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Michigan Micro Mote: the world's smallest autonomous computer

by Mark Tyson on 7 April 2015, 12:05

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The University of Michigan's computer science department has been developing the Michigan Micro Mote (M^3) computer for over a decade, reports CBS News. The M^3 computer is now ready for production.

Claimed to be the smallest autonomous computer in the world, the M^3 is smaller than a grain of rice. Despite its miniature size the computer is said to be capable of taking pictures, reading temperatures, recording pressure, radio communication, and more. The flexibility afforded by its compactness means that the device will be popular in medical, industrial and IoT applications.

It is foreseen that the M^3 will be injected into the human body to provide medical sensor readings including ECG, pressure and temperature measurements. In industrial use the computer can be placed deep into oil wells to sense remaining pockets of oil resources. In the IoT and for consumers the M^3 could be useful in many parts of the intelligent home and even be implanted simply to track significant personal possessions.

One of the greatest challenges to making such a miniature computer was down to battery power. The University of Michigan's Prof. David Blaauw explains that "What people don't realize is a very large part of the volume of a computer for instance in a cellphone is actually consumed by the battery." So the team made sure to reduce required power to the minimum to keep the whole system as small as possible.

Another challenge for a tiny computer is programming it and recharging it. The M^3 uses a light interface for both duties. A high frequency strobe is used to send the required programming data to the computer. The computer charges its tiny battery from light and even ambient light in a room with no natural sunlight can be enough to power it perpetually. The Phoenix processor inside the M^3 requires just 500pW in standby mode.

Phoenix processor on a coin edge

As mentioned in the intro, the M^3 is now, after many years development, ready for production. However the Michigan scientists aren't going to rest there as they have began to design even smaller computers referred to as 'smart dust'.



HEXUS Forums :: 5 Comments

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At the moment, that can only TRANSMIT over RF, not receive, so that 2m range does not mean you can form a mesh network with a larger volume. If you can place local nodes everywhere this could be neat for niche applications, but it's not a pervasive scatterable sensor net yet.
It is foreseen that the M^3 will be injected into the human body
Uh oh, it's started…
I've a question:
The computer charges its tiny battery from light and even ambient light in a room with no natural sunlight can be enough to power it perpetually.
and
It is foreseen that the M^3 will be injected into the human body to provide medical sensor readings including ECG, pressure and temperature measurements. In industrial use the computer can be placed deep into oil wells to sense remaining pockets of oil resources.
If M^3 is implanted or stuffed down a (presumably dark) oil well or deep in the human body, then how the heck is it supposed to recharge? Or is this really a short-term-use-only device?

PS, I'm sure the security services are watching this closely … for the obvious uses.
Maybe this device is intended for implanting and daylight recharging as part of the Great Societies obedience to The Beast of Revelation's demand that all who wish to buy or sell display ‘666’ the Mark of the Beast on their forehead where it can easily be scanned by CCTV or on their hands where it can be scanned by POS readers.
Anyone without 666 will have to rely on charity of friends for food and sustenance.