Monthly Archives: August 2021

Letters to the editor, Aug. 29 – The Star Press

Posted: August 28, 2021 at 12:24 pm

Sons of AMVETS plan flag retirement ceremony

I would like to invite everyone to the 21th Annual Sons of American Veterans (AMVETS), Squadron #12, Muncie, Flag Retirement. This event will take place Saturday, Sept. 11, 2021, at 3 p.m., atAMVETS Post #12, 7621 N. Ind. 3, Muncie.

In the last 20 years, weve retired 43,742 flags, and again this year well be retiring approximately 2,000 flags at one time in a spectacular display of retiring our county's colors. (Hamilton Township Volunteer Fire Company will do us the honors).

If you have a worn, torn American flag that you would like retired just drop them off at Post #12.There is a drop box behind the Post, or you can put them in a bag and drop them off in the front foyer.

Well start if off again Friday night, Sept. 10,4-6p.m. as well be out in front waving American flags, in memory of the almost 3,000 people who lost their lives on 9/11.

Also, the Ladies Auxiliary will again be having their luminary display on Friday night.

For more details call the Post at 765-287-9054.

Saturday night the Band Back Woods Country will be playing outside from 7p.m. to 11p.m.

These events are open to the public so come on out and join us in honoring our country, flag, Gold Star/LODD families, veterans and first responders!

Don Finnegan

Sons of AMVETS #12,Past National Commander

On Oct. 9, hundreds of people in East Central Indiana will join the fight against Alzheimers disease and other dementia during the annual Alzheimers Association Walk to End Alzheimers. Plans are moving forward to host the event in person at Canan Commons in Muncie, with the option to watch an online ceremony and walk from home.

I volunteer for the walk in honor of all those living with the disease, and their caregivers. The isolation and challenges these families have faced in the last 18 months, especially, are staggering. The support programs of the Alzheimers Association are a critical lifeline for these families.About 110,000 Hoosiers are currently living with Alzheimers disease and another 215,000 are serving as unpaid family caregivers.

Please join me in raising funds and awareness by registering at alz.org/Indiana/walk. Every dollar raised helps advance the Alzheimers Associations dementia research and support programs for our friends and neighbors who have been affected by this disease.

President Biden losing America's respect from all of our foreign allies while making deals with China, Iran and Russia (socialists). Defunding our brave police forces, and taking away our guns. They have bodyguards.

Doing away with the border fence, but they all have their own fences.

BLM andAntifa. They admit to being anarchists and wanting to create havoc and destroy America. Everywhere they go there is UNpeaceful rioting, looting, burning and destruction , while the Dems never condemn them and Vice PresidentKamala Harris bails them out.

Voting machines and China stole the election. (Soon to be verified) The Squad. A.O.C. , Omar, Talib and Pressley. Im not racist, but even I hate people that hate America.

Biden helping Iran get nuclear capabilities.

Boys cheating girls in sports. It does not impress me.

Big tech companiescensoring conservatives. They shut off the president, yet they allow BLM and Antifa and terrorist to keep broadcasting their hatred.

Fake news. No reporting on the border crisis. Nothing on the Bidens corrupt dealings with China, Russia, Ukraine or son Hunter's laptop evidence. The distribution of sick illegal immigrants all over the U.S. Allowing terrorists and gang members to enter the U.S. Nothing about V.P. Kamala and her refusal to secure the border. She is a joke, just like our so-called pres.

P.S. Im tired of B.H.O. Accusing Americans (Republicans) of being racist. Just how can he explain being elected president twice.

Jeff Felton

Muncie

I find it fascinating that the very people who deride the younger generation for being ignorant, self-centered,lazy, unpatriotic and selfish are the very same people who, TODAY, are teaching our kids that they dont have to follow the rules, they dont have to be told what to do and they dont have to sacrifice for the good of the country and mankind.

I think its pretty clear who is to blame for these alleged selfish attitudes exhibited by some of the younger generation.Its a good thing yall didnt live during a world war or the Depression, when people actually sacrificed for the good of the country and their fellow man.The Greatest Generation didnt partake is conspiracy theories or cry that their liberties were being taken and the government was only looking to control them. Look in the mirror and see if you can make the correlation.You are the reason we are where we are today.

Melissa Hathaway

Muncie

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Letters to the editor, Aug. 29 - The Star Press

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You Don’t Need To Go To Kabul To See The End Of American Order – The Federalist

Posted: at 12:24 pm

The nations attention these past two weeks has focused nearly exclusively on Kabul, and rightly so given that the city has become the scene of the largest hostage situation in American history and a vivid image of the decline of Pax Americana abroad.

But Americans dont need to travel 7,500 miles to get a first-hand glimpse of the end of American order. In many of our own countrys major cities, gangs of masked thugs and criminals do what they please and our far-better-armed police arent allowed to stop them and protect the rest of us.

Take one August Sunday in Portland, Oregon, where two days ago political gangs roamed freely, beating people, including women, and even opening fire downtown. Meanwhile the police, who have been threatened with government action if they intervene, were nowhere to be seen.

The breakdown of law and order was crafted in the offices of politicians, and its results are as immediate as they are sickening: A beautiful port city is now a frequent host to pitched battles between masked and helmeted left- and right-wing mobs spanning across city blocks; paintballs, pepper spray, fireworks, and beatings in broad daylight; and while innocent civilians flee the violence under a cloudy gray sky, the only sounds audible are of rioting with nary a police siren in the distance.

Its long not been safe to be a reporter in Portland: Just Sunday, Antifa targeted independent journalist and photographer Maranie Staab. You f-cking endangered people by flying to f-cking Colombia and endangering everyone by opening them up to COVID, you little slut, one masked and armored man screamed at Staab, referring to her June reporting on violence in South America.

Minutes later, Antifa members pepper-sprayed her, knocked her to the ground, and reportedly broke her phone and damaged her camera, yelling, How many times do we have to f-cking tell you?

After other reporters moved her away from the mob and helped her wash out her eyes and mouth, an Antifa member sprayed them (and their cameras) with more paint. Once again, police were nowhere to be seen or even heard.

That same day, during riots and demonstrations downtown, a man opened fire on Antifa members, who reportedly fired back. Police were nowhere to be heard or seen, though they arrested the man minutes later.

So where are the police, exactly? Law and order has slowly, and then rapidly, broken down in Portland for years, with images of besieged courthouses, lawless autonomous zones, open drugs and violent crime, and roving, organized mobs hitting honest newspapers across the United States nearly every week. Indeed, Sundays festivities were organized to celebrate a violent clash that had taken place the year before.

Amid it all, local and national politicians have repeatedly attacked and undermined the men and women who maintain order at great personal risk, cutting the police budget by millions and threatening further cuts along the way.

Then on July 19, the governor signed a new law that opened police officers using non-lethal, anti-mob force to personal prosecution. This, independent journalist Andy Ngo reports, was the final nail for an effective permanent police stand down.

Therein lies an interesting connection to the most recent disaster weve been watching abroad: In Portland, city leaders demand say their refusal to back their own police or enforce their own laws is a national problem that demands national resources, adding thatthe idea that Portland, or any city, can single handedly defeat white nationalism is a fallacy. Across the country in Washington, White House leaders pretend 10-15,000 stranded Americans, a captured military base, hijacked American equipment in enemy hands, and outnumbered soldiers and Marines in a civilian airport surrounded by the Taliban is just what all withdrawals look like.

All of this is completely false, of course both these crises, in their immediate senses, have been created by the foolish decisions of the people directly in charge of them. We dont need a time traveler from 2010 to teach us how to maintain peace in our cities, just as we dont need Alexander the Great to teach us to remove civilians and equipment before the military departs and to hold bases until they arent needed anymore.

Our country here and abroad is held captive by radical and lying politicians unwilling to tell the truth or face it. Drive into your closest major city anywhere in the country and theres a good chance its gotten a lot worse than it was just a few years ago. Look at any foreign paper and see that our word is worth a lot less than it was just a few weeks ago.

Neither of these is, or were, inevitable: They are the conscious decisions of a country in decline. We dont have much time to put things right, but we know what we have to do to fix these things; the answers arent arcane. It already might be too late, but its worth the fight.

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You Don't Need To Go To Kabul To See The End Of American Order - The Federalist

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The International Space Station will soon be retired, but a replacement likely won’t come from NASA – CNBC

Posted: at 12:23 pm

The International Space Station got its start in 1998 when its first segments were launched, and it's now starting to show its age.

Since 2000, the ISS has continuously housed a rotating group of astronauts from 19 countries. The station has the only laboratory for long-duration microgravity research and has been instrumental in a number of scientific developments including creating more efficient water filtration systems and exploring new ways to treat diseases such as Alzheimer's and cancer.

"The International Space Station is currently approved to operate through at least December 2024 with our agreements with the international partners," said Angela Hart, manager of the Commercial Low Earth Orbit Program Office at NASA. "However, as we are actively working to continue to do science and research, we understand that the ISS at some point will have its end of life."

But NASA will likely not build the next space station. Instead, the agency will depend on the technology of outside companies. A few, like Sierra Space in Colorado and Houston-based Axiom Space, are well on their way to constructing their own commercial space stations.

Watch the video above to learn more about the future of the International Space Station and the companies working toward building their own space outposts.

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Here’s why NASA may depend on outside companies for its next space outpost – CNBC

Posted: at 12:23 pm

Over the last couple of years, NASA has increasingly relied on outside companies to complete tasks that have traditionally been reserved for the government agency.

Under its Commercial Resupply Services program, NASA has contracts with SpaceX and Northrop Grumman to send cargo resupply missions to the International Space Station. Last year, SpaceX made history by becoming the first private sector company to carry NASA astronauts to the ISS under NASA's Commercial Crew Program. NASA is now hoping to replicate the success of its commercial crew and commercial cargo programs with the Commercial LEO Destinations project.

As part of the project, NASA plans to award up to $400 million in total to as many as four companies to begin development of private space stations. Covering part of the developmental costs of the station would be a big money saver for NASA. The ISS cost $150 billion to build, and the U.S. picked up the largest chunk of that bill ahead of its partners, Russia, Europe, Japan and Canada. NASA also spends about $4 billion a year to operate the ISS.

"We've had all these years of success on the ISS, and NASA now wants to put our eye toward moon and Mars and other exploration items and turn over this area of space to the commercial market," says Angela Hart, manager of the Commercial Low Earth Orbit Program Office at NASA.

A number of companies, including Colorado-based Sierra Space and Houston-based Axiom Space, are already well on their way to launching private space stations.Watch the video to find out more.

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Here's why NASA may depend on outside companies for its next space outpost - CNBC

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Astronauts celebrate Tokyo Paralympics opening day with ‘torch’ ceremony in space – Space.com

Posted: at 12:23 pm

As the Paralympic Games kicked off in Tokyo this week, astronauts at the International Space Station celebrated the quadrennial sporting event in space.

On the opening day of the Tokyo Paralympic Games on Tuesday (Aug. 24), Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy posted a photo on Twitter showing the current seven occupants of the International Space Station (ISS) posing with a "torch" inside one of the station's modules under a ceiling decorated with national flags.

The torch, which appears golden in the image, of course, is not burning.

"The torch itself is a bundle of five tubes in the form of sakura petals with gold trim," Novitskiy said in the Tweet. "The ISS-65 Expedition crew wishes all the participants good luck!"

Related: Watch astronauts hold their own Summer Olympics in space with zero-g synchronized swimming and more

The 2020 Summer Paralympic Games, postponed from last year due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, officially kicked off Tuesday (Aug 24) and will close on Sept. 5. About 4,400 athletes with various types of disabilities representing 162 nations will participate in the games.

While astronaut candidates have traditionally been required to be fully able-bodied people, the space station might soon welcome its first "parastronaut." Earlier this year, the European Space Agency (ESA) invited qualified experts with certain types of disabilities to apply for a special astronaut feasibility study. The agency launched the call for astronauts with disabilities together with its current astronaut recruitment round in February.

The current ISS crew including Russian cosmonauts Oleg Novitskiy and Pyotr Dubrov, NASA's Mark Vende Hei, Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur, Europe's Thomas Pesquet, and Japan's Akihiko Hoshide have previously held their own Olympic Summer Games.

Split into two teams based on the vehicle that took them to the space station the Soyuz MS-18 and Dragon Crew 2 the seven astronauts competed in several unique microgravity disciplines. In a video that has since gone viral, the teams performed competitive routines in synchronized space "swimming," complete with weightless tumbling and flipping. The crew members also competed in individual events, including no-floor gymnastics, and the game of "no-hand ball," which required them to pass a ping pong ball through a hatch only by blowing at it. In space sharpshooting, the sportsmen were trying to hit a target with a rubber band.

The crew later held an Olympic closing ceremony during which Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide passed the torch to France's Thomas Pesquet. The next Olympic Games will be held in France's capital Paris in 2024.

Follow Tereza Pultarova on Twitter @TerezaPultarova. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Astronauts celebrate Tokyo Paralympics opening day with 'torch' ceremony in space - Space.com

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Someone Is Secretly Working on "Privately Owned" Space Station – Futurism

Posted: at 12:23 pm

A company was just tasked to build the station's life support systems.Moonraker?

Collins Aerospace, a subsidiary of military and aerospace contractor Raytheon Technologies, is working on environmental control and life support technologies for a privately owned and operated low Earth orbit outpost, according to SpaceNews.

Theres plenty of money being poured into developing a commercial presence in space right now. The small firm was awarded a $2.6 million contract by a mysterious unnamed customer a sign, in spite of its opacity, that the race to commercial orbit is heating up.

The Collins work includes machines capable of controlling both temperature and pressure levels in space enabling a prolonged human presence, according to SpaceNews reporting.

The subsidiary already has plenty of experience to draw from. In fact, its behind the International Space Stations current water recovery system.

Shawn Macleod, Collins Aerospaces director of business development, told SpaceNews that as more private industry destinations become available, the demand for life support systems will increase.

There is a non-zero chance that the unnamed contractor is Axiom Space, according to SpaceNews analysis. The Houston-based, privately funded space company is planning to construct its own commercial space station.

The company also announced the crew for the worlds first entirely-private mission into orbit back in January, on board a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft.

But whether Axiom Space is behind the Collins contract remains unclear. The company declined SpaceNews request for comment.

READ MORE: Collins Aerospace to provide life support for privately run LEO outpost [SpaceNews]

More on Axios Space: First Entirely-Private Mission to Space Station Names Its Crew

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Someone Is Secretly Working on "Privately Owned" Space Station - Futurism

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Nauka’s Troubled FlightBefore It Tumbled the ISS – IEEE Spectrum

Posted: at 12:23 pm

Nevertheless, while computer chips won't burn a literal hole in your pocket (though they do get hot enough to fry an egg), they still require a lot of current to run the applications we use every day. Consider the data-center SoC: On average, it's consuming 200 W to provide its transistors with about 1 to 2 volts, which means the chip is drawing 100 to 200 amperes of current from the voltage regulators that supply it. Your typical refrigerator draws only 6 A. High-end mobile phones can draw a tenth as much power as data-center SoCs, but even so that's still about 1020 A of current. That's up to three refrigerators, in your pocket!

Delivering that current to billions of transistors is quickly becoming one of the major bottlenecks in high-performance SoC design. As transistors continue to be made tinier, the interconnects that supply them with current must be packed ever closer and be made ever finer, which increases resistance and saps power. This can't go on: Without a big change in the way electrons get to and from devices on a chip, it won't matter how much smaller we can make transistors.

In today's processors both signals and power reach the silicon [light gray] from above. New technology would separate those functions, saving power and making more room for signal routes [right].Chris Philpot

Fortunately, we have a promising solution: We can use a side of the silicon that's long been ignored.

Electrons have to travel a long way to get from the source that is generating them to the transistors that compute with them. In most electronics they travel along the copper traces of a printed circuit board into a package that holds the SoC, through the solder balls that connect the chip to the package, and then via on-chip interconnects to the transistors themselves. It's this last stage that really matters.

To see why, it helps to understand how chips are made. An SoC starts as a bare piece of high-quality, crystalline silicon. We first make a layer of transistors at the very top of that silicon. Next we link them together with metal interconnects to form circuits with useful computing functions. These interconnects are formed in layers called a stack, and it can take a 10-to-20-layer stack to deliver power and data to the billions of transistors on today's chips.

Those layers closest to the silicon transistors are thin and small in order to connect to the tiny transistors, but they grow in size as you go up in the stack to higher levels. It's these levels with broader interconnects that are better at delivering power because they have less resistance.

Today, both power and signals reach transistors from a network of interconnects above the silicon (the "front side"). But increasing resistance as these interconnects are scaled down to ever-finer dimensions is making that scheme untenable.Chris Philpot

You can see, then, that the metal that powers circuitsthe power delivery network (PDN)is on top of the transistors. We refer to this as front-side power delivery. You can also see that the power network unavoidably competes for space with the network of wires that delivers signals, because they share the same set of copper resources.

In order to get power and signals off of the SoC, we typically connect the uppermost layer of metalfarthest away from the transistorsto solder balls (also called bumps) in the chip package. So for electrons to reach any transistor to do useful work, they have to traverse 10 to 20 layers of increasingly narrow and tortuous metal until they can finally squeeze through to the very last layer of local wires.

This way of distributing power is fundamentally lossy. At every stage along the path, some power is lost, and some must be used to control the delivery itself. In today's SoCs, designers typically have a budget that allows loss that leads to a 10 percent reduction in voltage between the package and the transistors. Thus, if we hit a total efficiency of 90 percent or greater in a power-delivery network, our designs are on the right track.

Historically, such efficiencies have been achievable with good engineeringsome might even say it was easy compared to the challenges we face today. In today's electronics, SoC designers not only have to manage increasing power densities but to do so with interconnects that are losing power at a sharply accelerating rate with each new generation.

You can design a back-side power delivery network that's up to seven times as efficient as the traditional front-side network.

The increasing lossiness has to do with how we make nanoscale wires. That process and its accompanying materials trace back to about 1997, when IBM began to make interconnects out of copper instead of aluminum, and the industry shifted along with it. Up until then aluminum wires had been fine conductors, but in a few more steps along the Moore's Law curve their resistance would soon be too high and become unreliable. Copper is more conductive at modern IC scales. But even copper's resistance began to be problematic once interconnect widths shrank below 100 nanometers. Today, the smallest manufactured interconnects are about 20 nm, so resistance is now an urgent issue.

It helps to picture the electrons in an interconnect as a full set of balls on a billiards table. Now imagine shoving them all from one end of the table toward another. A few would collide and bounce against each other on the way, but most would make the journey in a straight-ish line. Now consider shrinking the table by halfyou'd get a lot more collisions and the balls would move more slowly. Next, shrink it again and increase the number of billiard balls tenfold, and you're in something like the situation chipmakers face now. Real electrons don't collide, necessarily, but they get close enough to one another to impose a scattering force that disrupts the flow through the wire. At nanoscale dimensions, this leads to vastly higher resistance in the wires, which induces significant power-delivery loss.

Increasing electrical resistance is not a new challenge, but the magnitude of increase that we are seeing now with each subsequent process node is unprecedented. Furthermore, traditional ways of managing this increase are no longer an option, because the manufacturing rules at the nanoscale impose so many constraints. Gone are the days when we could arbitrarily increase the widths of certain wires in order to combat increasing resistance. Now designers have to stick to certain specified wire widths or else the chip may not be manufacturable. So, the industry is faced with the twin problems of higher resistance in interconnects and less room for them on the chip.

There is another way: We can exploit the "empty" silicon that lies below the transistors. At Imec, where authors Beyne and Zografos work, we have pioneered a manufacturing concept called "buried power rails," or BPR. The technique builds power connections below the transistors instead of above them, with the aim of creating fatter, less resistant rails and freeing space for signal-carrying interconnects above the transistor layer.

To reduce the resistance in power delivery, transistors will tap power rails buried within the silicon. These are relatively large, low-resistance conductors that multiple logic cells could connect with.Chris Philpot

To build BPRs, you first have to dig out deep trenches below the transistors and then fill them with metal. You have to do this before you make the transistors themselves. So the metal choice is important. That metal will need to withstand the processing steps used to make high-quality transistors, which can reach about 1,000 C. At that temperature, copper is molten, and melted copper could contaminate the whole chip. We've therefore experimented with ruthenium and tungsten, which have higher melting points.

Since there is so much unused space below the transistors, you can make the BPR trenches wide and deep, which is perfect for delivering power. Compared to the thin metal layers directly on top of the transistors, BPRs can have 1/20 to 1/30 the resistance. That means that BPRs will effectively allow you to deliver more power to the transistors.

Furthermore, by moving the power rails off the top side of the transistors you free up room for the signal-carrying interconnects. These interconnects form fundamental circuit "cells"the smallest circuit units, such as SRAM memory bit cells or simple logic that we use to compose more complex circuits. By using the space we've freed up, we could shrink those cells by 16 percent or more, and that could ultimately translate to more transistors per chip. Even if feature size stayed the same, we'd still push Moore's Law one step further.

Unfortunately, it looks like burying local power rails alone won't be enough. You still have to convey power to those rails down from the top side of the chip, and that will cost efficiency and some loss of voltage.

Gone are the days when we could arbitrarily increase the widths of certain wires in order to combat increasing resistance.

Researchers at Arm, including authors Cline and Prasad, ran a simulation on one of their CPUs and found that, by themselves, BPRs could allow you to build a 40 percent more efficient power network than an ordinary front-side power delivery network. But they also found that even if you used BPRs with front-side power delivery, the overall voltage delivered to the transistors was not high enough to sustain high-performance operation of a CPU.

Luckily, Imec was simultaneously developing a complementary solution to further improve power delivery: Move the entire power-delivery network from the front side of the chip to the back side. This solution is called "back-side power delivery," or more generally "back-side metallization." It involves thinning down the silicon that is underneath the transistors to 500 nm or less, at which point you can create nanometer-size "through-silicon vias," or nano-TSVs. These are vertical interconnects that can connect up through the back side of the silicon to the bottom of the buried rails, like hundreds of tiny mineshafts. Once the nano-TSVs have been created below the transistors and BPRs, you can then deposit additional layers of metal on the back side of the chip to form a complete power-delivery network.

Expanding on our earlier simulations, we at Arm found that just two layers of thick back-side metal was enough to do the job. As long as you could space the nano-TSVs closer than 2 micrometers from each other, you could design a back-side PDN that was four times as efficient as the front-side PDN with buried power rails and seven times as efficient as the traditional front-side PDN.

The back-side PDN has the additional advantage of being physically separated from the signal network, so the two networks no longer compete for the same metal-layer resources. There's more room for each. It also means that the metal layer characteristics no longer need to be a compromise between what power routes prefer (thick and wide for low resistance) and what signal routes prefer (thin and narrow so they can make circuits from densely packed transistors). You can simultaneously tune the back-side metal layers for power routing and the front-side metal layers for signal routing and get the best of both worlds.

Moving the power delivery network to the other side of the siliconthe back side"reduces voltage loss even more, because all the interconnects in the network can be made thicker to lower resistance. What's more, removing the power-delivery network from above the silicon leaves more room for signal routes, leading to even smaller logic circuits and letting chipmakers squeeze more transistors into the same area of silicon.Chris Philpot/IMEC

In our designs at Arm, we found that for both the traditional front-side PDN and front-side PDN with buried power rails, we had to sacrifice design performance. But with back-side PDN the CPU was able to achieve high frequencies and have electrically efficient power delivery.

You might, of course, be wondering how you get signals and power from the package to the chip in such a scheme. The nano-TSVs are the key here, too. They can be used to transfer all input and output signals from the front side to the back side of the chip. That way, both the power and the I/O signals can be attached to solder balls that are placed on the back side.

Simulation studies are a great start, and they show the CPU-design-level potential of back-side PDNs with BPR. But there is a long road ahead to bring these technologies to high-volume manufacturing. There are still significant materials and manufacturing challenges that need to be solved. The best choice of metal materials for the BPRs and nano-TSVs is critical to manufacturability and electrical efficiency. Also, the high-aspect-ratio (deep but skinny) trenches needed for both BPRs and nano-TSVs are very difficult to make. Reliably etching tightly spaced, deep-but-narrow features in the silicon substrate and filling them with metal is relatively new to chip manufacture and is still something the industry is getting to grips with. Developing manufacturing tools and methods that are reliable and repeatable will be essential to unlocking widespread adoption of nano-TSVs.

Furthermore, battery-powered SoCs, like those in your phone and in other power-constrained designs, already have much more sophisticated power-delivery networks than those we've discussed so far. Modern-day power delivery separates chips into multiple power domains that can operate at different voltages or even be turned off altogether to conserve power. (See "A Circuit to Boost Battery Life," IEEE Spectrum, August 2021.)

In tests of multiple designs using three varieties of power delivery, only back-side power with buried power rails [red] provides enough voltage without compromising performance.Chris Philpot

Thus, back-side PDNs and BPRs are eventually going to have to do much more than just efficiently deliver electrons. They're going to have to precisely control where electrons go and how many of them get there. Chip designers will not want to take multiple steps backward when it comes to chip-level power design. So we will have to simultaneously optimize design and manufacturing to make sure that BPRs and back-side PDNs are better thanor at least compatible withthe power-saving IC techniques we use today.

The future of computing depends upon these new manufacturing techniques. Power consumption is crucial whether you're worrying about the cooling bill for a data center or the number of times you have to charge your smartphone each day. And as we continue to shrink transistors and ICs, delivering power becomes a significant on-chip challenge. BPR and back-side PDNs may well answer that challenge if engineers can overcome the complexities that come with them.

This article appears in the September 2021 print issue as "Power From Below."

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Nauka's Troubled FlightBefore It Tumbled the ISS - IEEE Spectrum

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Maya-3 and Maya-4, PHLs own CubeSats, to be launched off to International Space Station – GMA News Online

Posted: at 12:23 pm

The Philippines has made yet another historic mark in the field of space exploration!

Maya-3 and Maya-4, the countrys own cube satellites or CubeSats, are set to be launched off to the International Space Station this Saturday afternoon.

READ:Maya-2, Philippines2nd CubeSat, has been launched to space station!

According to Space Technology and Applications Mastery, Innovation, and Advancement (STAMINA4Space) Programs announcement on Facebook, Friday, the two CubeSats are set to leave Earth aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in a Dragon C208 cargo as part of the SpaceX Commercial Resupply Mission.

The two satellites mission, as mentioned in STAMINA4Spaces website, is to demonstrate image and video capture of the RGB camera using a 5MP commercial-off-the-shelf RGB camera as well as demonstrate ground data acquisition using Store and Forward capability of the CubeSat which will allow collection of data from remote ground sensors such as temperature, humidity and wind speed, among many other tasks.

Maya-3 and Maya-4 are the first Philippine university-built satellites designed and developed by the first batch of scholars under the STAMINA4Space Program: Project 3 - Space Science and Technology Proliferation through University Partnerships (STeP-UP).

It is under the support of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST), DOST-Science Education Institute (DOST-SEI), Kyushu Institute of Technology, and the Philippine Space Agency.

To watch the launch live, simply visit National Aeronautics and Space Administrations website. Kaela Malig/RC, GMA News

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Maya-3 and Maya-4, PHLs own CubeSats, to be launched off to International Space Station - GMA News Online

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"Woman in Motion" Documentary Honoring Star Treks Nichelle Nichols Boldly Goes to the International Space Station – Yahoo Finance

Posted: at 12:23 pm

Astronauts in Space can now watch the film about how the original Lt. Uhuru recruited the first minorities and women to fly in spaceFilm also being shown to entire NASA workforce

ORLANDO, FL / ACCESSWIRE / August 27, 2021 / Stars North Films, Shout! Studios and Concourse Media are proud to announce that the feature documentary Woman in Motion has been uploaded to the International Space Station for the astronauts to watch at their leisure.

Additionally, the film is being shown to the NASA workforce as NASA marks Women's Equality Day. NASA employees and contractors will have opportunities now through September 6 to watch the film. Showing a film to the entire NASA workforce has not been done since Hidden Figures in 2017. Not only is NASA celebrating Women's Equality Day but also its own research mathematician Katherine Johnson who is the inspiration for Hidden Figures who was born on August 26, 1918.

Directed by Todd Thompson, the film chronicles how Nichols transformed her sci-fi television stardom into a real-life science career when she embarked on a campaign to bring diversity to NASA in 1977. Nichols formed the company Women In Motion, Inc. and recruited more than 8,000 African American, Asian and Latino women and men for the agency. Nichols and her program continue to influence the younger generation of astronauts as well, including Mae Jemison, the first female African American astronaut in space. Despite an uphill battle against a bureaucracy that was initially hesitant to let her get involved, Nichols persevered and is credited by NASA for turning it into one of the most diverse independent agencies in the United States Federal Government.

Thompson said, "It is an honor for Woman in Motion to be in the company of films like 2001: A Space Odyssey, Apollo 13 and Hidden Figures on the Space Station, where the diversity onboard is a true reflection of Nichelle Nichols's incredible efforts."

Producer Tim Franta said, "I hope the Space Station crew has a movie night and watches the film together. It is only fitting that a film about astronauts be watched by astronauts in space."

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Matthew Shreder, CEO at Concourse Media, said, "Having this film on the ISS and shown to everyone at NASA is a dream-come-true for everyone involved. We are all honored and humbled to be included among the library of films made available to the astronauts and personnel who share Nichelle's vision of equality for all."

"I cannot think of a more appropriate film to share with the amazing crew of the International Space Station," said civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is also executive producer of the film. "Nichelle Nichols took equality to new heights and her message that Space is for everyone!' continues to inspire and motivate new generations."

Crump linked the recruitment program Nichelle Nichols worked on in 1977 to NASA's most recent effort: "In the spirit on Nichelle's groundbreaking work, it is encouraging that NASA announced its new 'Mission Equity' program to further expand diversity and equal opportunity for all Americans." More information on the program can be found here.

Woman in Motion is available on demand and digital and is streaming on Paramount+.

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About Stars North Films

Stars North Films is an award-winning, independent, motion picture production company based in Orlando, Florida. The company actively pursues the development and production of original digital content and short and feature-length films, leveraging state legislative incentives that help support growth in the local economy and generate a continuous flow of work for cast and crew. Follow Stars North on Facebook and Twitter.

About Shout! Studios

Shout! Studios is the filmed entertainment production and distribution arm of Shout! Factory, specializing in all aspects of distribution, including theatrical, VOD, digital and broadcast. Reflecting Shout! Factory's ongoing commitment to innovation and excellence, Shout! Studios champions and supports like-minded filmmakers and creators at the forefront of pop culture, driving creative expression and diversity in independent storytelling. Shout! Studios finances, produces, acquires and distributes an eclectic slate of movies, award-winning animated features, specialty films and series from rising and established talent, filmmakers and producers.

About Concourse Media

Concourse Media is a content agency that offers entertainment and technology services for clients and brands. It facilitates the packaging, financing and licensing of content across all forms of distribution. More than ever, it continues its mission of being a filmmaker-focused agency that supports the creative process from a foundational level. Concourse was formed as a vehicle for content makers to thrive in, and its model centers on bringing a unique and diverse set of voices to the forefront of today's entertainment marketplace. Our leadership has been involved in the distribution of more than 40 independent films over the past decade. For more information on Concourse, please visit the company website at http://www.concourse-media.com.

Media Contact:Jennifer Bisbee, APRjennifer@bisbeeandco.com407-257-4667

SOURCE: Stars North

View source version on accesswire.com: https://www.accesswire.com/661710/Woman-in-Motion-Documentary-Honoring-Star-Treks-Nichelle-Nichols-Boldly-Goes-to-the-International-Space-Station

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"Woman in Motion" Documentary Honoring Star Treks Nichelle Nichols Boldly Goes to the International Space Station - Yahoo Finance

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Hong Kong people looking forward to dialogue with astronauts on space station – Macau Business

Posted: at 12:23 pm

Hong Kong people are eagerly looking forward to a real-time dialogue with three mainland astronauts on Chinas space station in early September.

The three astronauts, Nie Haisheng, Liu Boming and Tang Hongbo, on board of the Shenzhou-12 spaceship were sent into space and entered the space station core module Tianhe on June 17 and have since carried out a number of tasks as planned.

In recent days, the dialogue with the astronauts has become a hot topic in Hong Kong. Many people are curious about the daily life of the three astronauts and are concerned about their physical and mental conditions.

It is reported that during a conversation scheduled on Sept. 3, the astronauts will give a virtual tour of the core module and answer questions collected in advance.

Since Monday, people who are interested in taking part can submit their questions on the Hong Kong STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) Education Alliances website, with some asking very professional questions.

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Hong Kong people looking forward to dialogue with astronauts on space station - Macau Business

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