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I believe this article should be deleted as it refers to something which does not exist. There are other articles which treat this subject properly as speculative fiction.
as well as other sources, such as The Singularity is Near by Ray Kurzweil, and perspectives from Neuroscience.
It should address the issues of:
How much computing power does the human brain use? (This should cite various predictions, by
Hans Moravec,
Ray Kurzweil and many others. Maybe a table would be good.)
When does
Moore's Law predict that this much computing power will be available?
What are the prospects of duplicating the function of the nervous system and neural structures? How is it difficult? What are the issues?
Historical research approaches such as Pitts & McCullough, etc.
Critics of the notion of
brain death have sometimes argued that it could be invalidated by the futuristic existence of artificial brains, given that death in its broadest definition involves the entire body and that it happens on the cellular level, and not on any peculiar mnemonic level. Hence, if your brain unexpectedly dies, it might be replaced by one of these organic computer brains that would maintain your previous state of psychological consciousness, as one would store information on a computer disk.
ADM (
talk)
07:07, 25 August 2009 (UTC)reply
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Isn’t “an order of 100,000” times more than a megawatt 100 gigawatts? Supercomputers only consume a few megawatts, not many gigawatts. I’m not so sure that the so-called “current supercomputer” can possibly use anywhere near 100 GW of power.
That sentence appears to be clarifying that 1MW is an order of 100,000 more than 20W. I've changed the grammar a bit to help parsing that. (Still needs a citation though.)
Tga (
talk)
18:33, 19 June 2019 (UTC)reply