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___Price___ t1_it8g957 wrote
Reply to comment by OptimisticSkeleton in The End of Moore’s Law: Silicon computer chips are nearing the limit of their processing capacity. But is this necessarily an issue? Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies by CPHfuturesstudies
It’s been that way for years so they have altered chip design layout.
Even the idea of stacking or cube shaped models etc.
Mores law will be dead when we have 1nm chips laid out in the most efficient form with superconductors that runs in tandem with a quantum chip and artificial brain tissue, even then is that the actual limitation? Could anti matter silicon create faster computations by energy relativisticly running backwards in time. We are still working on theory’s on different states of matter, quantum loop theory is still pretty new, saying more law is dead is saying science has figured it out and manufacturing has caught up.
___Price___ t1_it8emt5 wrote
Reply to comment by PortiaLabiata in Sewage sludge and other waste products could be turned into industrial feedstock that cuts down on waste and carbon emissions by mutherhrg
Industrial feedstocks are raw materials used to make industrial products and thousands of consumer goods. Many industrial products are made from oil and natural gas feedstocks, which have a high energy content that could otherwise be used as fuel to heat homes, run vehicles, and power manufacturing processes.
Had to google it.
___Price___ t1_itltunn wrote
Reply to comment by Benton_Tarentella in The End of Moore’s Law: Silicon computer chips are nearing the limit of their processing capacity. But is this necessarily an issue? Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies by CPHfuturesstudies
That’s making the assumption exponential growth would stop.
Exponential growth would only stop because economic limitations and a barrier of theory.
As of right now it’s nowhere near dead.