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AI News: Indian Institute of Science — Explained in 60s

Tech

The hardest computational problems are not waiting for faster chips – they are waiting for machines that compute in a fundamentally different way. A multi-institution team, emerging from the Telluride Neuromorphic and Cognition Engineering workshop in Colorado, and the Bangalore Neuromorphic Engineering Workshop (BNEW) at IISc, has built a neuromorphic computer that combines quantum-tunnelling physics with a brain-inspired architecture to find solutions to hard mathematical problems. For decades, Moore’s law delivered the exponential gains that made “buy a faster computer” a viable strategy for tackling complex problems. The next order of magnitude will not come from smaller process nodes, rather from architectures that think and compute differently. This work therefore represents a community of neuromorphic engineers from around the globe, who regularly meet and brainstorm ideas at the Bangalore Neuromorphic Engineering Workshop in Asia, the Telluride Neuromorphic Engineering Workshop in the Americas, and the CapoCaccia Neuromorphic Workshop in Europe. Read more: https://iisc.ac.in/a-eureka-machine-that-thinks-like-nature-and-explores-what-ai-cannot/ #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #MachineLearning #TechAI #AITools #AIBreakthrough

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