17 comments

  • mdaniel 4 days ago ago
  • webdevver 4 days ago ago

    we are incredibly overdue for the 3D-printer-ification of silicon chips

    • snek_case 3 days ago ago

      Don't hold your breath. Chip fabrication is extremely sophisticated. It's basically nanotechnology. Not something that could practically be done at home anytime soon.

      • __MatrixMan__ 3 days ago ago

        I agree, photolithography at home is a long way out.

        I think if we want to distribute the means of computational production, a better approach would be to print oligonucleotide instructions (requires a custom inkjet printer), and use a cell free extract (e. coli would work) to synthesize proteins which are programmed to assemble the computational substrate from nanoparticles.

        Something along these lines: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1422649112

        • mptest 2 days ago ago

          That being the better approach says volumes about the complexity of lithography.

          For anyone reading this, read Chip Wars by Chris Miller. The Lithography sub-story that threads through is amazing and fascinating and the whole book is incredible besides.

          For those who think Ai Is a bubble and longshot, look up how crazy of a bet EUV (extreme ultraviolet) lithography was.

    • jononor 3 days ago ago

      I think that before that will be the PCB-ification, where you can order online and be batched in with others on a standardized process, for a reasonable price. This is actually starting to become possible, for example via TinyTapeout you can get tiny chips taped out for a few hundred USD.

    • LargoLasskhyfv 2 days ago ago

      That exists, sort of. Just not at an affordable level for home use.

      But still worlds apart from current semiconductor fabrication with billions of necessary investments.

      https://www.yokogawa.com/industries/semiconductor/minimal-fa...

    • queuebert 3 days ago ago

      There is a company called Nano Dimension working on something like that. Last I heard their 3d printer wasn't at the consumer level yet, but neither were computers in the early days.

  • john_minsk 4 days ago ago

    How did you create such amazing animation with svgs? Cool docs

    • xrd 3 days ago ago

      I was interested in this as well. The site is awesome and beautiful. And, I wished the SVGs were built in a way that (from my limited interaction) is basically just swapping new SVG in for each tick. It's really pretty, but I wished there was a bit more interaction and composability.

    • mi_lk 3 days ago ago

      Seems a bunch of excalidraw outputs stacked together, no?

      • john_minsk a day ago ago

        May be. I don't know. Thanks for answering - will check the excalidraw!

  • ForOldHack 4 days ago ago

    Can I get a PCIe card with multiple units and An easy interface? Say 4 TPUs and 8 ram slots? $5,000???

    • mdaniel 3 days ago ago

      I had approximately the same comment in a thread under a submission about a new CPU <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44201707> and the replies highlighted my understanding of exactly how slow using sticks of RAM versus on-die VRAM. I'd still enjoy trying it, but I have not yet loaded enough of the FPGA ecosystem in my head to know how many hours I am away from watching the bits flow

  • faangguyindia 4 days ago ago

    Those who are expert at this, how many TPUs i need to run lets say

    Gemini flash 2.5 and pro 2.5 models for 1 user?

  • 4 days ago ago
    [deleted]
  • mdaniel 4 days ago ago

    Ah, and a psuedo dupe of https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44944592 but I'll be straight that I think the current point spread is accurate because I much prefer the repo link to some random .com domain