The chip is based on nanotechnology, the science of building computers and their components out of molecules. Nantero, a startup that collected $6 million in first-round funding last week from Draper Fisher Jurvetson and others, uses as its primary building block carbon nanotubes, whose walls are one-atom thick. "The usual comparison is 100,000 times smaller than a strand of your hair," says Greg Schmergel, Nantero's co-founder and CEO.
The chips could also substitute for flash memory in cell phones and MP3 players, Schmergel says, or perhaps in network servers. Schmergel's goal is to create a commercial prototype with 1 Gbyte of storage, but he believes that Nantero will be able to make a 1 terabyte-capacity chip within three to five years.
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