Brain-Inspired Computer Made From Duroquinone 77
hasu notes that scientists at the National Institute for Materials Science at Tsukuba in Japan have created a device, consisting of 17 duroquinone molecules on a gold surface, that can in theory encode 4.3 billion outcomes. The "device" does not constitute a practical computer, since it requires both a scanning tunneling microscope and operation near absolute zero. A single duroquinone is surrounded by sixteen others, and weak chemical bonds allow a pulse to the central molecule to shift all seventeen molecules in a variety of ways. Each duroquinone has four different "settings," so a single pulse can have 4^16 possible outcomes. As a demonstration the researchers docked 8 other nano-devices to their 17-molecule computer. It is unclear how well they have characterized the inputs that result in 4.3 billion different outputs. They are working on a 3D design that would have 1,024 duroquinone molecules surrounding a central one.
State of the art??!?? (Score:4, Funny)
Some kind of robot or battlesuit, right? (Score:4, Funny)
Elaboration Please (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Elaboration Please (Score:5, Informative)
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-ellie
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It sounds a lot like a logical gate array to me. (In function, that is.)
Still, the physical size of it is very impressive.
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It means bring your coat [wikipedia.org]...
Re:Elaboration Please (Score:5, Funny)
Really cold : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero [wikipedia.org]
A woman's heart? (Score:2)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_Zero [wikipedia.org]
That quantum computer that made news a while ago was the same way.
Anyone else notice the three... (Score:1)
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But... (Score:4, Funny)
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Command line, maybe.
Re:But... What would it do for Brock's Spain in (Score:2)
" The machine is made from 17 molecules of the chemical duroquinone. Each one is known as a "logic device".
They each resemble a ring with four protruding spokes that can be independently rotated to represent four different states."
Would they be: Liquid, Gas, Solid, Kinetic/Memetic or Magnetic/Frenetic?
And, if you built one of these for Frankenstein, and it crashed from over-guttural grunting, would it be Blankenstein?
Can they be used to create drones, or upgra
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Kirk (toward Spock): YOU are ILLOGICAL
Boma (referring to Spock): I'm sick and TIRED of taking orders from this MACHINE!
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destroys the analytial Brain,
leaving only a single brain
perspective android servility.
Educators who suppress the
Harmonic Time Cube [timecube.com] 4 Day
4 corner Earth simultaneous
rotation should be ki...., for
they threaten all humanity.
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question is, will it create linux?
So it can store an integer up to 4.3 billion? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So it can store an integer up to 4.3 billion? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:So it can store an integer up to 4.3 billion? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:So it can store an integer Expressive... (Score:4, Funny)
But, if they use it in bugs, and they abandon their masters, it will give a new meaning to "buggin out". If they emerge from a wig-wearing woman, then we literally have "wiggin out".
But, as for expressionism.... do you want IMpressionism?
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So it can store an integer up to 4.3 billion?
Doesn't sound like impressive computing.
How large of an integer have -you- stored in only 1 atom today? ;}
Seriously though, its not the amount or size of data here thats the break through, its the method they are using to store it, which actually is quite impressive.
Imagine when they get this ramped up to a thousand, or ten thousand atoms, which will still be invisible to the naked eye, and store many integers up to mind boggling values.
I don't foresee this ramping up hard drive storage in the next hundred years, but there are still plenty of us
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Well, look at it this way. The serial bus on your computer can transmit either a 0 or a 1 followed by more of the same so it takes N transmissions to transmit N bits. However, if you can transmit any number between 0 and 4^16-1 then you can transmit 32 bits in one shot, and N bits in N/32 shots. Now, how many shots per second can be made depends on how fast the encoding can occur after a lasering. At the molecular size, it could be fast, but near absolute zero maybe it
Nano (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, though, this is incredibly small! The molecular computation machiniery necessary to direct our nanomachines are going to be far more interesting, challenging, and incredible than the nanomachines themselves.
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Video and model (Score:5, Informative)
So, how's it not practical? (Score:1, Funny)
Very cool (Score:1)
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Wow, 4.3 billion states? (Score:4, Insightful)
Is this really a computer? Or 32 bits worth of really impractical memory?
Re:Wow, 4.3 billion states? (Score:5, Informative)
It's good that they're researching this; maybe someday it'll lead to faster, more compact storage. But when they release statements about how they can store "4.3 billion different states", they seem to be trying to market themselves. You can do the same with 32 pennies.
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Re:Wow, 4.3 billion states? (Score:4, Insightful)
You noticed that as well. I replied as much to a post above. Scientists have ways of making their "discoveries" seem much more impressive than they really are. It helps keep the grant money coming in. After all, which sounds more impressive?
"I've made a 32 bit register that requires a room-size microscope and refrigerator to operate."
"I've made a molecular 'brain' that holds over FOUR BILLION states!"
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Hilary might just have a chance.
Well... (Score:4, Insightful)
How is that a computer? (Score:2)
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Make a great D&D Number Generator (Score:3, Funny)
brain inspired? (Score:1)
...partnering with Windows (Score:1)
Memory vs Computation (Score:2, Interesting)
This sounds very weak (Score:2)
Inaccurate Summary? (Score:2)
So I did a little test. I went to Google news and searched for "computer duroquinone [google.com]".
Then I searched for "http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&hs=lJI&resnum=0&um=1&resnu
brains in jars (Score:1)