DailyDirt: Who Cares About Moore's Law Anymore?
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
The end of Moore's law is basically here already, but it's not such a surprise. It's maybe more surprising that it's lasted so long. What are we going to do now that our computers aren't getting exponentially better? Try completely different ways of making computers, of course. Quantum computers are making some significant advances, even though they're not ready to compete with regular silicon processors just yet. Here are just a few new quantum milestones that could lead to some re-thinking of encryption schemes and programming courses.- A quantum computer built from just 5 atoms demonstrates a possible new way to build a practical quantum computer with many, many more qubits. The researchers working on this demo used Shor's algorithm to factor the number 15 (ok, not exactly encryption-breaking yet), but it's another step towards scaling up a quantum computer that could do calculations that are impractical for traditional computers today. [url]
- A quantum spin liquid could be useful for making a quantum computer someday -- if we can figure out how to manipulate them and measure them correctly. Cooling exotic materials down to near absolute zero is a bit problematic, but a few supercomputers in the 1980s were cooled with liquid nitrogen, so it's not impossible to imagine liquid-helium-cooled quantum computers will exist for a while until technology improves. [url]
- Optical qubits are making some progress, too. Researchers have achieved "multiphoton entangled quantum states" -- for the first time -- and they say it should be scalable.... [url]
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Filed Under: optical qubits, quantum computers, quantum computing, quantum physics, quantum spin liquid, qubits, shor's algorithm, supercomputers
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moore's law
http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2015/04/economist-explains-17
not until 2025?
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Totally cool
People are still using liquid nitrogen to cool their computers, for example...
http://imagescdn.tweaktown.com/content/5/2/5276_01_team_au_overclocking_in_perth_with_liqu id_nitrogen_deanzo_s_thoughts.jpg
Woot!
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Moore's Law
You know that isn't what Moore's Law says, right?
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Re: My dream...
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Re: Moore's Law
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Re: Re: Moore's Law
I was hoping Michael Ho did though.
While speed has plateaued lately, density is still improving nicely, so Moore's law is still in no danger of ending.
It may not continue to be economically viable to keep it up though.
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Re: Re: My dream...
Throw Xubuntu on there and take off!
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Re: My dream...
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i7 5820k, ASUS x99, Radeon R9 390X, 256 Samsung 950 pro m.4
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I know... we want a cerebral cortex interface so it knows what we want before we do. LOL.
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Re: Re: Moore's Law
But, without a similar increase in speed we have found it difficult to make use of the extra density - so practical performance has not improved to the same extent.
Also Vitanyi's 1995 prediction for the inevitably 3kw laptop/heater by 2015 has not materialised and so we have definitely fallen short in some sense.
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Re: Re: My dream...
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Re: Re: My dream...
The amount of computing power that is wasted for no good reason is stupendously mindblowing. I don't see any sign that this will change anytime soon.
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Re: Re: Re: Moore's Law
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