In an email to Tom's Hardware, Itera described the underlying approach as a form of electrowetting, where electric fields are used to precisely move liquid metal alloys...
It’s for development, not production use. You can’t even buy it. They want to sell a service where they build your circuit and let you test and modify it remotely.
Sounds like a pathway to security vulnerabilities. Instead of just code you could now also physically alter a circuit to change it’s behaviour.
It’s for development, not production use. You can’t even buy it. They want to sell a service where they build your circuit and let you test and modify it remotely.