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posted by n1 on Wednesday November 08 2017, @04:38AM   Printer-friendly
from the phasers-set-to-1 dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1984

Historically, one of the larger bottlenecks to computing performance hasn't been processor speed; it has been getting data and instructions to and from the processor. Working with memory isn't only a performance bottleneck, as the multiple layers of caches and high-speed memory add significantly to a computer's power budget. Other systems, like the extremely power-efficient neuron, mix processing and memory in individual cells.

That has inspired some computer scientists to try to figure out if we could do the same. Resistance-based memory, like memristors and phase-change memory, operate based on physics that make them amenable to performing calculations, and a few proof-of-concept demonstrations have been done using them. But a team from IBM Zurich has now gone beyond proof of concept, and it has used an array of a million phase change memory bits as an analog computer, performing tests for temporal correlations on real-world weather data.

[...] The authors note that a variety of other calculations, like factorization and matrix manipulations, can be performed using phase change memory arrays, meaning this isn't a one-trick pony. The primary limitation, in the end, may be with developing a sufficient market for phase change as memory. If it ends up being mass produced, then adapting it for calculations would probably be relatively simple. But phase change memory has been on the periphery of the market for nearly a decade now, and there's no clear indication that it will be taking off. Until that changes, using it for analog computing will be a niche within a niche.

Source: Ars Technica

Nature Communications, 2017. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-01481-9


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Osamabobama on Wednesday November 08 2017, @05:40PM

    by Osamabobama (5842) on Wednesday November 08 2017, @05:40PM (#594165)

    I have an ice cube tray that has twelve bits of phase change memory. It's not very fast, but I suppose speed comes with smaller scale. I don't have it hooked up to an analog computer, though; I mainly use it to reduce entropy to acceptable levels in temperature measurements.

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