by bodigami » Mon 20 Jul 2009, 22:41:06
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'T')he Computer Revolution was Googled and it is Over. Few people or businesses have more need for increased computer power. HD on-demand video is here now. The last significant improvement will be the fiber build out.
The consumer is just about done buying next year's model. What Novus says is only partially true. There will be no multicore extravaganzas.
Moore's-Law-Is-No-More
That is just completely ridiculous.
Preliminary quantum computing chips are already in existence. There will only commence a similar technological progression as what occurred with microelectonics in silicon. Nanophotonics, too, is a really smokin' hot area of development for which switching technology has recently been announced.
So often, on PeakOil.com, you meet with posts that, in effect, say, "Since new ideas are not yet actualized, there is no possibility that they ever will be". Come on! That's just plain silly! The whole area of nanotechnology is experiencing significant breakthroughs all the time. Nanotechnology has enormous and stunning potential with particular applications to computing.
To say that the 500-year old trend of Progress in general has ended, or that no new scientific discoveries will emerge from current, cutting-edge research, or that significant tech applications are not possible with continued R&D is a completely wild, uninformed (and greatly biased) speculative guess.
For you, civilization cannot collapse fast enough. And you will twist your own perception of factual reality in order to continue to convince yourself that your Olduvai fantasy is really true. But dream on! There is absolutely ZERO indication that technological innovation is slowing down. If anything, it is accelerating rapidly.
Nature Magazine - 2020 computing: Champing at the bits$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Despite some remaining hurdles, the mind-bending and frankly weird world of quantum computers is surprisingly close. Philip Ball finds out how these unusual machines will earn their keep.
Five years ago, if you'd have asked anyone working in quantum computing how long it would take to make a genuinely useful machine, they'd probably have said it was too far off even to guess. But not any longer.