Intel's Pohoiki Beach is a Neuromorphic Computer Capable of Simulating 8 Million Neurons (venturebeat.com) 58
During the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) Electronics Resurgence Initiative 2019 summit in Detroit, Michigan, Intel unveiled a system codenamed "Pohoiki Beach," a 64-chip computer capable of simulating 8 million neurons in total. From a report: Intel Labs managing director Rich Uhlig said Pohoiki Beach will be made available to 60 research partners to "advance the field" and scale up AI algorithms like spare coding and path planning. [...] Pohoiki Beach packs 64 128-core, 14-nanometer Loihi neuromorphic chips, which were first detailed in October 2017 at the 2018 Neuro Inspired Computational Elements (NICE) workshop in Oregon.
They have a 60-millimeter die size and contain over 2 billion transistors, 130,000 artificial neurons, and 130 million synapses, in addition to three managing Lakemont cores for task orchestration. Uniquely, Loihi features a programmable microcode learning engine for on-chip training of asynchronous spiking neural networks (SNNs) -- AI models that incorporate time into their operating model, such that components of the model don't process input data simultaneously. This will be used for the implementation of adaptive self-modifying, event-driven, and fine-grained parallel computations with high efficiency.
They have a 60-millimeter die size and contain over 2 billion transistors, 130,000 artificial neurons, and 130 million synapses, in addition to three managing Lakemont cores for task orchestration. Uniquely, Loihi features a programmable microcode learning engine for on-chip training of asynchronous spiking neural networks (SNNs) -- AI models that incorporate time into their operating model, such that components of the model don't process input data simultaneously. This will be used for the implementation of adaptive self-modifying, event-driven, and fine-grained parallel computations with high efficiency.
So just network about 10,000 of these together... (Score:2)
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Even a real time simulation of a cockroach brain is already pretty damn exciting you numpty.
That's an understatement, especially when it starts tweeting or goes off-script during press conferences. Look out below!
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1 billion sounds about right
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Re:So just network about 10,000 of these together. (Score:4, Informative)
You're mixing up two different arguments, namely that evolution took a long time, and that we need to observe a working copy to understand how it works before we can really start. But evolution never had a working brain to copy. It just applied random changes and happened to stumble on a working brain.
And your (modified below) number of 1 million years is just 100k generations, which could be done much faster than nature does it. We don't have to wait 10 years for the body to grow so we can "mate" two different designs in a simulation.
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Half the brains of a mouse. We can have maze solving contests with this.
So about twice the brains of the average politician then.
Mis-read the title (Score:2)
Thought it said "Capable of Stimulating 8 Million Neurons". Inevitable visions of super-charged porn ensued.
Close but no cigar. (Score:3)
hey have a 60-millimeter die size and contain over 2 billion transistors, 130,000 artificial neurons, and 130 million synapses, in addition to three managing Lakemont cores for task orchestration.
Intel almost managed to put out a product that wasn't vulnerable to Meltdown but it seems they couldn't help themselves.
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hey have a 60-millimeter die size and contain over 2 billion transistors, 130,000 artificial neurons, and 130 million synapses, in addition to three managing Lakemont cores for task orchestration.
Intel almost managed to put out a product that wasn't vulnerable to Meltdown but it seems they couldn't help themselves.
It might end up the only way we can tell what our nascent AI overlords are thinking.
Main application: Creating reaction shots (Score:1)
...of simulated human brains who realize that they are not actually humans, then go Robocop 2 failed specimen on themselves.
Careful for what you wish for (Score:1)
"The good news is we can emulate a typical human mind. The bad news it wants to watch porn and cat videos all day."
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Um, it was intended as (mostly) a joke.
Between a cockroach and a frog (Score:5, Informative)
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Another area that makes the comparison difficult is the emerging role of astrocytes in computation. Each one surrounds about one million synapses and influences the behavior of the synapses and neurons in addition to participating in their own glial network. Their exa
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