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Global Report on Technology and the Economy
19 Years Providing Weekly Foresight
The most accurate predictive report on technology and the global economy, read by leaders in industry, finance, and government worldwide.
***SNS***
Special Letter:
Supercharging Big Data Academic Research with High-Performance Cyberinfrastructure
[Please open the attached .pdf for best viewing.]
Please join us at FiRe 2015 to explore:
42 new technologies and The Power of Patterns.
October 6-9 • Stein Eriksen Lodge
Park City, Utah
www.futureinreview.com/register
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Publisher's Note: In this week's issue, members will get a view of a completely new computing environment, from SNS Pattern Recognition Processors out to a new secure Net running as a multi-institution backplane across a whole state, at real measured speeds of 100 Gbps. Old hands may think of the first days of ARPANET, and dumb terminals, upgraded to what we'll all be using perhaps 20 years from now. But it's all real today.
This also is the first public unveiling of a project Larry Smarr and I envisioned during one of our annual road trip weekends together: the SNS Calit2 Pattern Recognition Laboratory. Yes, there are other PRLs in the world, but almost all of them are focused on image recognition in some way or another. We are going to push the science and technology of PR in unconstrained data environments. That means (it seems likely to me) we will be building machines, software, tools, languages, and practices and procedures that will ultimately reveal not just what's hidden in an image, but also what remains hidden from us in the world.
Those attending the 13th annual FiRe conference next month will have a chance to see all of this in action, and to meet the players from around the world who are involved in creating the first Pattern Computer, the first PRPs, backed by neural nets with iterative learning, low-energy-consumption asymmetric spiking neurons, and biomimetic languages.
Sounds a bit different from Windows, Android, and PCs, doesn't it?
Buckle your seat belt and come along for the ride, as Larry Smarr describes where computing is headed in the next few decades, starting now. - mra
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