FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2008
- Messages
- 26,263 (4.33/day)
- Location
- IA, USA
System Name | BY-2021 |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X (65w eco profile) |
Motherboard | MSI B550 Gaming Plus |
Cooling | Scythe Mugen (rev 5) |
Memory | 2 x Kingston HyperX DDR4-3200 32 GiB |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT |
Storage | Samsung 980 Pro, Seagate Exos X20 TB 7200 RPM |
Display(s) | Nixeus NX-EDG274K (3840x2160@144 DP) + Samsung SyncMaster 906BW (1440x900@60 HDMI-DVI) |
Case | Coolermaster HAF 932 w/ USB 3.0 5.25" bay + USB 3.2 (A+C) 3.5" bay |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek ALC1150, Micca OriGen+ |
Power Supply | Enermax Platimax 850w |
Mouse | Nixeus REVEL-X |
Keyboard | Tesoro Excalibur |
Software | Windows 10 Home 64-bit |
Benchmark Scores | Faster than the tortoise; slower than the hare. |
Absolutely not. I used the acronyms ALU and FPU explicitly for a reason.For example the Pentium processor with MMX had a 64-bit FPU. By your definition it would be a 64-bit processor, but because it had a 32-bit memory address space, everyone else considered it a 32-bit processor.
Yes, they would. All they have to realize is the states represent data. They'd figure out how to read and write it shortly thereafter.If you look at any cell there will not be binary data. If some alien acquired a flash memory chip the alien would have no idea that it represented binary information.
I think a super computer could be built in the next 10-20 years that has a bus fast enough to treat many CPUs as cores and have one massive pool of memory or something like old Opterons had where processors can share memory. Should it happen, it would become the first processor with a 128-bit architecture (IA-128 anyone?).