惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

博客园_首页
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
S
Secure Thoughts
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
H
Heimdal Security Blog
W
WeLiveSecurity
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
博客园 - 【当耐特】
D
DataBreaches.Net
I
Intezer
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
C
Cisco Blogs
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
博客园 - 聂微东
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
罗磊的独立博客
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
博客园 - 叶小钗
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
D
Docker
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
J
Java Code Geeks
B
Blog RSS Feed
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
AI
AI
美团技术团队
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
月光博客
月光博客
P
Proofpoint News Feed
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
小众软件
小众软件
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
The Cloudflare Blog
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org

TechSpot

Flagship Rematch: Ryzen 7 5800X3D vs. Core i9-12900K Slack chats and internal data from failed startups are finding a second life in AI training A $5 Bluetooth tracker hidden in a postcard exposed a warship's movements Leakers claim PlayStation 6 could offer at least 3x the performance of the PS5 The Mac Mini is no longer a niche product, it's local AI infrastructure IPv6 traffic reaches parity with IPv4 for the first time, Google data shows Xbox expansion cards are now cheaper than SSDs, and PC users are repurposing them Blue Origin prepares to reuse New Glenn booster in bid to challenge SpaceX Nvidia could bring back the 12GB RTX 3060 as supply issues disrupt GPU roadmap What was the first OS you ever used? SNK revives NeoGeo AES with modern upgrades and HDMI support Valve's Proton 11 beta boosts Linux gaming with better performance and classic game support Researchers warn Microsoft Defender vulnerability is already being exploited A four-day Steam freebie turned into $250,000 for an indie game AMD may relaunch Ryzen 7 5800X3D for AM4's 10th anniversary This humanoid robot can almost run as fast as a human sprinter Two New Jersey men jailed for helping North Korean IT workers infiltrate 100+ companies A $7,000 DIY radar project is taking on hardware that usually costs over $100,000 Metro 2039 is going darker than ever, launching this winter on PC and consoles Gemini arrives on macOS with a dedicated desktop app AI infrastructure boom pushes AMD, Intel and Arm to new valuation heights New self-healing material can repair itself over 1,000 times, extend the lifespan of cars and aircraft Japan's bullet train to debut high-tech private cabins, for an added fee Memory card and flash drive pricing surges 120%, with some models spiking 260% Open-source tool decrypts all private data collected by Windows Recall on Copilot PCs The 2026 PC and Console Gaming Report shows most revenue now comes from games outside the Top 20 PureMac is a new open-source macOS cleanup and app removal tool Your Airbnb host might actually be AI Steam might soon display 30-day price history for game deals Intel brings 18A process to budget laptops with new Core Series 3 CPUs How Intel Got Into Trouble: We Test the Last Decade of Intel Flagship CPUs Microsoft counters MacBook Neo with free Game Pass and Office bundle on Windows laptops Popular WordPress plugins backdoored after ownership change, putting thousands of websites at risk Spotify launches physical book sales, expands audiobook features Intel Nova Lake-S is coming after Ryzen APUs with a 16-core iGPU for gamers on a budget Alienware launches $350 QD-OLED monitor with lower brightness to cut costs Recordly brings Screen Studio-style recordings to a free, open-source app Meta doubles down on custom AI chips with Broadcom deal through 2029 Someone finally got an RTX 5090 running on a Mac – no hacks required Will AI agents need to buy their own software licenses? Microsoft sure hopes so Duolingo stops evaluating workers based on how much AI they use Nvidia warranty payouts surged 1,000% last year, not that they can't afford it Nvidia says it's not buying a PC maker, but the idea didn't seem crazy Netgear becomes first router brand exempt from FCC foreign-made ban Google adds Rust to Pixel 10 modem to block attacks at one of Android's weakest points Clicking "reject cookies" might not actually do anything DaVinci Resolve 21 beta adds photo editing and deeper AI integration Malware campaign lures users with fake Windows Update website Apple is testing four smart glasses designs as it prepares to challenge Meta Ray-Bans Amazon purchases Globalstar for $11.6B to expand its low Earth orbit satellite network Capcom's Pragmata earns strong early reviews ahead of release Microsoft is removing 32GB size limit for FAT32 volumes, this time for real Missouri town ousts half of its city council after $6 billion AI data center approval External GPUs were always second best. CopprLink may change that Google will demote websites that hijack your browser's back button Japan finds a way to recover 90% of lithium from old EV batteries Man who vandalized Sam Altman's home claimed AI would end humanity, charged with attempted murder New terahertz technique lets engineers see inside running processors in real time Microsoft just made its Surface laptops a lot more expensive Shipping records suggest Valve will launch the Steam Controller before the Steam Machine This 3D-printed 15-fan side panel drops CPU temps by 20 degrees Rockstar Games hit with ransom demand after third-party data breach Blu-ray lives on as Verbatim and I-O Data pledge support with new drives and discs The software that landed Apollo 11 on the moon is now free online Metal Gear Solid movie is back on track with new directors Anti-data center vote in Wisconsin puts future AI projects on notice Mozilla says Microsoft is using Copilot and Edge to tighten its grip on Windows Gmail encryption goes mobile, but email itself remains the weak link France starts moving government systems from Windows to Linux xAI sues Colorado over AI law, calling it a threat to free speech Florida launches probe into OpenAI as company eyes massive IPO South Korea moves to curb the meteoritic rise of DRAM and PC hardware prices Keychron shares 3D keyboard blueprints on GitHub, opening hardware to modders Nvidia's mythical N1 SoC surfaces on a real motherboard, and it's packing 128GB of LPDDR5X Tesla is working on a smaller, cheaper electric SUV DDR5 prices drop nearly 30%, but memory costs are still far from normal Amazon laid off 30,000 workers while CEO Andy Jassy got a 30% pay bump FBI recovers "deleted" Signal messages through iPhone notifications PC market posts modest growth in early 2026 despite memory shortages and economic strain TikTok star Khaby Lame's $975 million deal is raising serious red flags VeraCrypt, WireGuard among projects disrupted by Microsoft account suspensions Microsoft OneDrive users report mysterious spam files that won't go away Intel tops $300 billion market cap for the first time since the dot-com boom The cables powering the internet are under the ocean – and under threat A version of Windows 10 released a decade ago is now eligible for additional security patches Iran-linked hackers are now targeting industrial controllers in US infrastructure Hackers are turning home routers into tools to spy on Microsoft 365 users A weird macOS bug is blocking new network connections after 49 days of uptime NIH study identifies experimental opioid with strong pain relief and lower addiction risk SanDisk's new 2TB SD card costs $2,000, and it's not even the fastest option Ohio man pleads guilty in first case under federal law banning AI deepfakes John Deere will pay $99 million in right-to-repair lawsuit, but admits nothing Tech layoffs are piling up: 80,000 jobs cut in early 2026, and AI is getting the blame Greece to ban social media for children under 15 starting next year New report revives theory that cryptographer Adam Back could be Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto Anthropic just lost another round in its fight with the Pentagon Some Windows 3.1 apps were simply "too evil" for Windows 95 to support, says Microsoft veteran AMD confirms Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 priced at $899 German police identify REvil and GandCrab mastermind now living in Russia After Wi-Fi 7's Speed Push, Wi-Fi 8 Is Turning to Reliability
Scientists created a paint so black it makes cars look like silhouettes
Skye Jacobs · 2026-06-23 · via TechSpot

Serving tech enthusiasts for over 25 years.
TechSpot means tech analysis and advice you can trust.

Looking ahead: The idea of a car that appears to swallow light rather than reflect it has lingered on the fringes of materials science for years. Now, a group of researchers says it has taken a step toward that goal with a new composite coating that combines extreme light absorption with practical durability.

A team at Nipsea Group, working through its Color Technology and core R&D unit in Shanghai, has developed what it describes as an "ultra-black coating" capable of absorbing roughly 99.9% of visible light. The material is clearly inspired by Vantablack, the carbon nanotube coating that makes objects look almost flat and featureless.

That visual effect has been demonstrated before, most notably when BMW applied Vantablack to a 2019 X6 concept vehicle. The automaker said at the time that "a surface coated in Vantablack loses its defining features to the human eye, with objects appearing two-dimensional," adding that the effect "can be interpreted by the brain as staring into a hole or even a void."

Despite the attention, coatings like Vantablack have remained impractical for production vehicles, in part because of problems with adhesion, durability, and the difficulty of scaling up production.

The Nipsea team is trying to get around those limitations by changing how the material is structured, instead of relying only on pure carbon nanotube arrays. Their approach combines carbon black with carbon nanotubes, taking advantage of a natural pi-interaction between the two. That interaction helps the particles line up into a connected structure that traps light more effectively.

In a paper in Matter & Light, the researchers describe the material as having a "unique structural light-trapping morphology," and say it absorbs more light than a standard carbon black coating. Instead of reflecting light off a surface, the structure repeatedly scatters and absorbs it within the coating.

In terms of performance, the material approaches the optical characteristics of more specialized nanotube systems. The researchers note that vertically aligned carbon nanotube arrays can achieve reflectance as low as 0.04%, with Vantablack at about 0.05%.

Their composite coating measures around 0.08% reflectance across the visible spectrum. The reflectance is higher, but the tradeoff is better stability and more practical use.

Durability has been a persistent issue with nanotube-heavy coatings, particularly when it comes to adhesion and environmental resistance. To test those factors, the team exposed coated panels to prolonged heat and moisture. One sample sat in a 40°C water bath for 10 days, while another was subjected to 95% humidity for two weeks. According to the researchers, the coated panels showed "no significant visual paint defects" and passed a standard adhesion test.

There is also the question of how such a coating would function on an actual vehicle. Ultra-black surfaces can obscure contours and design details to the point where objects lose visual depth, something BMW acknowledged when it said the effect can "blot out virtually all the design details and highlights." That has implications not just for styling, but potentially for visibility.

To address that, the Nipsea team added a glossy overcoat in its automotive tests. The goal was to reintroduce enough reflectivity to preserve the perception of shape, while maintaining most of the underlying light-absorbing properties.

A transmission electron microscopy image shows the carbon black and carbon nanotube paint mixture that creates the ultra-dark, "optical black hole" effect

The commercial angle is tied to demand in the luxury segment, particularly in China. "In China, car color has become a key selling point," said Nipsea research chemist Zhiwei Liu. "Deep black finishes have long been the premium choice and signature color for luxury cars due to their elegant appearance, powerful visual impact, and luxurious undertone."

Even with those advances, the coating is not ready for production. Scaling nanomaterial-based systems remains a challenge, especially when consistency and cost come into play. "[There] is still room for improvements in practical processability of carbon-nanotube-containing nanomaterials," Liu said.

For now, the work signals incremental progress rather than a near-term product. It points to a shift from ultra-black coatings as lab curiosities toward materials that can actually survive in everyday use.