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AI IBM Supercomputing

IBM 'TrueNorth' Neuro-Synaptic Chip Promises Huge Changes -- Eventually 97

JakartaDean writes: Each of IBM's "TrueNorth" chips contains 5.4 billion transistors and runs on 70 milliwatts. The chips are designed to behave like neurons—the basic building blocks of biological brains. Dharmenda Modha, the head of IBM's cognitive computing group, says a system of 24 connected chips simulates 48 million neurons, roughly the same number rodents have.

Whereas conventional chips are wired to execute particular "instructions," the TrueNorth juggles "spikes," much simpler pieces of information analogous to the pulses of electricity in the brain. Spikes, for instance, can show the changes in someone's voice as they speak—or changes in color from pixel to pixel in a photo. "You can think of it as a one-bit message sent from one neuron to another." says one of the chip's chief designers. The chips are designed well not for training neural networks, but for executing them. This has significant implications for consumer AI: big companies with lots of resources could focus on the training, which individual TrueNorth chips in people's gadgets could handle the execution.
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IBM 'TrueNorth' Neuro-Synaptic Chip Promises Huge Changes -- Eventually

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  • You will be ruled by the King of Rats...

    I think not.

    Irony is not lost on silicon.

  • TFA (and its accompanying picture) indicate that 48 (not 24) chips are wired together to simulate a rodent brain.

    • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

      Evidence for the singularity! By the time I get to read all comments about new tech, the transistor count doubles!

  • "IBM 'TrueNorth' Neuro-Synaptic Chip Promises Huge Changes -- Eventually"

    So basically... the chips are thinking about it?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • It appears that you're growing the computer to limits beyond what I expected. Well done.
  • Just wire up the brains of a bunch of mice. No development cost. Just a little bit of feed and a pooper scooper...

"When the going gets tough, the tough get empirical." -- Jon Carroll

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