Hewlett Packard Enterprise on Tuesday announced it was open-sourcing The Machine to spur development of the infant computer design project. HPE has invited the open source community to collaborate on its largest and most notable research project yet. The Machine focuses on reinventing the architecture underlying all computers built in the past 60 years. The new design model switches to a memory-driven computing architecture. The new design model switches to a memory-driven computing architecture. Bringing in open source developers early in the software development cycle will familiarize them with the fundamental shift.
This is what is interesting about Moore's Law. Baically technology has hit the road-bump of only becoming faster while its overall structure remains the same.
To achieve the next level we need to reinvent the computer; evolve it. Too long we've relied on bytes and bits and boxes to put them in. Data is too large to rely on that anymore. Its like measuring the universe in millimeters. Its not how fast a computer thinks anymore, its about how it thinks.
Besides, I think The Machine sounds cooler than Skynet.
HPE Wants Open Source Devs to Kick The Machine Into Gear
Posted by: Jack M. Germain June 10, 2016 05:00 AMHewlett Packard Enterprise on Tuesday announced it was open-sourcing The Machine to spur development of the infant computer design project. HPE has invited the open source community to collaborate on its largest and most notable research project yet. The Machine focuses on reinventing the architecture underlying all computers built in the past 60 years. The new design model switches to a memory-driven computing architecture. The new design model switches to a memory-driven computing architecture. Bringing in open source developers early in the software development cycle will familiarize them with the fundamental shift.
To achieve the next level we need to reinvent the computer; evolve it. Too long we've relied on bytes and bits and boxes to put them in. Data is too large to rely on that anymore. Its like measuring the universe in millimeters. Its not how fast a computer thinks anymore, its about how it thinks.
Besides, I think The Machine sounds cooler than Skynet.