Engineers have long lived by a simple, seemingly obvious rule when designing new computers: The machines have to deliver correct answers.
If asked to compute two plus two, a computer should answer four. But what if computers didn’t always have to answer correctly?
Nearly a decade age, a Houston computer scientist posed this heretical question. Today, it’s led to a movement dubbed “probabilistic computing,” which he believes will revolutionize the future of computing.
On Sunday, Krishna Palem, speaking at a computer science meeting in San Francisco, will announce results of the first real-world test of his probabilistic computer chip: The chip, which thrives on random errors, ran seven times faster than today’s best technology while using just 1/30th the electricity.
Just think: One need never again worry about draining an iPhone battery in a day or even a week.
“The results were far greater than we expected,” said Palem, a Rice University professor who envisions his chips migrating to mobile devices in less than a decade.
And hopefully some of the companies that will arise to design, manufacture, and use those chips will be located right here. Regardless, this is an exciting development.
And if we tolerate random, unpredictable errors in our “brains,” they’re different from politics how?