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Topic: Asics? This is what they dreamed of in the 80s: Wafer scale Integration (Read 1021 times)

full member
Activity: 196
Merit: 100
... did not watch
Damn, how relevant can a 24 years old video be ?

Seriously, stop

To my knowledge, electricity and how we use it hasn't fundamentally changed in, well, since we started using it.  I didn't watch either, but I have no doubt the concepts may still hold up.  Perhaps you might not have ideas 20 years ahead of their time, but that doesn't mean someone else didn't.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
... did not watch
Damn, how relevant can a 24 years old video be ?

Seriously, stop
could you be trolling?  Shocked
donator
Activity: 1731
Merit: 1008
 ... did not watch
Damn, how relevant can a 24 years old video be ?

Seriously, stop
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
Yeah its one of those things, like 3D Cinema... nobody thinks it will ever be around till it suddenly does and you ask yourself why it hasn't much sooner.
legendary
Activity: 2408
Merit: 1009
Legen -wait for it- dary
That vid is 24 years old! You'd think they would have something produced by now!
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
I just discovered this video:  Shocked

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7JYZviFH54

And the strange thing is: at some point these things will actually work.
What does that mean for us?

This process makes traditional VLSI obsolete. The cost of manufacturing computers would be  so drastically reduced (No more expensive PCBs, packaging and so on) that building a customized chip-based application specific asic would be no longer needed.

We simply would have 10^5 to 10^7 processors on a large silicon device (Using 180-32nm with 8 inch wafers)
And if you research a little there are already some companies willing to touch the subject again...  Wink
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