By John Wayne on Friday, 15 March 2024
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

DeepSouth Supercomputer Steps Towards Surpassing the Human Brain, Or So They Say By Brian Simpson

Australia is not losing in the transhuman, the replace of humans by AI, stakes. A supercomputer called DeepSouth will go online next year, and it is supposedly capable of 228 trillion synaptic operations per second, which we are supposed to take as being good, no?

The headlines seem to imply that the supercomputer will be superior to the human brain, but when one reads on, it seems that this is not so, but is but one step in the process of creating an AI brain superior to the human brain.

Well, we will see about that.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/the-world-s-first-human-brain-scale-supercomputer-will-go-live-next-year/ar-AA1ly3UC

"Our brains are remarkably energy efficient.

Using just 20 watts of power, the human brain is capable of processing the equivalent of an exaflop — or a billion-billion mathematical operations per second.

Now, researchers in Australia are building what will be the world's first supercomputer that can simulate networks at this scale.

The supercomputer, known as DeepSouth, is being developed by Western Sydney University.

When it goes online next year, it will be capable of 228 trillion synaptic operations per second, which rivals the estimated rate of operations in the human brain.

The hope is to better understand how brains can use such little power to process huge amounts of information.

If researchers can work this out, they could someday create a cyborg brain vastly more powerful than our own. The work could also revolutionize our understanding of how our brains work.

"Progress in our understanding of how brains compute using neurons is hampered by our inability to simulate brain-like networks at scale," said André van Schaik, a director at Western Sydney University's International Centre for Neuromorphic Systems.

Using just 20 watts of power, the human brain is capable of processing the equivalent of an exaflop — or a billion-billion mathematical operations per second.

Now, researchers in Australia are building what will be the world's first supercomputer that can simulate networks at this scale.

The supercomputer, known as DeepSouth, is being developed by Western Sydney University.

When it goes online next year, it will be capable of 228 trillion synaptic operations per second, which rivals the estimated rate of operations in the human brain.

The hope is to better understand how brains can use such little power to process huge amounts of information.

If researchers can work this out, they could someday create a cyborg brain vastly more powerful than our own. The work could also revolutionize our understanding of how our brains work.

"Progress in our understanding of how brains compute using neurons is hampered by our inability to simulate brain-like networks at scale," said André van Schaik, a director at Western Sydney University's International Centre for Neuromorphic Systems." 

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