Future Computers Will Be Radically Different (Probabilistic Computers Explained)

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @AnastasiInTech
    @AnastasiInTech  Месяц назад +44

    Check out my new course on Technology and Investing in Silicon:
    www.anastasiintech.com/course
    The first 50 people to sign up get 25% off with the code “EARLY25”.

    • @Locreai
      @Locreai Месяц назад +5

      Love your content.

    • @TheBlueMahoe
      @TheBlueMahoe Месяц назад

      Do I need to study Electrical Engineering to do a Probabilistic Computer Start-up company?

    • @Locreai
      @Locreai Месяц назад

      @TheBlueMahoe no man. Delegate! Make someone else do their strong suit and you stick to yours. Using collaboration and delegation to make a real team and fill in the gaps of each other's competence.

    • @stevengill1736
      @stevengill1736 Месяц назад

      If you're gonna harvest noise, what about random number generators??
      I guess that sounds like synthetic data for stochastic parrots, kinda.... ;*[}

    • @guytech7310
      @guytech7310 Месяц назад +1

      I though years ago about using a comparator neural net using arrays of D/A converters & comparators for near instantaneous results. Basically a DLN will have perform a huge array of comparisions to detemine a match. But this could all be done using an analog array. using D/A to create a comparison node value that feeds into one side of the comparator. This would be extremely energy efficient & as well as fast. Imagine a chip with a 100M analog comparator nodes using a couple of watts of power.

  • @curiousdocumentaries
    @curiousdocumentaries Месяц назад +186

    The idea of p-bits acting as a bridge between classical and quantum computing is mind-blowing! Could this be the practical ‘quantum’ tech we need before full quantum computers are ready? cool

    • @XenoCrimson-uv8uz
      @XenoCrimson-uv8uz Месяц назад +10

      Most likely, I been waiting for this for ~8 Years, iirc.

    • @Nandarion
      @Nandarion Месяц назад +13

      No. q-bits without quantum entanglement are same as p-bits. But to be faster then classical computing entanglement is required. We already had p-bits.

    • @sylversoul88
      @sylversoul88 Месяц назад +6

      Very ai-bot comment. Genuinely asking are you a human?

    • @BarrellRofl
      @BarrellRofl Месяц назад +6

      @@Nandarion Yes so it seems that p-bits can solve with the equilibriums where the variance is converging, and then q-bits can solve where they diverge too.

    • @milktobo7418
      @milktobo7418 Месяц назад +7

      Sounds like more vapor-ware marketing speak.

  • @Äpple-pie-5k
    @Äpple-pie-5k Месяц назад +136

    As a computer scientist and software engineer. I see great niche cases for p-bits or stochastic bits. But 100% of software is 99% deterministic, even when stochastic elements are put inside "deterministic cages". So I want to stress that nondeterministic computing has only niche uses within a deterministic framework, for the great majority of tasks for which humans want to program digital solutions.

    • @chriskiwi9833
      @chriskiwi9833 Месяц назад +18

      AI isn’t 100% deterministic.

    • @BeReytM8
      @BeReytM8 Месяц назад +11

      @@chriskiwi9833agree, I think he missed this point and the associated demand, niche, yeah right.

    • @tikabass
      @tikabass Месяц назад +9

      That's true, but what is taking a toll on performance and power consumption _is_ the non-deterministic part. There will always be a mix of the two, if only for the very deterministic communications part.

    • @quibster
      @quibster Месяц назад +10

      @@tikabass this doesn't actually have a good power consumption, they only stated that it functions at room temperature, they did not state it functions at all "efficiently at room temperature". it only functions as efficiently as stated when it is supercooled- there is no inclusion of the cooling as a part of the power budget in this piece. instead as a consumer, it reads they are basically trying to refer to this component as "passive", when it _is not passive_. people who build servers will know this is the sort of chip that you need to have a significant portion of a server building dedicated to cooling to run at all efficiently.
      this piece steps around HPC by saying its "the old way", even though HPC accounts for the majority of computing required to be done by hardware right now. if you are looking to what is actually going to be relevant in the future, it's still deterministic, good old fashioned high performance compute, just with loads of added extras for developers- look at NextSilicon, they're on the yellow brick road in contrast to this extropic landfill, waste of sand.

    • @tikabass
      @tikabass Месяц назад +5

      @@quibster They stated this new tech has 100,000,000 (that's 1.e8) better power efficiency than the current tech, which mostly uses GPU cards. Take max the consumption of your GPU card and divide by 100,000,000 to have an idea of the power consumption of the new tech. Mine, a lowly GTX 1060 is rated at 120W, divided by 100,000,000 is 1.2 µW.... In terms of heat dissipation, that close to nil, and it's no surprise that this tech runs at room temperature. For comparison, the power consumption of the small LED that tells you your computer s on is in the order of 10mW, or 10,000 times more.

  • @sguthery111
    @sguthery111 Месяц назад +38

    This is not new. Doing it in silicon is new, but what has been done since the industrial revolution. Before there were active controls, you set up an equilibrium equation. On one side, you put things you could determine, and on the other side, you put things you couldn't determine. The met on something you wanted like the temperature of a room or the number of bags of flour you wanted to grind every day. You turned the system on and it settled on its equilibrium point. You fiddled with the things you could determine until the equilibrium point was what you wanted. Same is true for any analog computer. You dial in the properties of the equilibrium and you let it go. It's a beautiful implementation of a very old engineering method.

    • @TesterBoy
      @TesterBoy Месяц назад +5

      Is there a good youtube video that explains this in detail?

    • @ellsworthm.toohey7657
      @ellsworthm.toohey7657 Месяц назад

      @@TesterBoy Search for PID

    • @LupusMechanicus
      @LupusMechanicus Месяц назад +1

      @@TesterBoy First Principles of Engineering. It's actually greek philosophy. But more intrinsically like neurons.

    • @patrickhulliger7856
      @patrickhulliger7856 Месяц назад

      Connecting energy probabilities within equilibrium while maintaining synaptic connections is basically what the mind does?
      Putting that with a powerful AI…
      Because putting quantum computing with AI is what we have now with computers/bots?

    • @timothyblazer1749
      @timothyblazer1749 27 дней назад

      ​@patrickhulliger7856 that's what the brain does. We don't yet know what "the mind" does.

  • @forestpepper3621
    @forestpepper3621 Месяц назад +22

    There is "Monte Carlo Integration", which is a method of computing by random sampling, that has been known for several decades. To approximate the area of a shape in a rectangle, you could try covering just the interior of the shape with tiny boxes and then the total area of all the boxes is the approximate area of the shape; this is the classical computation. Alternatively, randomly choose a thousand points in the rectangle and count how many are inside the shape. This gives a statistical estimate of the area of the shape. As the number of dimensions of the rectangle increases (i.e., shapes in N-dimensional boxes), the numerical error associated with the classical computation tends to grow more quickly than the numerical error associated with random sampling, I recall. The "probabilistic computing" discussed in this video reminded me of these "random sampling" methods.

    • @lukebrennan5780
      @lukebrennan5780 Месяц назад +1

      Fascinating stuff. Stanislaw Ulam back in 1946 is generally credited for Monte Carlo method.

    • @denm8991
      @denm8991 Месяц назад +1

      Basically, that’s what I also mentioned above with regards to random number generators using noise or other parameters from nature. Monte Carlo integration and Monte Carlo methods in general use the central limit theorem and law of large numbers for obtaining the right answer . This of course is more accurate if we have an “unbiased “ random number generator.

    • @nomars4827
      @nomars4827 Месяц назад +1

      The problem is how to make those p-bits to make needed distribution with given parameters. They should be influenced by temperature very much. Will thermostatic solutions will be enough ?

    • @bogda1917
      @bogda1917 2 дня назад

      In your example, how would you check if the box is inside the area without a deterministic procedure? Fine you can generate points stochastically but to count them conditionally can be a probabilistic procedure as well?

  • @roch145
    @roch145 Месяц назад +232

    You didn’t really address how p-bits and algorithms and data work together to produce an output or solution.

    • @cybervigilante
      @cybervigilante Месяц назад +32

      You have to buy the course. Can't give away all the secrets for free 🤪

    • @roch145
      @roch145 Месяц назад +51

      @ I don’t need a course. Just a very high level description of the way you program with p-bits. Hardware advances are great. But the value of hardware is achieved through software. So it’s a great concept, but software will define its success.

    • @jamesgallagher2434
      @jamesgallagher2434 Месяц назад +14

      In all fairness you’d probably need an entire video for that

    • @aripapas1098
      @aripapas1098 Месяц назад +10

      @@roch145 "very high level description" sounds like a course; but, yes, the software is required. But isn't mathematical literature already being implemented as software for these quantum computers? To my recollection, the "software" is what enabled the hardware to begin development in the first place (seeing as the 'soft' is the structured thought and the 'hard' is the physical body) - but it's definitely something that needs to be more publicly enticing...

    • @sandun4983
      @sandun4983 Месяц назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/VQjmO77wyQo/видео.html

  • @dwaynestomp5462
    @dwaynestomp5462 Месяц назад +74

    I solved this years ago when I hooked up my stereo to my computer, put on some Zappa, turned it all the way up, and then pulled the knob off...

    • @rodorr
      @rodorr Месяц назад +7

      Saw Frank and The Mothers back in 1971. What a show (Portland, Oregon).

    • @dwaynestomp5462
      @dwaynestomp5462 Месяц назад +2

      @rodorr saw them in Ft Worth, I think it was 1976 or 77.

    • @DemonsCrest1
      @DemonsCrest1 Месяц назад +7

      but did you dial the volume up to 11? ^_^

    • @phoenixfireclusterbomb
      @phoenixfireclusterbomb Месяц назад +1

      @@dwaynestomp5462 hi Dad, must’ve been a bad hangover because you probably didn’t remember what happened that night but, here I am. 😂

    • @dwaynestomp5462
      @dwaynestomp5462 Месяц назад +2

      @phoenixfireclusterbomb awesome! Ready for me to move in yet?

  • @zimbot_KWB
    @zimbot_KWB Месяц назад +7

    It has been fun watching you mature from a bright young student into a powerful expert.

  • @mylesl2890
    @mylesl2890 Месяц назад +11

    Was not what I thought the video would be about, learned a TON ...loads of cool info, can't wait to see this deployed ! :)

  • @ramptechtruckcurtains6313
    @ramptechtruckcurtains6313 10 часов назад

    I am a booma from Australia. I am in ore of what is happening in this space.
    The way Anastasi explains things so concisely and soothingly in what might otherwise be terrifying is fantastic! I realise I need to "lean in"as I come kicking and screaming into the 21st century!❤❤

  • @letitiabeausoleil4025
    @letitiabeausoleil4025 Месяц назад +7

    Good work Anastasi.

  • @ericclarke1990
    @ericclarke1990 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @MegHumper
    @MegHumper Месяц назад +5

    SO LONG AND THANKS FOR ALL THE FISH.

  • @matthiashauer1975
    @matthiashauer1975 Месяц назад +1

    Danke!

  • @miguelJsesma
    @miguelJsesma Месяц назад +58

    Sounds very similar to adiabatic quantum computing. Useful for solving optimisation problems, but not universal computing.

    • @DeltaNovum
      @DeltaNovum Месяц назад +7

      Would you reckon it will be able to be used in even more real ray tracing? Where these methods are used to cast a whole different order of magnitude rays in random directions, where we would cast from the light sources, reacting with materials (maybe based on actual physcs and photon interaction), where only a very tiny margin will reach the camera. Just like irl.
      I hope im making sense here.

    • @trudyandgeorge
      @trudyandgeorge Месяц назад +5

      Yep. I foresee these analog systems working in tandem with classical Von Neumann, Turing machines, all in the same box. So the CPU offloads a task to the analog chip, then takes result back to classical land.

    • @trudyandgeorge
      @trudyandgeorge Месяц назад +3

      @@DeltaNovum It's hard to foresee exactly how things would come to be, but one thing is for sure, once we humans are able to abstract functionality behind a layer, we find all kinds of novel ways to use it. Just look at what we were able to do with data and arithmetic logic gates.

    • @kakistocracyusa
      @kakistocracyusa Месяц назад +1

      rebranded "quantum annealing"

  • @daves-selfie-wilderness-raves
    @daves-selfie-wilderness-raves 20 дней назад +1

    Appreciate the information Anastasi

  • @meinbherpieg4723
    @meinbherpieg4723 Месяц назад +3

    This is amazing. Great work. Thank you for curating such interesting and important knowledge.

  • @telwood15
    @telwood15 22 дня назад +2

    There have been breakthroughs since the stone ages and it will continue as long as we remain curious.

  • @friskydingo5370
    @friskydingo5370 Месяц назад +17

    Excellent video. 👍 I remember proposing a similar idea for a lidar project. 👍

  • @ryoshishibbone2704
    @ryoshishibbone2704 21 день назад

    I’m a subscriber. I don’t know why it takes three weeks for this to hit my feed.

    • @AnastasiInTech
      @AnastasiInTech  20 дней назад

      Oh that's sad... Turn on notifications :)

  • @Augustus_Imperator
    @Augustus_Imperator Месяц назад +130

    32K fully ray traced minecraft coming 😌

  • @XAirForcedotcom
    @XAirForcedotcom Месяц назад +16

    If Byte magazine was still around today, you would be doing the digital video version of it. That’s exactly what your discussions remind me of.

    • @XAirForcedotcom
      @XAirForcedotcom Месяц назад +1

      You should rename the channel to Byte Anastasia. LOL

    • @JVerstry
      @JVerstry Месяц назад +4

      I miss Byte magazine so much...

    • @XAirForcedotcom
      @XAirForcedotcom Месяц назад +1

      @@JVerstry I also missed the computer shopper in the sense that you could only go through it once really to find what you wanted and wouldn’t have to doom scroll all day and look at videos about stuff that misinform you

    • @XAirForcedotcom
      @XAirForcedotcom Месяц назад +2

      @@JVerstry I just bought a $2000 VR headset that I’m waiting until February or March, and after the fact, I found out that they’ve never shipped a product yet even though they’ve announced two other products

    • @NineInchTyrone
      @NineInchTyrone Месяц назад +2

      Byte and Shopper. Good times !

  • @John_Krone
    @John_Krone Месяц назад +1

    Thanks Anastasi for this video. I saw the video from Jensen Huang and had trouble following it. You made it clear, and I also appreciate the included graphics and videos you added.

  • @springwoodcottage4248
    @springwoodcottage4248 Месяц назад +4

    Super interesting & super well presented. As I understand it, the solution obtained by a Boltzmann or reduced Boltzmann machine are minimums in the parameter space defined by the energy of each state & the total energy of the system. Boltzmann showed that the probability of a given state is proportional to the exponent of the energy divided by the temperature & the true probability is obtained by multiplying the system temperature by Boltzmann’s constant. It is a brilliantly simple model that works with physical systems & has been adopted by the two winners of this years physics Nobel prize to create AI systems that find solutions as minimums in the model space using Boltzmann’s equation. It is sad to recall that Boltzmann took his own life a little before his ideas became accepted. Thank you for sharing!

    • @WarrenLacefield
      @WarrenLacefield Месяц назад +1

      Vaguely, but in a sense, this is similar to cooking (e.g., poached or scrambled eggs) or metal annealing (blacksmithing and sword blades, etc.). Harnessing the random effects of heating and cooling to achieve some equilibrium-defined result of interest.

    • @springwoodcottage4248
      @springwoodcottage4248 Месяц назад +1

      @ yes, but the difference is that the weights of each component are variables that can be adjusted as well as self adjusted to create minimums in the parameter space & unlike say eggs there are many more possible outcomes, some of which were never before explored as in the way AI became world champion at Go.

    • @WarrenLacefield
      @WarrenLacefield Месяц назад +1

      @@springwoodcottage4248 Yes, you are right about that. But for us to get to cookbooks and recipes (and the chemistry science of foods) our ancestors had to search manually (exploring Eric Drexler’s ”timeless potential landscape of technology”) .. Finding the right initial conditions and ingredients and treatments is a difference between me and a chef in the kitchen in search of a good "equilibrium" state! 🙂

    • @springwoodcottage4248
      @springwoodcottage4248 Месяц назад

      @ the difference between our ancestors searching & finding some solutions is that AI can search at least a million times faster & a much larger range of potential ingredients. The success of AlphaGo, AlphaChip, AlphaFold,…etc indicates that the AI approach can find minima that humans have failed to find and can do the searches at such speed that many decades of human searching can be done in hours. AI is an extraordinarily powerful technology that takes its origin from the studies of Boltzmann over 100 years ago.

  • @WanderingJoy
    @WanderingJoy Месяц назад +1

    Very glad to see you talking about this topic!

  • @doublezeta4s
    @doublezeta4s Месяц назад +6

    Thanks Anastasi for the informative content as always!
    Also, what is your bet that Graphene Processors could accelerate this further and shorten the time from conceptual phase to first hardware testing setup? Cheers and keep up with the amazing content!

  • @joemurray8902
    @joemurray8902 Месяц назад +2

    Fascinating! I've never heard of using noise for computation. I've worked with equipment that uses noise to hide in but never computing.

  • @PeterBergstrom-vv2sl
    @PeterBergstrom-vv2sl Месяц назад +3

    Very interesting finds. Hope they manage to iron out the drawbacks before another tech breaks daylight. I've read about analog computers in the early computing age and if this technology arrives, it has become full circle. Great video. Thanks!

  • @pierrebeauchesne1228
    @pierrebeauchesne1228 Месяц назад

    Merci!

  • @cybervigilante
    @cybervigilante Месяц назад +11

    Basically, you are using the universe, and its randomness, as part of your system. It reminds me of DNA, which doesn't just make things ex nihilo. It plugs into the environment to make things in a cooperative manner.

    • @trudyandgeorge
      @trudyandgeorge Месяц назад +2

      I love this. DNA was my goto analogy when describing the difference between code and software to a team of scientists (DNA being code and the phenotype/animal being its software)
      The initial part of your comment "...using the universe and its randomness" reminded me of Stephen Wolfram and his ruliad idea. He would say "using the universe and its computation".

    • @kakistocracyusa
      @kakistocracyusa Месяц назад

      keep selling, salesman.

    • @trudyandgeorge
      @trudyandgeorge Месяц назад

      @@kakistocracyusa your comment went over my head. Who's the salesman and why?

    • @kakistocracyusa
      @kakistocracyusa Месяц назад

      @@trudyandgeorge "using the universe" ? By that glitzy narrative , so is asphalt cooling at night and heating the next day. Thermodynamics was always a cerebral subject.

    • @trudyandgeorge
      @trudyandgeorge Месяц назад

      @@kakistocracyusa I see now, thanks. You know, entropy and the second law is most certainly universal.

  • @Crusaderon
    @Crusaderon Месяц назад

    Danke!

  • @wskinnyodden
    @wskinnyodden Месяц назад +11

    Just had a crazy idea neural network related, I wonder if it has been tried. Basically instead of having one weight per neuron we would have 2, one being the normal activation weight the other would be a "functional" weight and this particular "weight" would decide what function is performed by this neuron instead of having all neurons on a layer perform the same computation.

    • @picassoimpaler3243
      @picassoimpaler3243 Месяц назад +3

      Makes sense to me. A typical nuron speak to others with chemical signals as well as electrical ones. Unknowledgeable enough to know how it would work though.

    • @MikkoRantalainen
      @MikkoRantalainen Месяц назад +5

      Interesting idea. If you can figure out how to train such system, it could be used as an optimization (improve latency or energy efficiency). If I remember correctly, it has been shown mathematically that using just single non-linear function for every neuron is enough to have same computational abilitities (AI counterpart of Turing machine). However, the proof is about what's possible, not about what's easy/fast to compute.

    • @v-sig2389
      @v-sig2389 Месяц назад

      Well ... build a proof-of-concept !

    • @isleepy6801
      @isleepy6801 Месяц назад

      I am not sure if this has been done exactly as you describe but learnable activation functions is a relatively well explored area.

    • @wskinnyodden
      @wskinnyodden Месяц назад

      @@isleepy6801 Wouldn't be surprised, that said, have yet to see anything describing the node functions that way.

  • @alanmcmillan6969
    @alanmcmillan6969 Месяц назад

    The only way forward, is by seeing what happens when you try. It is an obvious thing to say, but it is the only way. Good luck to you for this stream!

  • @garyrust9055
    @garyrust9055 Месяц назад +14

    A computers memory is limited to
    the number of transistors it can
    use when computing (constants,
    variables, coefficients). When it
    is computing information is fed to
    it sequentially. The result of an
    Algorithm occurs as combinational
    logic. An analogy would be that
    computing is like making a bag
    of microwave popcorn, where each
    kernel is data (constants, variables,
    coefficients). Assume that (in this
    analogy) the kernels pop randomly,
    but once they are popped they are no
    longer a kernel. They are popcorn. So
    they are moved to a different part of
    memory (called the result). This frees
    up the initial memory so it may be used
    by the Algorithm. The Algorithm can
    speed up to finish the job faster
    because it can use more memory and
    therefore do parallel processing as in
    combinational logic. This saves time
    and energy.

    • @devilsolution9781
      @devilsolution9781 Месяц назад +2

      @@garyrust9055 I think she understands conventional chip architecture. Plus i was under the impression its propositional, sequential and combinatorial logic used in a low level architecture

    • @mhamadkamel6891
      @mhamadkamel6891 Месяц назад +5

      @garyrust9055 who wrote that poem?

    • @Astrodicted
      @Astrodicted Месяц назад

      @@mhamadkamel6891 ChatGPT

  • @YodaWhat
    @YodaWhat Месяц назад +2

    There is no need to use anything fancy like superconductive Josephson Junctions in order to generate Quantum Randomness. It is quite sufficient to use reverse-biased diodes and amplify the resulting "shot noise". If it is desired to have digital random numbers, the interval between the "shots" provides that.

  • @Karmabim123
    @Karmabim123 Месяц назад +3

    This reminds me of the infinite improbability drive for the Starship in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. Maybe it was more of a prediction than a fantasy by Douglas Adams.

  • @larsdam4447
    @larsdam4447 Месяц назад

    Thanks

  • @johnmajewski1065
    @johnmajewski1065 Месяц назад +3

    Epic thanks for sharing your knowledge in this exciting future field of computer science! ❤

  • @GlobalDailyProfits
    @GlobalDailyProfits Месяц назад +1

    00:10 A new computing method embraces noise for vastly superior performance.
    02:41 Probabilistic computing bridges classical and quantum concepts using environmental noise.
    05:14 Introduction to p-bits as a bridge between classical and quantum computing.
    07:32 Probabilistic machine achieves 100 trillion parameters with low power consumption.
    09:38 Noise-based computing uses thermodynamics to enhance computational performance.
    12:03 Thermodynamic computers drastically improve efficiency over classical GPUs.
    14:18 Extropic's groundbreaking thermodynamic computer utilizes superconductivity for probabilistic computing.
    16:35 Advancements in thermodynamics technology enhance CMOS-based probabilistic computing.

  • @Recreman
    @Recreman Месяц назад +7

    Here comes the next layer of the simulation.

    • @GR8APE69
      @GR8APE69 22 дня назад

      My ass is lubed up and ready for it.

  • @quest_edward
    @quest_edward Месяц назад

    Excellent analysis and explanation! Thank you.

  • @techpiller2558
    @techpiller2558 Месяц назад +5

    Also we can get faster classical c-bit computing with optical computing for precise algorithms. This p-bit tech seems suitable for AI especially. At some point we will have q-bit for similar purposes and for some advanced stuff.

    • @hanskloss7726
      @hanskloss7726 Месяц назад

      and with the same problems our carbon based computers in our heads have i.e. they are not as good as their owners think they are.

    • @lilep666
      @lilep666 20 дней назад

      Q bits are not a real thing and will never be a real thing

  • @tedrees5989
    @tedrees5989 25 дней назад

    I was working on a filter design long ago, where the purpose of the filter was to optimize the detection of information that was heavy in noise. In addition, the shape of the digital information was warped by the physical limits of the system. I made a software program that sought the best solution through variation of the elements in the filter. But this approach tends to get stuck in minor minima on the way to the global best solution. The solution was to force the system out of the minor minima all the time, to allow it to keep searching for a long time. This was like introducing noise into the machine, to make it slippier. Of course there was some uncertainty in knowing if it had reached the global minima. I just had to give it time while noticing that the answer was not getting better.

  • @Tore_Lund
    @Tore_Lund Месяц назад +6

    This sounds no different from fuzzy logic from the 1980'? Also using random seeds to determine outcome with adjustable weights.

  • @zbaktube
    @zbaktube 20 дней назад

    Making thermodynamic works for us is mindblowing! This technology is a gamechanger if we want to move away from silicon to step up on the Khardasian ladder!

  • @Matli-MC
    @Matli-MC Месяц назад +3

    3:13 probabilistically yes 🎉

  • @E9Project
    @E9Project Месяц назад

    I love your channel so much, thank you for all that you do!

  • @pedro_marques92
    @pedro_marques92 Месяц назад +15

    great video as always, thank you for posting Anastasi!!!

  • @jw4659
    @jw4659 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for presenting all this information on these new platforms - this has cleared up many things I didn't understand about them.

  • @Harvey_Pekar
    @Harvey_Pekar Месяц назад +6

    "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Arthur C. Clarke

    • @lilblackduc7312
      @lilblackduc7312 Месяц назад +1

      I'm 66yrs old and a lifelong "Electronics Junkie". I understand the science. Nevertheless, I'm still amazed at my microwave oven. Lol⚡

  • @ndurubuthuo4024
    @ndurubuthuo4024 Месяц назад +2

    Wow, you really know your stuff....fluency even! Thanks for sharing!

  • @dpi3981
    @dpi3981 Месяц назад +5

    Beff Jezos is watching

    • @tudogeo7061
      @tudogeo7061 Месяц назад +1

      Probably

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Месяц назад

      Yes, and he will undoubtedly figure out how to implement it with something less than vaguely phallic.

  • @JohnSmith762A11B
    @JohnSmith762A11B Месяц назад +2

    Amazing video, many thanks! 🙏🏻

  • @MrFoxRobert
    @MrFoxRobert Месяц назад +4

    Thank you!

  • @Gan_Gineandro
    @Gan_Gineandro Месяц назад +2

    Fascinating.
    Room temp superconductors will make a huge difference.

  • @brianjay9811
    @brianjay9811 Месяц назад +4

    If your attempt was to explain this to everyday people, I believe you over estimated the common education on computing. From the start, when you brought up "noise" there needed to be an exact explanation as to what you meant. People quickly ask, "Is she talking about sound, like radio static?" I understand noise as random spikes, but I still can't picture how this can be used. Where is this noise? What substance are you referring to? Is this light, as in TV noise? Show us a graphic of the *physical* thing scientists are manipulating, because right off the bat you lost a ton of viewers to total and noisy confusion...

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Месяц назад +1

      TV and radio noise are both EM radiation, so is light noise, and so is the noise she is referring to.

    • @brianjay9811
      @brianjay9811 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@MrJdsenior Thanks! I was just hoping to see a report that was on a very simplistic basis, but this video appears to be for the more advanced folks in the field. I'll keep looking...

    • @kennethhodge7953
      @kennethhodge7953 3 дня назад

      @brianjay9811
      • a RUclips audience is largely self-selecting, especially for a long-form video. We know what we are watching.
      • as a data-person, I've never encountered a person who needed "noise" interpreted, only identified.

  • @chrisbender1614
    @chrisbender1614 Месяц назад

    I have learned so much from your videos. Thanks Anastasi!!!

  • @stunspot
    @stunspot Месяц назад +3

    WONDERFUL! This is EXACTLY what we need! My god. What I could do with that and an ML weighting table! Gosh!
    And I love to see you having "your world turned upside down". This is _exactly_ what I have seen over and over every time I teach a coder to be a prompter. "NO! Stop trying to make it act like a computer! SURF THE NON-DETERMINISM! Make it _work_ for you." Fantastic.

  • @Luke-bs3qz
    @Luke-bs3qz 29 дней назад +1

    Happy 2025! 🎉 ✨ Anastasi see you in the future!

  • @kokopelli314
    @kokopelli314 Месяц назад +17

    I read about Josephson junctions in the 1980s Proposed as a means of low noise superconducting switches. Seeing them used to bridge p-bits makes a lot of sense althoughi wonder about the scalability of bridging the stochastic behavior with low temperature junctions.
    Neurons use relatively slow, but programmable activation potentials and they work at body temperature.
    Just some random thoughts but this was a great topic and I really appreciate it so thank you!

  • @Drakelaagan
    @Drakelaagan Месяц назад

    Its been a while i havent watch this channel,but everysingle day there is a breakthrough...

  • @quantumspark343
    @quantumspark343 Месяц назад +4

    auto ML can spawn super intelligence with this one

  • @imienazwisko3774
    @imienazwisko3774 Месяц назад +1

    The best thing about it all is that startups that work on these computational units do not know how to produce them, they get an "object" whose detailed description of behavior they get, but they do not know how the supplier produces it. In this way, the knowledge of the "alchemists" will remain only at the disposal of the alchemists. And scientists have the right to order their "gold" in the appropriate places of silicon wafer, they can use it, but they have no idea how it is created.

  • @AORD72
    @AORD72 Месяц назад +20

    The universe is probably deterministic. Our lack of ability to see all the variables means it looks random. Although we might be able to build machines to see more variables, to see them all we would probably need more material than the universe has.

    • @ip6289
      @ip6289 Месяц назад +4

      You first sentence said it all😊

    • @aclearlight
      @aclearlight Месяц назад +1

      This was essentially Einstein's position in the face of indeterminate wavefunction collapse upon measurement, yes?

    • @WhoisTheOtherVindAzz
      @WhoisTheOtherVindAzz Месяц назад

      I know you are probably ;) joking​@@ip6289. But in case you aren't: there is a difference between using a word in an epistemological context versus in an ontological sense. His use of the word "proba bly" in the first sentence is in the former sense.

    • @WhoisTheOtherVindAzz
      @WhoisTheOtherVindAzz Месяц назад

      ​@@aclearlightI think so. I am also pretty sure (I.e., IIRC) that he also thought everything was really fundamentally discrete (thus essentially making the equations of physics what is approximated by nature (ideally, i.e. if the theory is good and/or the system under consideration is simple enough) - the exact opposite of how we are taught to think).

    • @siloton
      @siloton Месяц назад +4

      You cannot build such machine because it would have also include itself and thus recursively swell ad infinitum. Principially impossible

  • @robertboudreau8935
    @robertboudreau8935 Месяц назад +1

    This video is awesome and groundbreaking!

  • @vilijanac
    @vilijanac Месяц назад +3

    q-bit, actually can be many states. Shortest path of the noise the equilibrium determines the constant probabilistic.
    How I understand it.

  • @Danoman812
    @Danoman812 Месяц назад

    Thanks! Awesome job, Anastasi!!

  • @id104335409
    @id104335409 Месяц назад +12

    So is this computer actually going to work?
    Tech engineer pushes back up his glasses with one finger: Probably...

    • @gwh0
      @gwh0 Месяц назад +2

      no

    • @sambojinbojin-sam6550
      @sambojinbojin-sam6550 Месяц назад +1

      But maybe yes. Depending

    • @iceshadow487
      @iceshadow487 Месяц назад

      It's already working, just like how they have quantum computers working. It's just a matter of refining the technology to make it better and competitive with current solutions.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Месяц назад +1

      @@iceshadow487 quantum computers is vaporware

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Месяц назад

      @@SoloRenegade That's a strange statement, considering that 'they' have already demonstrated nonclassical performance with them in some areas of computation.

  • @danngehdochzunetto
    @danngehdochzunetto Месяц назад +1

    Ich folge deinem Kanal nun schon eine ganze Weile. Heute war es soweit, dass ich dir absolut nicht mehr folgen konnte. Erst nach dem zweiten Anschauen und Recherche im Internet, was du überhaupt meinst, ist es mir gelungen, wenigstens etwas zu verstehen, worüber du sprichst.
    Wenn ich es jetzt richtig verstanden habe, sind die Ergebnisse, die der Computer auswirft, bei gleichen Eingaben, nicht immer die gleichen. Das ist es doch aber, was bei digitaler Rechentechnik so wichtig ist. Bei gleichen Eingaben, das gleiche Ergebnis.

    • @AnastasiInTech
      @AnastasiInTech  Месяц назад +1

      Ja, es handelt sich um ein anderes Funktionsprinzip, das auf andere Problemstellungen angewendet wird

  • @levieux1137
    @levieux1137 Месяц назад +5

    For almost two years now I've been saying that doing AI using digital was completely broken. A neuron is an op amplifier, and what we're doing using SIMD to multiply, accumulate, then apply an activation function is just a super-expensive emulation of the op-amp. I just don't know how fast we could make op-amp work at the node technology used by CPUs , it might be possible that digital remains faster but I strongly doubt it. I'm still waiting for an analog AI chip.

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Месяц назад

      For two years now, apparently.

  • @Olaf_Schwandt
    @Olaf_Schwandt Месяц назад

    In my understanding, Thermodynamic Computing involves the use of two thermodynamic quantities - energy and entropy. You mentioned the second law of thermodynamics. Classical computers have traditionally only accounted for information related to energy in the form of work. Work is very directed, whereas heat is entirely undirected. In classical computers, nearly all information must be removed as heat, and they need to be cooled to prevent damage. In Thermodynamic Computing, instead, as much information as possible is extracted and processed from this heat. However, it is not easy to measure and evaluate information such as time-dependent temperature values (the noise you mentioned) so precisely and at such a localized level. The use of this technology could be great. And thank you for your report from Vienna

  • @davewesj
    @davewesj Месяц назад +3

    As a computer scientist and software engineer, for 58 years now, I would point out that
    the majority of computer CPU time is wasted and not relevant to the discussion of
    AI problem solving using P-Computer if developed as presented will be a game changer
    and not exactly a niche item. Yes you can get excited about this!

  • @casualclubpro
    @casualclubpro Месяц назад +1

    Спасибо Анастасия. Очень познавательные видео.

  • @RobertHouse101
    @RobertHouse101 Месяц назад +5

    The point for me is its availability. Talking about these breakthroughs when they are just discovered is not really helpful. It's only hope, not a promise, i.e., wireless power transmission, neuromorphic computing, chiplets, 3d stacking, and optical computing. Sure, it's fun to dream, but getting excited about something that will take years to develop and most likely change beyond recognition of the descriptions now is not appealing. However, I enjoy your show, but sometimes it's too good to be true. Rob

    • @JasminUwU
      @JasminUwU Месяц назад +1

      Chiplets are already a widely used thing, what are you talking about?

    • @cybervigilante
      @cybervigilante Месяц назад

      But dreams are becoming reality sooner and sooner. Everything is speeding up. But alas, the bad is also speeding up.

    • @RobertHouse101
      @RobertHouse101 Месяц назад

      @@JasminUwU, I'm sorry. I was misinformed by Microsoft Co-Pilot. I thought this was the case, but I assumed it was ones used in different configurations or forms. Rob

  • @robertnull
    @robertnull Месяц назад

    As an HDR monitor owner, I enjoyed getting spooked by the transition at 5:05 😁💛

  • @Galileosays
    @Galileosays Месяц назад +4

    The probabilistic computation will run into is the issue of local minima when parallel calculations are running. This issue is equivalent to the physical phenomenon of density fluctuations near a critical point. So local solutions (maximum entropy) are strongly influenced by nearby minima in entropy.

  • @DeepHaria-v4m
    @DeepHaria-v4m 17 дней назад +1

    I was just researching this topic today

  • @FuzTheCat
    @FuzTheCat Месяц назад +5

    100,000,000 times as efficient. Is that considering the total system, including cooling? When comparing, it should take into consideration the total power of the system.

    • @themax2go
      @themax2go Месяц назад +1

      No need, it runs at room temp

    • @furrball
      @furrball Месяц назад

      the question is: gazillion times faster in computing 1% of the job isn't much of help.

  • @green.holden
    @green.holden Месяц назад +1

    subscribed for the investing stuff

  • @djayjp
    @djayjp Месяц назад +9

    Not necessarily true. Reality may be totally deterministic actually.

    • @devilsolution9781
      @devilsolution9781 Месяц назад +1

      agreed and thats how we operate, by some predictive measure

    • @djayjp
      @djayjp Месяц назад

      @@devilsolution9781 Well we must be careful to distinguish between ontological and epistemological determinism. Technically speaking, "determinism" only refers to the former in that the past determines the future (if so).

    • @devilsolution9781
      @devilsolution9781 Месяц назад +1

      @@djayjp whats the difference? the only thing i can think of thats non deterministic is some aspect of quantum mechanics that describes the collapse of the probabilistic waveform to a particle

    • @djayjp
      @djayjp Месяц назад

      @@devilsolution9781 Ontological is what's actual in reality. Epistemic is what we know (or can know, in principle). Actually regarding QM, there are various, equally valid (to the Copenhagen interpretation), interpretations that posit determinism (such as pilot wave, many worlds, etc).

    • @JorgetePanete
      @JorgetePanete Месяц назад

      Superdeterminism is unfalsifiable.

  • @ianhesford
    @ianhesford Месяц назад +1

    First time it made sense to me. Thanks!

  • @christaylor553
    @christaylor553 Месяц назад +3

    Does this mean we can produce delusional AI?

    • @georgemoore5774
      @georgemoore5774 Месяц назад +5

      DAI, still smarter than some people I know.

    • @dwaynestomp5462
      @dwaynestomp5462 Месяц назад +2

      I've seen AI output that's pretty delusional...

  • @UniversityofUniverse-512
    @UniversityofUniverse-512 Месяц назад

    This idea of P Bits is so cool and Mind Blowing. Thanks❤

  • @Gr8Success
    @Gr8Success Месяц назад +21

    i keep hearing about advancements for decades ! but nothing changes for me ! i kinda get sick and tired of this crap !

    • @6AxisSage
      @6AxisSage Месяц назад +4

      Because theyre grifters. They talk big to grift. I came up with a concept thatll do this stuff but academia grifters are all off using thier grifting powers to take it away from me :(

    • @Primaate
      @Primaate Месяц назад

      There's a delay between proof of concept then 'profitable' manufacturing and finally, you the average consumer. (5-15years)

    • @micahisawesome4843
      @micahisawesome4843 Месяц назад +1

      99pct of the time, these great new ideas don't pan out when you take them out of the lab and into reality.

    • @st3ppenwolf
      @st3ppenwolf Месяц назад

      Maybe you should put more effort in understanding what the limitations of these new ideas are. Real life is complex

    • @whitacrv
      @whitacrv Месяц назад

      The statement is due to a lack of vision. If you can't take all the abstract information in and apply it to a vision you will never come up with a solution

  • @gaius_enceladus
    @gaius_enceladus Месяц назад +1

    This almost sounds like "Hitch-hikers Guide to the Galaxy" stuff!
    The "Infinite Improbability Drive"!

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Месяц назад

      That's a very fuzzy almost!

  • @gani2an1
    @gani2an1 Месяц назад +5

    i got lost as soon as she said zeroes and ones. lol

  • @marcbjorg4823
    @marcbjorg4823 Месяц назад +1

    The nice thing with Photons is that they don't decay (because time is frozen at the speed of light) unless they hit something and then, if is a mirror...

    • @thesnare100
      @thesnare100 Месяц назад

      how can anything made of energy "decay" depends what you mean by decay, not decay like a corpse, or a neutron becoming a proton.

    • @marcbjorg4823
      @marcbjorg4823 Месяц назад

      @thesnare100 , Decay in a metaphoric sense. If you cut power to a superconductor Q-Bit it will cease to exist. A photon can travel for ever if there is no obstacles.

    • @thesnare100
      @thesnare100 Месяц назад

      @@marcbjorg4823 it makes me wonder what is there to stop you from going forever if YOU could travel at the speed of light, since there is "end of space" so to speak a point where space is still expanding/hasn't expanded to you, but it travels faster than the speed of light, as has been doing so since the big bang, so you couldn't up with it. I don't know if there's a name for it "the space wall" or something

  • @costrio
    @costrio Месяц назад +3

    Basically sorting probabilities?
    Sounds like day dreaming to me.

  • @ShaunHall-i7e
    @ShaunHall-i7e Месяц назад

    I always learn something new with your videos. ❤💻

  • @henrythegreatamerican8136
    @henrythegreatamerican8136 Месяц назад +3

    Wish my colon was 100 million times better at digesting some of the latest frankenstein food ingredients slopped into our food.

  • @zencontroller
    @zencontroller Месяц назад

    Really interesting video thankyou!!!

  • @iamcomcy
    @iamcomcy Месяц назад +1

    I commented about this kind of leap forward about a month ago, that there would be some advancement that would GREATLY enhance efficiency of AI compute. And here it is! Thank you Nastya! 😂

  • @necromancer0616
    @necromancer0616 28 дней назад +1

    OK, I'm might be shooting backwards on this but... If you built the CPU based on thermal-dynamics and took the following steps to influence the noise by shielding the hardware in a layer of synthetic skin that is temperature regulated to 98 degrees (like the human body). Then perhaps try and simulate movement or sleight pressure changes around the hardware and apply the AI programs and algorithm to it. Then build a second one and connect it to the other half and create a quantum/thermal bridge to connect the two halves, in theory it should act like a hyper evolved Intelligence right? Based on the human brain structure. Of course in given time it will discover how to improve itself.

  • @richardzakh7209
    @richardzakh7209 17 дней назад +1

    just a thought what if we create a structure in hardware that would behave probabilistic like randomness and particles using the power of physics instead of setting our logical gates that then used to create probabilistic outcome through much unnecessary complexity as necessary step which is likely ineffective

  • @taavetmalkov3295
    @taavetmalkov3295 Месяц назад +1

    This is obviously a cornerstone tech in the ASI

  • @khyron6
    @khyron6 Месяц назад +1

    Yeah Heavy Metal Computing. 🤘

  • @BenCaesar
    @BenCaesar Месяц назад

    In music production harnessing noise can be destructive but can also make your songs sound so much bigger and interesting.

  • @stevenparker8872
    @stevenparker8872 15 дней назад

    This is the first time I’ve heard about probabilistic and thermodynamic computing 👍 Very cool stuff, thanks for the video. I have a question though: what is the actual hardware used for these systems? Best Regards

  • @denm8991
    @denm8991 Месяц назад +1

    We’re already doing this with modern random number generators using noise or other parameters from nature for generating random numbers.

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Месяц назад

      Great, can you please give me the next largest prime number, please?

  • @rogerhuston8287
    @rogerhuston8287 Месяц назад +1

    Using Noise to DeNoise an image. Awesome!