Years before the CHIPS and Science Act was negotiated and passed by Congress, Arizona State University systems engineering Professor Daniel Bliss was already designing and producing a new generation of microelectronics.
The recipient of grants from the U.S. Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency totaling $22.4 million, systems engineering Professor Daniel Bliss is now working on two advanced computing projects both of which are producing reimagined “chips,” or microprocessors that are the foundation for most of today’s electronics.
Dan Bliss, Arizona State University, discusses Sensing and its role in achieving what’s most wanted in the future of 6G, which is faster, more flexible and more available communications.
Daniel W. Bliss is a Professor at Arizona State University and Director of ASU’s Center for Wireless Information Systems and.
autoevolution 8 Jan 2021, 13:54 UTC ·
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There are many efforts being made for the creation of a functional system capable of supporting autonomous electric Vertical Take-Off and Landing (eVTOL) aircraft. Yet despite the huge strides made when it comes to the technologies that go into the machines themselves or the infrastructure to support them, large-scale use of eVTOLs is still a long time away. 1 photo
Or maybe not, given how the mighty U.S. Air Force is now pushing for these things to become real and, more importantly, work as advertised.
Sometime last year, USAF let it slip that in 2021 it will begin funding eVTOL projects, and to make sure everyone gets the message, even conducted a demonstration of such hardware at Camp Mabry in Austin, Texas. And now that we’re fresh into the new year, here comes another development.