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World’s Smallest Computer is Benefited

World's smallest computer is only a square millimetre. This computer will be used for the treatment of the dangerous ‘Glaucoma black’ disease of the eye. A small computer system will be implanted in the patient's eyes OR it will engraft. This will be monitoring the pressure, which will be creating in the eye. This computer functions completely. There is an ordinary microprocessor placed in this computer, which is functioned with low power. Pressure sensor, memory, a thin-film battery, solar cell, and a wireless radio with an antenna that can transmit data to an external reader device. 

world smallest computer


University of Michigan Developments: 

Developed by researchers at the University of Michigan, which is expected to be commercially available in several years - is already being advertised as the future of the computing industry. Its creator - Professors Dennis Sylvester, David Blaauw, as well as David Wentzloff - statement that as the device's radio requires no tuning to find the right frequency it could connect to a wireless network of computers. 

A system of such units could one-day track pollution, monitor structural integrity, carry out observation, or make practically any object smart and traceable, according to the scientists. 

Eye Treatment (Glaucoma Black): 

The processor in the eye force perceive is the third generation of the researchers Phoenix chip, which uses a high-class design and an irrelevant sleep mode to achieve ultra-low-power utilization. The latest system wakes every 15 minutes to take measurements and consumes an average of 5.3 nanowatts. To preserve the battery charged, it requires exposure to ten hours of indoor light daily otherwise 1.5 hours of sunlight. It can accumulate up to a week's significance of the information. While this system is minuscule and comprehensive, its radio does not provide it to talk to other comparable devices, which is a significant aspect of any system targeted towards wireless sensor networks. The researchers are convinced their tiny device will take off.

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