New Way to Patch Defective Hardware
brunascle writes "Researchers have devised a new way to patch hardware. By treating a computer chip more like software than hardware, Josep Torrellas, a computer science professor from the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, believes we will be able to fix defective hardware by a applying a patch, similar to the way defective software is handled. His system, dubbed Phoenix, consists of a standard semiconductor device called a field programmable gate array (FPGA). Although generally slower than their application-specific integrated circuit counterparts, FPGAs have the advantage of being able to be modified post-production. Defects found on a Phoenix-enabled chip could be resolved by downloading a patch and applying it to the hardware. Torrellas believes this would give chips a shorter time to market, saying "If they know that they could fix the problems later on, they could beat the competition to market.""
Why are you such a fucking cretinous imbecile? Read the fucking paper the article is based on.
The idea isn't to replace the chip with an FPGA. The idea is to include a small FPGA through which various important signals are routed.
As shipped, the FPGA is just a pass-through, which does nothing. When you find out that a bug presents in a certain situation, you modify the FPGA to intercept the problem and handle it somehow.
"Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."