"Latest" Ahmad Khan Rahimi, the so-called “Chelsea bomber,” was found guilty on all counts by a New York jury.           North Korean nuclear test confirmed           #HurricaneHarvey: Death Toll Rises, whole city is underwater right now            ' 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of western Indonesia early Friday           Hundreds trapped in '500-year flood' in Texas after #HurricaneHarvey            Trump administration is aware of presence of Afghan taliban leadership in Quetta and Peshawar Pak. General Nicholson Computers of the future resemble the human brain - OSNews

Computers of the future resemble the human brain

At the San Francisco campus of Intel, the leader in chip design.

Computers are evolving, and the next generation of machines could look like the human brain in which a central stem controls the nervous system and outsources tasks to the surrounding cortices, NYT's Cade Metz reports.
  • Why it matters: This shift could "diminish the power of Intel, the longtime giant of chip design and manufacturing, and fundamentally remake the $335 billion a year semiconductor industry that sits at the heart of all things tech," Metz writes.
  • Technology in the classroom can improve primary mathematics


  • "For about half a century, computer makers have built systems around a single, do-it-all chip ... That's what you'll find in the middle of your own laptop computer or smartphone."
  • "Now, computer engineers are fashioning more complex systems ... dividing work into tiny pieces and spreading them among vast farms of simpler, specialized chips that consume less power."
  • The bottom line: By mimicking brain's biological design, these new computers can accelerate the speed at which artificial intelligence advances and "the dream of machines that can navigate the physical world by themselves can one day come true."

Computers of the future resemble the human brain Computers of the future resemble the human brain Reviewed by on September 18, 2017 Rating: 5

No comments:

Powered by Blogger.