Interesting article. 

Regarding this quote from the article:

"One of the first fundamental differences between the brain and computers is 
how their “smallest units” function. Brain neurons can have multiple 
connections and react to impulses in a range of different ways. Computer 
transistors, by comparison, are switches that, while can be connected to other 
transistors, can only have one of two states."


This is the problem. Trying to simulate biologic structure with silicon. Highly 
inefficient and structurally different. Biology is just better than what we can 
create at this time. I'm not convinced electronics will ever be able to 
simulate a brain, but it is a very interesting approach and we can certainly 
learn from it. Not a new idea, but very cool to see this scale.

John Vaughters



On Friday, November 9, 2018, 6:25:36 PM EST, Pete Soper via TriEmbed 
<[email protected]> wrote: 







U of Manchester probably got a price break for this new machine they've made:

    SpiNNaker Million-Core Supercomputer

-Pete



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