The Guwahati teenager’s prototype uses a microchip instead of
a hard disk
City schoolboy Afreed Islam on Monday launched his prototype
of a computer system that uses a microchip instead of a hard disk and is
embedded with an operative system that allows dependencies on both Windows and
Linux-based software simultaneously.
A student of Little Flower School, Hatigaon, Afreed, who will
be appearing for his Class X CBSE examinations beginning March 3, claimed that
his invention (named Revo Book) replaced both mechanical and electronic hard
disk drives with a microchip that also doubles as a storage unit and therefore
does not run the risk of data loss or system crash.
He has also developed an operating system and has named it
ReVo IX which he has installed on the microchip. He claimed that it features
faster execution speed, an inbuilt firewall and stands as a complete
independent operating system. Afreed said he has applied for a patent.
“A hard disk drive always runs the risk of data loss as it
has moving parts which may crash due to shock and also when brought in a strong
magnetic field. However, the microchip has no moving parts and is also not
influenced by magnetic field, therefore there is little risk of data loss of
the microchip-run computing system invented by Afreed,” explained Anupam
Barman, Senior Systems Consultant at the Assam Electronics Development
Corporation Limited, who was also present at the launch of Afreed’s invention.
“The idea to develop the system came to my mind first when I
was studying in Class VII and encountered some problems while operating the
computers which my parents had bought for me,” said Afreed. He said he had
collaborated with a German company for manufacturing the computer system.
Siddhartha Debnath, a scientist at the Patent Information
Centre of the Assam Science Technology and Environment Council (ASTEC), said
that Afreed’s invention fulfilled all basic eligibility criteria for submission
of a patent application.
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