Computing ecosystems are changing dramatically. AI, quantum computing, exascale supercomputers, biological DNA, chemical and ...
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Sound waves could drive neuromorphic chips that mimic brain efficiency
A new approach to neuromorphic computing proposes using acoustic waves — rather than electrical ...
Neuromorphic chips mimic the brain’s architecture, offering massive energy savings and real-time processing for edge AI applications. Companies like Intel, IBM, and BrainChip are pioneering the space, ...
This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American For the past few years, tech companies and ...
Neuromorphic computing, inspired by the brain, integrates memory and processing to drastically reduce power consumption compared to traditional CPUs and GPUs, making AI at the network edge more ...
Every thought you have, every face you recognise and every memory you recall is powered by an organ that consumes roughly the ...
Our latest and most advanced technologies — from AI to Industrial IoT, advanced robotics, and self-driving cars — share serious problems: massive energy consumption, limited on-edge capabilities, ...
Intrinsically stretchable electronics can be used to make wearable devices that collect large amounts of multimodal sensory data. This has led to a demand for enhanced near-sensor computing ...
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