The Singularity comes a step closer

Self-programming chips loom

Computer circuits that require fewer components than our existing technology employs, combine several functions and are capable of 'self-learning' have been fabricated for the first time.

Researchers at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories in Palo Alto, California combined memristors with transistors in a hybrid circuit array to demonstrate conditional self-programming and show that just a few such device elements can be configured to act as logic, switching and memory components simultaneously. The use of fewer circuit elements offers the benefits of smaller circuit size and lower power consumption.

The term 'memristor' means 'memory resistor', the fourth type of passive circuit element in addition to the (fixed) resistor, the capacitor and the inductor. Having been predicted by theory in 1971, the first memristor device wasn't fabricated until 2008. The memristor is a two-terminal circuit element that changes its resistance in response to the positive or negative polarity of the voltage applied to it or the amount of current flowing through it.

As passive devices, memristors must be combined with active elecronic devices such as transistors, which can amplify or switch electronic signals, in order to become useful in analog or digital circuits.

Due to their memory capability, memristors are also programmable. By routing the output of a logic circuit containing memristors back into those same memristors, the circuit can even be made to reconfigure itself, thus in effect self-programming itself.

Stan Williams of HP told Physorg.com, 'It actually takes at least a dozen transistors to mimic the electrical properties of a single memristor.' He explained that building logic circuits incorporating fewer memristors in place of larger numbers of transistors might offer logic designers opportunities to develop circuit capabilities while decreasing the total number of devices required, concluding, 'Thus, it may be possible to continue the equivalent of Moore's law for a couple of generations not by making transistors smaller, but by replacing some subset of them with memristors.'

In their demonstration, the HP research team fabricated a crossbar array consisting of two sets of 21 parallel 40nm-wide wires arranged perpendicular to each other, between which a 20nm-thick film of the semiconductor titanium dioxide (TiO2) was layered to fabricate a memristor at the intersection of each crossed pair of wires. To complete the combined memristor-transistor circuit, the researchers connected a peripheral array of field effect transistors to the crossbar array of memristors with metal traces.

The basic nature of a memristor is that the resistance of the device can be changed and then persist. In the memristors that the HP researchers fabricated, the memory 'switch' is physically manifested by the movement of positively charged oxygen ions, which are the dopants in a semiconducting TiO2 layer. A positive bias voltage pushes these 'holes' away from an electrode and increases the resistance, whilst a negative bias attracts the ions toward the electrode and decreases the resistance. If not subjected to either a positive or a negative voltage, the programmed state of the memristor will remain in force for at least a year.

The researchers exercised the hybrid circuit they created by performing a basic logic function (AB + CD) from four different voltage inputs representing the four logic values, applied across two different row and column pairs of the memristor crossbar array. They routed the output results through the transistors to amplify the signals and directed the outputs back into the memristor array to change their resistance values, thus using the results of the logic function to reprogram the memristors.

'Self-programming is a form of learning,' HP's Williams said. 'Thus, circuits with memristors may have the capacity to learn how to perform a task, rather than have to be programmed to do it.' To put it another way, the modification of subsequent behaviour in response to feedback received might be viewed as the essence of learning. At a very basic level, this is how nerve synapses in a brain develop.

HP's researchers hope that their demonstration of a hybrid memristor-transistor device will spur progress in integrating memristors with conventional circuits. They also believe that their demonstration of a prototype electronic circuit that can perform self-programming might lead to various new design endeavors, such as efforts to develop adaptive synaptic circuits.

Such advances in the basic technologies underlying electronic logic devices and design patterns could conceivably advance not only computing and information technology, but also the state of the art in artificial intelligence.

Thus self-programming hybrid memristor-transistor circuitry may hold great promise to help us extend Moore's Law. Even more importantly perhaps, it might also help light the path toward creating truly intelligent machines.

We look forward to greeting our intelligent machine overlords. X

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Brit begs answer on ‘Slumdogs’ from India’s pm

After reading report in UK paper on Mumbai’s slum children being crippled for begging, Briton sends letter to Dr Manmohan Singh asking if this is true; state govt orders probe

By Aneesh Phadnis


The beggars’ mafia may be an open secret for us in India, but it took a letter from a British national to the Prime Minister’s Office for the state to finally order a probe into whether slum children in Mumbai are indeed crippled by mafia gangs for begging.

Geoff Chapman, 64, a resident of Yevoil town in Somerset, Britain, was so upset after he read a report by Andrew Malone in a British tabloid - titled ‘The real Slumdog Millionaires: Behind the cinema fantasy, mafia gangs are deliberately crippling children for profit’ - that he decided to demand an answer from none other than India’s Prime Minister.

“I am not associated with any social welfare organisation but I do support charities which campaign against this kind of abuse. I am just a person who is deeply concerned about the welfare of human beings anywhere in the world and want to see this kind of abuse stamped out by governments,” Chapman wrote to Mumbai Mirror in an email, explaining why he had sent the letter to Dr Manmohan Singh.

Geoff Chapman
Chapman’s letter was accompanied by a copy of the newspaper article that appeared on January 24, much before the film Slumdog Millionaire bagged eight Oscars, but around the time the movie had started to make waves internationally. The Prime Minister’s Office promptly forwarded the letter to the central Women and Child Welfare Ministry, who, in turn, sent it to the Maharashtra government for further action. The state government has now initiated a probe into the allegations made in the article and will be sending a detailed report to the PMO.

Maharashtra government’s secretary V S Singh confirmed receiving the complaint from the Centre. “We will forward it to the Home department and the State Commission for Protection of Child Rights for investigation,” he stated. The newly constituted State Commission has civil court powers and can investigate cases of exploitation.

Chapman claims he has never been to India and, therefore, has no personal experience of Mumbai’s slums. He hasn’t even seen the Oscar-winning film by fellow Briton Danny Boyle, but the newspaper article was reason enough for him to write to the Indian government. He said so far he has received no response to his letter.



 Andrew Malone’s report

Malone in his report states that in his “chilling week-long investigation” he found the truth he discovered was more disturbing than anything dreamt up by the makers of Slumdog Millionaire. Malone claims to have interviewed a child who was allegedly fed drug-laced cakes before his leg was amputated at a BMC hospital. A few of the children even described how they were maimed so as to “maximise their earnings from sympathetic passers-by”. Malone writes that gang leaders force children to hand over whatever they earn and torture them when they do not collect enough. The article states that child beggars are addicted to the drugs supplied by the gang to keep them under control.
READ MORE - Brit begs answer on ‘Slumdogs’ from India’s pm

Kim Kardashian: 2010 Kalendar Shoot

 

Kim Kardashian loves posing for kalendars almost as much as she loves starring in sex tapes.

While it seems like only a couple months ago we published photos from Kim's 2009 kalendar, the reality TV vixen has already jetted to Cabo San Lucas for her 2010 swimsuit edition.

As she says in her official blog:

I am sooo excited about it and I wanted to share with you guys a sneak peek of the behind the scenes footage!

Look at that bronzer in some of the shots! I love that sun-kissed glow.

We're pretty sure she means fake-tan-kissed glow...

Ready to Shoot

Kim in CaboVery Klose UpCalendar PreviewLong ReachCalendar Shoot

Click on the pics above for larger images of Kim Kardashian.

READ MORE - Kim Kardashian: 2010 Kalendar Shoot

How will the recession affect Silicon Valley?

 

I recently spoke with Silicon Valley veteran Bill Coleman about Silicon Valley and its future. Mr Coleman worked at VisiCorp on the first spreadsheet, he headed development of Sun’s Solaris, he co-founded BEA Systems which sold to Oracle for $3.5bn, and he now runs Cassatt, a cloud computing tech startup.

I’m sitting with Bill Coleman, and one of his colleagues, in a small conference room in downtown SF. We’re talking and also trying to eat our sandwiches.

He is telling a story about being at JFK airport late last year, and getting a call from a reporter at the New York Times, asking if the recession would be better or worse for Silicon Valley compared with 2001.

“I said it will be worse than the previous downturn. The last time about 800 companies went out of business that had no business model. Secondly, the large companies had sold too much capacity and it took a year or two for things to catch up. This time the recession is not about Silicon Valley it is about something else.”

He said it would take a long time for capital spending to come back and that this would hurt Silicon Valley.

“I said you’ll see accelerating layoffs in the first quarter and that’s exactly what we’ve seen.”

What will this mean for Silicon Valley innovation?

Mr Coleman says he’s an optimist but he does have some concerns.

“I have a basic theory that Silicon Valley reinvents itself by inventing a new platform layer every 10 years.” He says that Silicon Valley was lucky to develop Information Technology (IT), a technology that is becoming cloud computing, a new platform. Information Technology is also vital in driving the development of two additional disruptive technologies: nanotech and biotech. And fortunately, Silicon Valley leads in all three industries.

Silicon Valley also leads in green technology, a large and growing market. But green technology is different — it isn’t a disruptive technology. He says that a disruptive technology has to have a characteristic of the Peter Drucker rule in that it provides ten times the value of what it’s displacing.

“In the green market, what we’re displacing is cheaper per unit than what is displacing it. It won’t be driven by a tsunami of adoption.” Mr Coleman says the government should come up with incentives for companies to adopt green technologies otherwise progress will be slow.

“People already have the capacity for doing what they do today. So this means that they can put off using green technologies for a long time. There are lots of benefits for humanity, but the economics of the green market won’t drive a rapid adoption unless there are incentives.”

He points out that a government program focused on incentives to adopt green technologies would provide a more effective stimulus than the current stimulus package, with its focus on building physical infrastructure. Building a bridge, or a road, is a one-time event, and it won’t provide long term stimulus. “It slows down capital formation,” he says, potentially slowing an economic recovery. If the government helped to expand green technology it would create higher quality jobs and provide other long term economic benefits.

Cloud computing doesn’t need government incentives because it is a disruptive technology, says Mr Coleman, especially the next stage, beyond what he terms “cloud 1.0.” As the cloud computing platform becomes more sophisticated, he predicts that there will be an acceleration in the use of the cloud driven by a “quadruple conversion.” Video, audio, and IT data all become IP based, and productivity applications become integrated with social networks.

“As we move forward from Web 2.0 to Web 3.0, all your productivity tools become integrated with your social networking, which becomes your business networking. Your mobile life and your online life will become the same. So now the client moves into the cloud and that’s when we’ll see a dramatic change in the cost structure of computing and of the capabilities you can have.”

He says that a platform ill be successful if it has three characteristics. It has to be able to commoditize a market. Secondly, it has to obey the 10x better/cheaper rule.

“When I was at VisiCorp, heading software development, each of our developers had a PC. This was faster and dramatically cheaper than using DEC VAXs [minicomputers]. Thirdly, a platform must allow you to add value with custom additions. The reason Netscape wasn’t a platform was that no one could program to it, nobody could add value. (By the way, that’s also true for virtualization…) Unless you have all three characteristics, you won’t have a disruptive chain that can accelerate a startup from zero to sixty, and turn it into a major player.”

I mentioned that a characteristic of a disruptive platform, is that it disrupts. If you are in the path of a disruptive technology you can often see what’s up ahead, you can see the train wreck, but you can’t get off the rails in time, you can’t downsize or restructure in time, you hit the train wreck.

“Yes. I call it the DEC spiral. DEC tried to deny the importance of the PC and then when they realized what was happening they couldn’t layoff people fast enough to match falling prices. There was little left and they had to sell [in 1998 to Compaq, the top PC company at the time.]” said Mr Coleman.

READ MORE - How will the recession affect Silicon Valley?

Science parks to stay tax-free until 2015

 

Government bid to encourage investment

By Subhankar Kundu

The Communications and IT Ministry has been lobbying for the extension of Software Technology Parks of India (STPI) scheme till 2015. It's already in talks with the finance ministry. But the scheme has already been extended for one year.



The scheme exempts all the IT companies inside the STPIs from Income-Tax under Section 10A and 10B of the Income-Tax Act. The IT ministry at the centre proposes the extension keeping in mind its significance, especially during the recession.

Union IT secretary Jarinder Singh said, 'The extension of tax holiday under STPI scheme is needed to support the growth of medium and small scale IT firms. It would encourage investors to set up new units and to create more job opportunities.”

Singh also said that the small and medium enterprises (SME) will benefit the most, if the STPI scheme is extended for another five years. He feels STPI could also help in creating more employment.

The recently announced 'interim budget' announced that the tax holidays under the STPI scheme will come to an end in March 2010.

Science parks to stay tax-free until 2015

READ MORE - Science parks to stay tax-free until 2015

Carol bartz: Yahoo will ‘Kick ass again’

Carol Bartz: Yahoo Will 'Kick Ass Again'


carol-bartz-tbi.jpgSixteen minutes after Yahoo announced that CFO Blake Jorgensen was leaving, new CEO Carol Bartz published a post on Yahoo's official blog, titled "Getting our house in order."

- Carol describes her first six weeks on the job -- "a whirlwind tour for the last six weeks, talking with everybody from executive leaders to the guys who configured my laptop."

- She talks a little about the new management structure she is rolling out today, that she believes "will make Yahoo! a lot faster on its feet."

- That means making things simpler: "We’ll be able to make speedier decisions, the notorious silos are gone, and we have a renewed focus on the customer."

- She says smart things about focusing on Yahoo's users -- its most important assets. "I’m singularly focused on providing you with awesome products. Period."

- She also says she's going to work more on Yahoo's (YHOO) brand. "Look for this company’s brand to kick ass again." (No details.)

Execution will be key, of course, but this is a good sign that Carol is at least looking to fix the right problems.

The full memo:

A month and a half in the saddle and today I have the perfect excuse to get blogging.

I’ve been on a whirlwind tour for the last six weeks, talking with everybody from executive leaders to the guys who configured my laptop. I’ve been in student mode, slowly getting smarter about what makes this place tick. And most recently, I’ve been gathering information on what it’s going to take to get Yahoo! to a great place as an organization –- and one that brings you killer products.

People here have impressed the hell out of me. They’re smart, dedicated, passionate, driven, and really nice. There’s so much great energy and frankly lots of optimism. But there’s also plenty that has bogged this company down. For starters, you’d be amazed at how complicated some things are here.

So today I’m rolling out a new management structure that I believe will make Yahoo! a lot faster on its feet. For us working at Yahoo!, it means everything gets simpler. We’ll be able to make speedier decisions, the notorious silos are gone, and we have a renewed focus on the customer. For you using Yahoo! every day, it will better enable us to deliver products that make you say, “Wow.”

I’ve noticed that a lot of us on the inside don’t spend enough time looking to the outside. That’s why I’m creating a new Customer Advocacy group. After getting a lot of angry calls at my office from frustrated customers, I realized we could do a better job of listening to and supporting you. Our Customer Care team does an incredible job with the amazing number of people who come to them, but they need better resources. So we’re investing in that. After all, you deserve the very best.

We’re also leaning on this team to make sure we’re all hearing the voice of our customers (consumers and advertisers). I’m singularly focused on providing you with awesome products. Period. The kind that get you so excited, you have to tell someone about them. Whether on your desktop, your mobile device, or even your TV.

And that takes a real understanding of what you want/need/love/hate, how you’re using our products, and what you find simple, intuitive, easy and fun. Who wants innovation for innovation’s sake if it doesn’t make your life easier, more efficient, more productive? So expect us to hear you better and take better care of you.

Finally, a note about our brand. It’s one of our biggest assets. Mention Yahoo! practically anywhere in the world, and people yodel. But in the past few years, we haven’t been as clear in showing the world what the Yahoo! brand stands for. We’re going to change that. Look for this company’s brand to kick ass again.

Big thanks to the many of you who’ve reached out with positive comments. It’s clear people want Yahoo! to succeed. I’ll try to pop by here again soon, though probably not too soon. I have a pretty long to-do list.

Carol Bartz
CEO

See Also:

READ MORE - Carol bartz: Yahoo will ‘Kick ass again’

yahoo CFo Blake out as bartz starts Reog

Yahoo CFO Blake Jorgensen Out As Bartz Starts Reorg [MediaMemo]


blake-jorgenson Time to start "getting our house in order" Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz has declared. One of the first steps: Sweeping out CFO Blake Jorgenson.
READ MORE - yahoo CFo Blake out as bartz starts Reog

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Gizmodo’s Amazon Kindle Review

Remains of the Day [For What It's Worth]


Oof, so much life to hack, so little time to hack it. Here's a look at what we found interesting today that didn't quite make the full post cut:

Something else from the day you'd like to point out? Let's hear it in the comments.



READ MORE - Gizmodo’s Amazon Kindle Review