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Nanoscale magnets could compute complex functions significantly faster than conventional computers


October 26, 2015

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Researchers from College of Engineering at University of South Florida have proposed a new form of computing that uses circular nanomagnets to solve quadratic optimization problems orders of magnitude faster than that of a conventional computer. A wide range of application domains can be potentially accelerated through this research such as finding patterns in social media, error-correcting codes to Big Data and biosciences. The findings were published in Nature Nanotechnology.Full Story

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University of South Florida

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