Coming soon to a CPU near you.....well, maybe not "soon" but no doubt will end up as a standard design element.
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Interesting...
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This article entices you to ask, if you could build a mechanism to convert that heat into energy, why isn't that design used to prevent such a massive loss of energy to heat in the first place.
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Because the one does not necessarily lead to the other. After all, most current power generation technology (oil, natural gas, coal, and nuclear) is based on the conversion of heat into electrical energy (from burning said oil, natural gas, and coal, or the heat generated from nuclear fission). In that particular case, the only way to get usable energy out of the source is through chemical/nuclear conversion (burning or fission) which outputs the energy as heat. Same with the engines we use for transportation; the only way for them to output power is through heat in the first place, so in this case, it's not so much a massive loss of energy to heat, as the fact that heat is the only way they can even produce the energy in the first place.
Now, for computer components, I think the loss of energy to heat lies largely in the resistance of the circuitry of the computer component, so the only way to prevent the loss of energy would be further developments in super-conductivity and materials research towards that goal. It's like when they have the bag to catch horse droppings on those horses that pull carriages; the technology to clean up after the horse has nothing to do with the technology (horse biology) that produces the problem in the first place. -
I like the explanation. It will be something to chew on for a while.
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Coming soon? Highly improbable.
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You didnt even read the first post in the thread did you? As my comments there were pretty clear, despite the irony in the thread title.
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Yes, I did. What they are talking about being used in cellphones and laptops is way, way, way out there. I also hate it when people make catchy thread titles to lure people in because they don't think the subject matter itself is good enough. It isn't irony, it is a sad attempt to catch readers.
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I dont need "readers" - you think I get paid for the banners on the page or something? Note also that in less than half a year you have been on Notebookreviews, you have already written as many posts as I have in SIX YEARS here on the forum. So spare me the nonsense please. I aint the attention-desperate one.
No, its a parody of what you hear in the movie theater previews. "coming soon to a theater near you". Sorry it had to be explained to you so literally - I wasnt assuming that anyone here was socially deficient.
As for when the technology would be used. I dont know. Predicting technology isnt my field. Just wanted to post it for people to think about, as I'm sure I wasnt the first one to wonder why my laptop is built to dissipate so much wasted energy (heat) from the CPU, while I am saddled with battery life problems.
But why dont you continue off on your sidetrack - I'll stick over here, thanks.
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This is very Interesting and I hope it will come out soon. I Think this helps on our environment as well.
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I wonder how fast it can convert/disperse the heat though, screw saving electricity, I wanna see how effective it is at cooling vs. standard heatsink and air and other cooling methods.
Coming soon to your CPU....
Discussion in 'Hardware Components and Aftermarket Upgrades' started by skagen, Dec 2, 2009.