
An MIT research team linked high-frequency silicon chips with an ultra-thin polymer cable to build a data transfer system ten times faster than a USB. Current data transfer technologies can’t keep up with soaring demand. The new system design is more compact and cost-efficient than traditional copper wire and draws far less power. The new transfer link could dramatically cut energy use at power-hungry data centers. With speeds of 105 gigabits per second, it also could “address the bandwidth challenges as this megatrend toward more and more data continues.
Read the full article at: www.ge.com

