ProgrammingGodJordan
Banned
The actual calculation shows that it is impossible to achieve your claim by 2020 of roughly 10^16 to 10^18 synaptic operations per second.
The OP links to a 2014 IBM SyNAPSE chip with "only" 256 million synapses.
A claim of 10^14 synaptic operations a second gets to the lower limit of the range that you gave in a little over 8 years (doubling every 2 years), i.e. at least 2025. But your source for this is not an currently working chip - it is a simulation on a massively parallel supercomputer.
The rest of the post may need a Duh! because it is just about inevitable that we will have "a brain in a box" sometime - maybe within the next few decades.
(A)
Don't be afraid of the word "simulation".
Simulations may yield proper outcomes.
For example, alpha go, the planet's prominent ai, and the planet's initial approximation of general artificial intelligence, used SIMULATIONS of scenarios to acquire its experience.
The use of SIMULATIONS did not stop it from destroying Lee Sedol, the planet's human go champion (before alpha go that is)
(B)
IT IS NOT 10^14 SYNAPTIC OPERATIONS PER SECOND.
People in this forum continue to repeat that error.
It is 10^14 SYNAPSES.
One is SYNAPTIC OPS PER SECOND, and the other is the SYNAPSES themselves.
(C)
This is why the original post began with 10^16 sops.
I could have began with 10^15 synapses, instead of 10^16 sops.
The 10^15 synapses is rough for some value x 10^15, or rough for 10^16 sops.
People here even till now, still don't get that 10^15 SYNAPSES can be ROUGH for 10^16 SOPS. (They still ignore the units )
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