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First Hot-Ice Computer Created

KentuckyFC writes "Sodium acetate is the stuff inside chemical handwarmers that emits heat when it crystalizes after you press that little metal widget. That's why it is known as hot ice. Now a computer scientist in the UK has created a computer made entirely out of hot ice. The device processes information by exploiting the movement and interaction of wavefronts of crystallisation as they move through the material. The data input is in the form of metal wires that trigger crystal nucleation. The output works by reading off the direction of the moving wavefronts and the edges of the resulting crystals. The researcher has created AND and OR gates and solved a few problems such as finding the shortest path through mazes. There are even a few videos of the computer in action. The resulting computer is far from perfect, however. The data readout sometimes gives no solution and at other times gives circular results, the hot ice equivalent of a BSOD."

13 of 120 comments (clear)

  1. So the computer is... by Shikaku · · Score: 4, Funny

    Vaporware?

    Full of hot air?

    Heating things up?

    Hot stuff?

    (I'm just throwing all the obvious puns, I'm done.

    1. Re:So the computer is... by interkin3tic · · Score: 5, Funny

      You took all the puns? Man, that's just ice cold.

  2. Pretty cool, but... by AmigaHeretic · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...does it run Linux?

    1. Re:Pretty cool, but... by jebrew · · Score: 5, Funny

      Only if you're using IceWM

  3. Err, not a BSOD by freeweed · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The data readout sometimes gives no solution and at other times gives circular results, the hot ice equivalent of a BSOD.

    No, it's the hot ice equivalent of an infinite loop.

    Yeesh, get off my lawn.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    1. Re:Err, not a BSOD by melstav · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, the analogy of a crash rather than an infinite loop is more appropriate.

      In an infinite loop, the same instructions are executed over and over.

      In the hot-ice computer, "execution" occurs when the stuff crystallizes. Once the hot-ice crystallizes at a given spot in the matrix, it cannot crystallize again until you reset the system. (by boiling it and melting all of the crystals)

      So, when the crystals form into a circular path in the system execution stops because there's no place for the reaction to spread before it stops.

  4. already being slashdotted, USE THE CACHE, LUKE by SuperBanana · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://uncomp.uwe.ac.uk.nyud.net/adamatzky/hot-ice/
    (Patience, it may take a bit for Coral to get the videos cached.)

  5. You need a NAND or a NOR gate to make a computer by Robotbeat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You need to be able to make NAND or NOR gates to make a computer, so until they also produce a NOT gate, this won't be a full computer.

  6. Re:New information processing methods by DerekLyons · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every time I hear NASA scientists talking about how life requires water, I always shake my head.

    And your qualificatione for shaking your head are what?
     
    Too many hours spent watching Star Trek and/or having an overactive imagination don't count.

  7. Plasmodium mould by bencoder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    haha... I was about to say how it reminds me of a seminar I went to by a guy doing computing out of plasmodium mould growth so I looked it up, and it's the same guy. hilarious. This hot ice would have a similar growth pattern to the mould growth, but obviously a lot faster, and much more expensive.

  8. quite brave of them by v1 · · Score: 4, Funny

    to host 25 and 50mb movies on an "ac.uk" server that's about to get turned into paste...

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  9. Re:New information processing methods by CarpetShark · · Score: 4, Funny

    And your qualificatione for shaking your head are what?

    Uhh... having a head, and being able to shake it?

  10. It's called critical thinking by FreeUser · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And your qualificatione for shaking your head are what?

    Presumably, having a mind capable of critical thought. Something you would be advised to learn. You are engaging in both the classic logical fallacy of "Appeal to Authority" (described here) and a tired ad homonem attack (you imply the grandparent poster watches star trek, which you implicitly indicate makes any thought they have on the subject meaningless. Both assumptions are themselves meaningless and irreleveant in the context of this discussion, but serve for you to classify the grandparent poster as a member of a group you view inherently as inferior to your rather arrogant self, which you then use as grounds to denigrate and dismiss their argument out of hand, without a shred of supporting logic to justify your stance).

    The fact of the matter is that no one, inside of NASA or out, is an "authority" on extra-terrestrial life. No one has ever, as far as we know, detected, much less observed extra-terrestrial life. Everything we know, or think we know, is based purely on supposition and guesswork. In the case of NASA (and the view your post suggests you hold), the supposition that life elsewhere in the universe must (or is even likely to) mimic life on Earth.

    Assuming extra-terrestrial life will be like Earth-based life is no more defensible, rational, or likely to be correct than assuming extra-terrestrial life will be nothing like Earth-based life. Assuming water must be intrinsic to life everywhere because we've observed it on one tiny, insignificant planet orbiting an unremarkable star in the outskirts of an equally unremarkable galaxy amounts to drawing statistical conclusions from a sample base with N=1, which is no better, or more intellectually rigorous, than just making random shit up.

    The grandparent is right to shake his or her head. Any critically-thinking person would be inclined to do the same when confronted with such broad assumptions about something no one knows anything about, built upon such flimsy evidence.

    All life in the universe may require water. Or not. Flip a coin. Based on the data we currently have, you are as likely to be right as any self-appointed "expert" in exobiology.

    (Hell, water-based life might be the exception, not the rule. Just because it's us doesn't make it average or representative of the rest of the cosmos. Until we actually find some extra-terrestrial life, we can't even begin to guess the truth on this one way or another).

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy