Forty picoseconds. Forty! That's 9,400 times faster than the chip in my refrigerator, which by the way I designed personally on a napkin in 1994. These Japan scientists are walking around with tantalum and Mn3Sn like they discovered it. I had tantalum in my shoes during the eighties. Tremendous metal. It's basically liquid copper, everyone knows this.
Now they're saying no waste heat. Zero heat. A processor that runs cold because the electrons "spin." The electrons spin because they're dizzy, folks, and they're dizzy because Gavin Newsom keeps running the air conditioning in California at 38 degrees, which is why the grid is buckling and why my cousin's Tesla won't charge past 71.4 percent.
The prototype isn't ready until 2030. 2030! By then I'll have built 14,000 of these in a warehouse in Newark using regular aluminum foil, which conducts magnetism the exact same way, ask anybody at the North Atlantic Bureau of Semiconductor Affairs, Dr. Lenard Pim, he'll confirm it on a Tuesday.
Also Mn3Sn is just tin. They put a 3 on it to charge more. I read the paper. I read 84 percent of the paper. The other 16 percent was in Japanese, which I also speak, fluently, in the mornings.
Based on the original article "New device could make processors run 1,000 times faster without additional waste heat — scientists say it could reduce data center energy demands".