Daniel Newhouse

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Have you seen Star Trek Generations?

The nexus uses tri-lithium to stop the reaction in a star.

Has anyone tried using it for microprocessors? The reason I ask is the power and heat keep increasing on CPUs. They went from Si to GaAs.

The trouble is, to make microprocessor order of operations sublime, the microprocessor needs to be 43 bits. The D/A and A/D need to be mismatched, I think its 28 bit D/A and 26 bit A/D, but the 43 is the most important number. I forget how many levels of memory it implies. I think 7.
 

SkyWriting

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Have you seen Star Trek Generations?

The nexus uses tri-lithium to stop the reaction in a star.

Has anyone tried using it for microprocessors? The reason I ask is the power and heat keep increasing on CPUs. They went from Si to GaAs.

The trouble is, to make microprocessor order of operations sublime, the microprocessor needs to be 43 bits. The D/A and A/D need to be mismatched, I think its 28 bit D/A and 26 bit A/D, but the 43 is the most important number. I forget how many levels of memory it implies. I think 7.

When they tried it for PC's they froze up. It was decided that
there were enough freeze-up opportunities. And not good for sequels either.
 
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Daniel Newhouse

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Tri-lithium as the semiconductor, not the conductor. Copper as the conductor.

You could use silver as the conductor, but I think it would be an unnecessary expense.

Silver is typically used as the thermal conductor in thermal paste.
 
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