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Interview with David Kuck ENIAC-on-a-Chip ENIAC Versus the Pentium Happy Anniversary, ENIAC Modelling in Virtual Space Moore's Law Caveats The Illiac 1 HPCN Background and Trends |
Could we build a computer like HAL today? For any given technolgy what
factors determine how powerful a computer we can produce? What might
be the general design -- the computer architecture -- of a HAL suited
to tasks as diverse as controlling a spaceship and discussing personal
psychology with the crew? What types of hardware components would we
use? How would the hardware support the complex software required to
carry out the many humanlike functions of which HAL is capable? With the 20/20 vision of hindsight, we can examine the specific predictions of both the book and the film versions of 2001 and observe now that some of them were far too optimistic and others were not nearly optimistic enough. In fact, over the past fifty years, progress in computer engineering and computer science has been breathtaking in some aspects and disappointing in others. While some computer systems have become workhorses and milestone systems against which all successor systems are judged, others have shown great promise but delivered too little to attract a wide following. So how does one make a rational prediction about comptuer and microelectronics techology? Two basic hardware characteristics, which vary over time, allow us to predict future system size and capability ..... |