Russian Company Tapes Out 16-Core Elbrus CPU: 2.0 GHz, 16 TB of RAM in 4-Way 
System
   
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/russian-company-tapes-out-16-core-elbrus-cpu-20-ghz-16-tb-of-ram-in-4-way-system


So the anarchist crowd spec's "open source/ open hardware" designs, for what 
it's worth.

Step 1 is understanding the development models and the possibilities around 
various "open"ness options.

"Open" anything has engineering tradeoffs, as do other models, the primary 
competition being "proprietary", which is mostly also "closed".

The advantages of "open" include:

 - maintaining relevance and interest outside of the primary sponsor (e.g. 
govt. and military)

 - the possibility of development of an 'ecosystem' (software, hardware, 
community, startups/ companies/ industries)

 - to the extent that an ecosystem is born and develops, there grows a "demand 
economy" for the hardware at issue - this becomes a symbiotic thing where 
interest drives innovation drives demand which drives down costs, which in turn 
drives the interest and demand


IF such an ecosystem is found to be a goal, certain steps foster this pathway, 
such as a "Rasberry-Pi"-type dev board, then a desktop workstation class 
computer, etc.  Not unlike the steps IBM has taken with their Power 
architecture.

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