Silicon chips already transformed the world once, but could the chief ingredient in sand be on the verge of a second technological revolution, in an entirely different industry?
Silicon already transformed the world once courtesy of the computer chip. But could the chief ingredient of sand be on the verge of delivering another technological revolution, this time in an entirely different industry - solar energy? Justin Rowlatt travels to San Francisco to the headquarters of chip-maker Intel, the home of 'Moore's Law', to ask whether the exponential shrinkage of computer transistors it has delivered is about to hit the buffers.
He also meets the author of another 'law' of exponential change, Dick Swanson, founder of Sunpower, who explains why solar panels just keep on getting cheaper. We discover the solar industry's surprising hippie origins with pioneer John Schaeffer at his Solar Living Center, and the even more surprising support that rooftop solar now receives from the opposite end of the spectrum, in the form of Republican stalwart Barry Goldwater Jr.
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- Sat 18 Oct 2014 04:32GMT91热爆 World Service Online
- Sun 19 Oct 2014 00:32GMT91热爆 World Service Online
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Elements
Chemical elements: where do we get them and how do they fit into our economy?