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'Pruned' Microchips Twice As Fast and Efficient

Zothecula writes "If you had to use a commuting bicycle in a race, you would probably set about removing the kickstand, fenders, racks and lights to make the thing as fast and efficient as possible. When engineers at Houston's Rice University are developing small, fast, energy-efficient chips for use in devices like hearing aids, it turns out they do pretty much the same thing. The removal of portions of circuits that aren't essential to the task at hand is known as 'probabilistic pruning,' and it results in chips that are twice as fast, use half the power, and are half the size of conventional chips."

2 of 127 comments (clear)

  1. Madman Muntz famous(and rich)for this last century by shoppa · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Removing unnecessary parts from a circuit until it stops working, is now something "new"?

    From Wikipedia entry on Madman Muntz:

    Muntz played the madman in his unorthodox television commercials, but in fact he was a shrewd businessman and a self-taught electrical engineer. By trial and error, taking apart and studying Philco, RCA, and DuMont televisions, he figured out how to reduce the devices' electrical components to their minimum functional number. This practice became known as "Muntzing".
    He often carried a pair of wire clippers, and when he thought that one of his employees was "over-engineering" a circuit, he would begin snipping components out until the picture or sound stopped working. At that point, he would tell the engineer "Well, I guess you have to put that last part back in" and walk away.

  2. Re:Hm by ZankerH · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Already been done, it's called one instruction set computing, and it makes brainfuck look like python in comparison.