Will this device revolutionize AI?
>>57180030
No, if they used that to make processors, then you'd have a CPU which increases in size the more electricity passes through it.
>>57180030
no why would it
>>57180030
Whoever thought of that name should be shot.
>>57180030
>memristor
>meme resistor
The robots will increase shitposting efficiency exponentially faster than Australians. This is truly the end of humanity.
>>57180030
HP's titanium pot memristors are the most promising in terms of their wide range of functionality. Still the impact that HP's business is able to have is incredibly questionable. They're a fractured company on already shaky ground.
If any hardware is going to have a dramatic effect on AI, it will be IBM.
>>57180044
A memrister, which is really a type of resistive RAM, can hold a state, and perform logic. It can do either on the fly. Because of this unique multi function ability you could create a dense array that is capable of being programmed like an FPGA. Form new pathways as needed to either store data, or activate units for executing instructions. It is the closest thing to a working brain there is in terms of this behavior.
The hypothesis is that the right software could utilize such a device and simulate a fully functional consciousness.
>>57180101
>>57180030
More like memeristor...
>>57180044
From what I understand the arch would allow for imitating the nervous system decently
>>57180120
This guy seems to explain it quite well
>>57180030
>memistor