With that thinking you can easily argue that every trivially simple techology was born from alien tech.
The fork? Alien tech. We pitiful humans are way to stupid to have ever developed it on our own.
Xtors though, thankfully I worked on them in first person so I do know different. There is nothing alien about them or our understanding of the physics that bely them.
It was a natural transition from vacuum tubes (the market existed), and
discovering their semiconductor properties was no more difficult or improbable than the discovery of
vulcanization of rubber. (i.e. both were accidents, but easy ones to make that would have happened sooner or later)
It's too bad though that aliens traveled all the way here and all we got out of it was the internet and the ability to twitter. We should have taken the FTL drive.
Ivybridge alien tech still isn't going to get you to the nearest star in anything less than decades while traveling at the speed of light
Actually.
I used to work for the government as an engineer. Type and place are irrelevant.
In 2006, I was lead engineer on a team tasked with reverse engineering three UFOs that crashed in Vermont. Actual From-Another-Planet-UFOs and not weather balloons gone astray type of UFOs.
I can't talk about much of the project...not because of some red classified stamps across everything, but because, quite simply, there isn't much to talk about. Their propulsion systems were largely destroyed, and what's left makes absolutely no sense. Their power system is fusion, something we'd have 20 years from now if we spent money on that instead of tanks and F-22's, but that's another discussion.
Much of what they have are made from alloys of metals that simply don't exist here on Earth...at least not yet. Much of their technology is sitting on shelves until we have the technology and science to understand it. The irony is, once we have the technology and science, the alien spacecraft won't be of much use to us. We can't replicate it today, and when we can, we won't need to.
At any rate.
The processors in the alien craft are ... from Earth. Intel Pentium 4 EE editions, circa 2004. More than 8000 of em, too. Humans, it seems, are the most adept EE's in the galaxy. Aliens that can get here, get here to steal our CPUs and not stick LED's up some redneck's ass.
Pressing on.
We got a decent enough idea of their power system, and learned that they couldn't power both their nav and propulsion system while keeping the many banks of CPUs cooking. They pre-plotted their route, shut down 75% of their CPU banks, then lit the fires.
In this case, they lit the fires right into Pico Peak.
Due to the extreme nature of the crash, we learned absolutely nothing about alien anatomy. Want to know what we know what an alien looks like? Got a jar of raspberry jam in the fridge? That's what we have, and we got that by scraping it off the inner windshields of their space craft. Well, obviously raspberry jam didn't fly three spacecraft into Pico Peak, but you get my idea.
If they'd just waited a year, they would have been able to upgrade all their P4 gear to Athlon 64 X2's, nearly halved their power budget and would have been able to run their nav while in flight.
We're all pretty sure they wet themselves when they found out about AVX in Sandy Bridge.