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Memristors spell end of Big Software, Hardware


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2014 Dec 11, 4:02am   7,659 views  18 comments

by John Bailo   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Revolutionary Linux++ from HP allows them to create 'data center in a box'!!

http://www.technologyreview.com/news/533066/hp-will-release-a-revolutionary-new-operating-system-in-2015/

Comments 1 - 18 of 18        Search these comments

1   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 4:03am  

LOL!!! They should stick with selling ink.

2   John Bailo   2014 Dec 11, 4:05am  

The Machine’s design includes other novel features such as optical fiber instead of copper wiring for moving data around. HP’s simulations suggest that a server built to The Machine’s blueprint could be six times more powerful than an equivalent conventional design, while using just 1.25 percent of the energy and being around 10 percent the size.

3   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 4:06am  

Computing power is a commodity nowadays, just like printer ink.

4   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 4:08am  

The next computing breakthrough most likely comes from either

1) Google, or
2) an unheard-of company

5   John Bailo   2014 Dec 11, 4:08am  

Peter P says

printer ink.

I read once that printer ink (sold in $36 cartridges) is something like 5000 times more expensive per ounce than the world's finest champagnes!

6   John Bailo   2014 Dec 11, 4:13am  

Peter P says

The next computing breakthrough

What we really need is an NP Computer.

Has you seen "The Travelling Salesman"?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ybd5rbQ5rU

7   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 5:23am  

John Bailo says

Peter P says

printer ink.

I read once that printer ink (sold in $36 cartridges) is something like 5000 times more expensive per ounce than the world's finest champagnes!

Yep. It is highly lucrative.

8   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 5:29am  

John Bailo says

What we really need is an NP Computer.

Many complex problems have much simpler approximations. We want a computer that think like life.

In the end, would you prefer the "best" solution in 100 years or a 99.9% optimal one in 5 seconds?

9   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 5:32am  

Cryptography based on "asymmetric" functions or any form of "computability" is not sustainable.

11   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 6:26am  

The best HP computer to date is still the trusty 12C.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HP-12C

12   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Dec 11, 8:26am  

curious2 says

It sounds like they've developed a new type of vaporware, by announcing non-existent software for hardware that doesn't exist yet either

HP has nothing to lose: they're pretty much down to selling expensive ink.
That's why they're dangerous.

13   John Bailo   2014 Dec 11, 12:48pm  

Peter P says

The best HP computer to date is still the trusty 12C.

Funny you mention that.

My college roommate and I both took an intro computing course (around 1980).

Our professor was very old school and taught the course using punch cards fed into a gigantic IBM 390 at computer center at the edge of campus.

However, he was very flexible in how we presented our assignments, since the course was more about numerical analysis than programming.

So, while I and the rest of the class carried around cartons of punch cards to the center, and waited hours for it to spit out watermelon paper that was the results, my friend did the entire coursework in his bed, programming on his HP and storing the results on the tiny memory strips that it used. I forget how he printed out the results, but I believe it had some sort of transfer or print cable.

14   Y   2014 Dec 11, 1:55pm  

I'll take my optimal local police force every time...

Peter P says

In the end, would you prefer the "best" solution in 100 years or a 99.9% optimal one in 5 seconds?

15   Peter P   2014 Dec 11, 2:46pm  

John Bailo says

So, while I and the rest of the class carried around cartons of punch cards to the center, and waited hours for it to spit out watermelon paper that was the results, my friend did the entire coursework in his bed, programming on his HP and storing the results on the tiny memory strips that it used. I forget how he printed out the results, but I believe it had some sort of transfer or print cable.

Some earlier HP calculators came with printers.

Here is an online museum of HP calculators:

http://www.hpmuseum.org

16   bob2356   2014 Dec 11, 4:43pm  

John Bailo says

My college roommate and I both took an intro computing course (around 1980).

Our professor was very old school and taught the course using punch cards fed into a gigantic IBM 390 at computer center at the edge of campus.

However, he was very flexible in how we presented our assignments, since the course was more about numerical analysis than programming.

So, while I and the rest of the class carried around cartons of punch cards to the center, and waited hours for it to spit out watermelon paper that was the results, my friend did the entire coursework in his bed, programming on his HP and storing the results on the tiny memory strips that it used. I forget how he printed out the results, but I believe it had some sort of transfer or print cable

Sounds more like an urban legend to me. The 390's didn't even come out until the 90's and I don't think the 12c was around till 82/83 or so and was pretty damn expensive like 400-500 in today's dollars. I did moonlighting as a night operator in various data centers from 78-85 and only saw one punch card machine the whole time. That one only ran really old jobs no one had bothered to put on disk about once a week or so. I bought a 12c circa 1988 or so when the prices came down some. It didn't have memory strips or an external interface. Took me quite a while to really get the hang of RPN. If I remember right you were limited to about 100 lines of code. You could have multiple programs but the total number of lines for all of them couldn't be more than 100. You just went to program mode then jumped to the first line of the program you wanted to run. Crude but effective

Makes a nice story though.

17   Peter P   2014 Dec 12, 12:08am  

I can only use RPN.

18   John Bailo   2014 Dec 12, 12:34am  

bob2356 says

Sounds more like an urban legend to me.

I did moonlighting as a night operator in various data centers from 78-85 and only saw one punch card machine the whole time.

Did you visit the Princeton Computing center in 1980?

This was way before I went there, but they were still using those punch card keyboards as late as 1979-80 (although it seemed to be mostly my class..another professor was teaching a similar course but using interactive terminals and pascal!):

https://twitter.com/muddlibrary/status/535433896289398784

The 390's didn't

A 360 then? We used JCL, and FORTRAN on the WATFOR compiler.

Maybe his calculator was the Ti-59:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TI-59_/_TI-58

Note the strip in upper image:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TI-59_/_TI-58#mediaviewer/File:TI-59.jpg

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