Alright Einsteins,
I read an article on Scientific American regarding a new processor that uses Morphware. Morphware is when the function of a processor changes to another function while this change is caused by a software within the system.
Say for example you want to use your computer to manage accounting data. You give a command to a software that then tells the Magnetologic processor to function like a business unit. But then you finish and you want to play games. You once again tell the software to tell the processor to function as a gaming platorm.
Cool, huh?
The magnetologic processor is made up of a series of magnets that are arranged like gates. The arrangment of the gates dictates the primary function of the processor. Thus, you can tell a computer to act like a DVD player or act like a business computer or act like a gameing platform.
Programmers have always had to sacrifice one function of a processor in order to serve another when it came to regular processor that we all currently have. I magnetologic gate processor doesn't require a clock, thus reducing the complex calculation significantly and save processing time. And it can make the changes and refresh in 0.1 [zero-point-one] nanosecond while a regular processor take much longer than that. Even a second can feel like an eternity for our regular processors.
This is from what I remember and understand from the Scientific American magazine. The understanding part was the hard part because a lot of technical terms [which I can't understand] have been used in the article.
Imagine how this can effect the FS and CFS series in the years to come. It may sound like a lot of years to you guys, but remember how fast the FS and CFS series evolved in just 10 years.