Silicon computing is starting to run up against hard limits when it comes to energy usage. Bitcoin mining is currently using 2% of the USA's energy. Data Centers are projected to be using a third of Ireland's electricity output by 2026.
However it seems next-generation solutions are on the horizon, and this is one of them. Transitioning computing to energy-efficient new technologies is another front in the war to slow climate change.
The solution is right in front of us. Stop burning fossil fuels. We could do it tomorrow, but we don't want too bcz it would lower people's quality of life, and make billionaires less rich, heavy emphasis on the later statement.
It wouldn't lower people's quality of life. People who live in medium density neighbourhoods and ride bikes to work have better lives. They sleep better because it's quiet, breathe better because there's less pollution, don't need to go to the gym, and get plenty of sun. Plus, no road rage. If you take public transit, you can read a book on the train. What I'm describing is the way life is supposed to be.
Original source (free access) : https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202303835
So, if I read it correctly, they do not modify the fiber so the training information would be store in the fiber.
They do not have light that can learn by itself either ... instead, what they do is they notice that a very reproducible noise pattern is created and they are training a machine outside of the optical fiber to recognize which part of this noise could be interpreted as information ... all of this is in fact very power costly, ... and is likely to remain so.
Edit : I removed my last statement because I don't want to start bickering about sterile nonsense.
It's significantly less compirationally costly however because you only need to train and run a small, linear output transformation rather than a full nonlinear neural network.
Well, in fact I don't care at all for that last statement of mine. So, if this is all you disagree about my reading of the article then it's fair game for me.
Interesting response. Do you have some particular physics qualification that gives you confidence to say this in response to the Physics Professor at Tne Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology who is making these claims?
B. Fischer, M. Chemnitz, Y. Zhu, N. Perron, P. Roztocki, B. MacLellan, L. Di Lauro, A. Aadhi, C. Rimoldi,
T. H. Falk, R. Morandotti: Neuromorphic Computing via Fission-based Broadband Frequency Generation.
Adv. Sci. 2023, 10, 2303835. https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202303835
This magazine has a good impact factor as far as a quick search shows.
Well that's dramatically better than techradar. It's hard to believe human beings living regular lives are doing this kind of thing. How did we get here?