to celebrate Black Business Month and to mark the one-year anniversary of the signing of the CHIPS Act. "I believe in bringing dollars home to my congressional district," said Rep. Lee "We pay a lot of the taxes –a lot of innovation, creativity, manufacturing should take place in Oakland."
Using the Earth’s most thermally conductive material, the team says the chips can withstand extreme temperatures, last longer and work more efficiently. They demonstrated for Lee using a simple example of an ice cube and one of their wafers to show the energy transfer.