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Re: [oc] Beyond Transmeta...



Quantum Computing, tertiary number base, optical processing
or existing (traditional) technology are all implimentation issues.
The problems for bit-stream processing is a routing problem of
the bitstreams to the proper combinatorial sections of the processor.
This is the same problem regardless of the implimentation.

A few posts back in this thread I made the analogy of the newspaper
printing press. Popular microprocessor design is more like a sheet-fed
press ca-chunk, ca-chunk, ca-chunk. The bitstream processor would
be more like a web press, shhhhhhheeee data streaming through the
process being handled and redirected many times.

Jim Dempsey

----- Original Message -----
From: "Ivan Guzvinec" <ivang@flextronics.si>
To: <cores@opencores.org>
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 2:10 PM
Subject: Re: [oc] Beyond Transmeta...


> On Mon, 2003-02-10 at 18:49, Jim Dempsey wrote:
> > e.g. the result of an n-bit adder is available only after
> > the complete result is available and not as the result propigates
> > across
> > width of the adder.
> >
> Hey, this looks very familiar with that they say about Quantum
> Computing. That quibits have to remain in superposition until the end of
> calculation. Then they can colapse into a single quantum state, when
> "measure" makes the result available. (or something quite familiar to
> what I wrote, but maybe expresed it auqardly)
>
> Maybe we should convince major players it might be interesting to pursue
> the research into more Quantum Computing elements, such as those I read
> about in New Scientist every now and then
> (http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/quantum/).
>
> Just a thought.
>
> regards,
> --
> Ivan Guzvinec <ivang@flextronics.si>
> Flextronics d.o.o.
>
> --
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