Tech Xplore on MSN
Tiny silicon structures compute with heat, achieving 99% accurate matrix multiplication
MIT researchers have designed silicon structures that can perform calculations in an electronic device using excess heat ...
MIT engineers use heat-conducting silicon microstructures to perform matrix multiplication with >99% accuracy hinting at ...
Dr. James McCaffrey presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of linear regression with pseudo-inverse training implemented using JavaScript. Compared to other training techniques, such as ...
A novel stacked memristor architecture performs Euclidean distance calculations directly within memory, enabling ...
Morning Overview on MSN
MIT’s heat-powered silicon chips hit 99% accuracy in math tests
Engineers at MIT have turned one of computing’s biggest headaches, waste heat, into the main act. By sculpting “dust-sized” silicon structures that steer heat as precisely as electrical current, they ...
“We must strive for better,” said IBM Research chief scientist Ruchir Puri at a conference on AI acceleration organised by the computer company and the IEEE in November. He expects almost all language ...
Numerical computation and mathematical software form the backbone of modern scientific inquiry, facilitating the approximation of real numbers, the solution of complex mathematical models, and the ...
The Register on MSN
Nvidia leans on emulation to squeeze more HPC oomph from AI chips in race against AMD
AMD researchers argue that, while algorithms like the Ozaki scheme merit investigation, they're still not ready for prime ...
Abstract: For many scientific applications, dense matrix multiplication is one of the most important and computation intensive linear algebra operations. An efficient matrix multiplication on high ...
Abstract: On multicore architectures, the ratio of peak memory bandwidth to peak floating-point performance (byte:flop ratio) is decreasing as core counts increase, further limiting the performance of ...
Researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology have demonstrated a surprising new way to compute—by using heat instead of electricity. In a proof-of-concept study published in Physical Review ...
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