The RISC-V ecosystem is making steady progress across various application fields, from cloud high-performance computing to automotive electronics. Industry players are launching solutions targeting ...
A new technical paper titled “Augmenting Von Neumann’s Architecture for an Intelligent Future” was published by researchers at TU Munich and Pace University. “This work presents a novel computer ...
The ESWIN EBC77 is a credit card-sized single-board computer that looks like a Raspberry Pi. But instead of an ARM-based processor, this little PC has a 1.8 GHz ESWIN EIC7700X quad-core chip based on ...
Abstract: Instruction set is a set of instructions used by CPU to calculate and control computer system, and is the interface between hardware and software. There are two common instruction sets: CISC ...
RISC-V, pronounced “risk five,” is a modern open-source instruction set architecture (ISA) based on reduced instruction set computer (RISC) principles. In simple terms, it’s like a blueprint that ...
Dr. Barak is a professor of computer science at Harvard University. On Oct. 8, 2023, I was on the steps of Harvard’s Widener Library, taking part in a vigil for the victims of Hamas’s terrorist attack ...
The Muse Pi Pro is a credit card-sized computer with a RISC-V processor, an AI accelerator, support for up to 16GB of LPDDR5x-2400 RAM, and up to 128GB of eMMC 5.1 onboard storage. But that’s just the ...
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin shared a new proposal over the weekend that would radically overhaul the system that powers its smart contracts. Buterin's suggestion, which he posted on Ethereum's ...
The Ethereum co-founder continues to propose ideas to make the smart contract blockchain more competitive with high-throughput chains. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has proposed replacing the ...
“Modern data-driven applications expose limitations of von Neumann architectures – extensive data movement, low throughput, and poor energy efficiency. Accelerators improve performance but lack ...
How can we push CPUs forward? That's the question the computing industry has been asking since the Intel 4004 processor launched in 1971. Chipmakers have tried cranking up clock speeds, adding ...