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Future Computers Built on a Forgotten Past

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Thu, Jan 27, 2022 04:07 PM

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We lost something along the way out of a need for efficiency and savings. A BIG something. We are fi

We lost something along the way out of a need for efficiency and savings. A BIG something. We are finally on the cusp of reclaiming that potential. We lost something along the way out of a need for efficiency and savings. A BIG something. We are finally on the cusp of reclaiming that potential. [Outsider Club logo] Future Computers Built on a Forgotten Past [Adam English Photo] By [Adam English]( Written Jan 27, 2022 Today I’m going to tell you about something we lost along the way. I’m going to tell you about how the future of computers is buried in our past. There is an elephant in the room — ubiquitous, persistent, and poorly handled — and we’ve ignored it for a good 80 years. It’s a variation of the old “Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain” from “The Wizard of Oz.” Except we’re going to start with a woman. Meet Barbara Canright. [barbara canright] New Robot Has Tech Execs Scrambling You might not believe this is even real, but I assure you this video has been left unedited. Nearly every tech company in the world is scrambling to get its hands on this tech. And investors are set to profit handsomely. Get the details on [our Top 3 Stocks Picks here.]( Once upon a time, but not too long ago, computers breathed, ate, slept, and pushed pencils. Computers were people. Mrs. Canright was one of the first. She was instrumental in early work at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory back before NASA technically existed and long before mechanical, then digital, computers and sensors were considered possible. Mrs. Canright and her peers had two advantages back when women were begrudgingly accepted in the workforce during the war years — processing speed and data quality. They lost the first — speed — before long. The return of World War II veterans to the job market would have pushed them out anyways, but that’s a whole other thing. We’re dealing with the fallout from abandoning the second advantage, data quality, today. Computers since then have largely exceeded all predictions for how good they are at crunching numbers. They were stupidly expensive to maintain, and labor costs — especially for overeducated women hitting a really low glass ceiling — were cheap. That quickly flipped. Mrs. Canright did complex physics, after all. Few — maybe less — can still do this work to this day, but there is a right and a wrong answer in the end. We don’t need pencil pushers to get there anymore. We haven’t for half a century. Instead, we need to use data better. What we need is help asking the right question before we start crunching the data. What Mrs. Canright could do that a mainframe that cost millions couldn’t was evaluate data before it was presented to anyone else. That distinction was lost along the way, [but no longer](. Facebook Has Already Bet $50 Billion on ThisForget 5G — 2021’s Biggest Gains Will Be Here Mark Zuckerberg is no fool. So when he invests $50 billion in a brand-new technology, you'd better pay attention — especially when venture capitalists have also plowed $45 billion in it. Apple and Google have quietly added it to more than 1 billion smartphones. And this exclusive video reveals why this new tech breakthrough is about to revolutionize the computing world... and make a lot of people very rich. Early investors stand to make extraordinary gains of as much as 9,910%. But you have to hurry — this technology is about to go mainstream. [Get the inside story here.]( Data is the one thing we most certainly have. Growth in what we collectively have saved somewhere is surging far beyond how we can use it. The new need isn’t about how quickly you can get an answer to a question. It’s about what questions you can ask while still getting a meaningful answer. What’s the meaning of life? 42. Douglas Adams was right about one thing — if you build the biggest computer in the universe but phrase the question wrong, you’ll get an answer you can’t use. Garbage in, garbage out. Mrs. Canright couldn’t ever compete for speed, but quality? That’s another issue, and one that we’ve poorly addressed since her time. That is poised to change, though. Not the meaning-of-life thing, clearly, but our ability to use computers to process data in meaningful ways when we do a poor job of making sure the data is pristine for what we try to use it for. Our current technology is at its absolute physical limits. Chips are now so small that we’re talking about nanometers of distance between circuits on them. You can only cram so much into a certain amount of space. A good human brain used to be the gold standard there; now we have to worry about the quantum behavior of electrons — the "spooky action" that even Einstein didn't want to address. What do the results serve? The microprocessors we use only answer the simplest of questions. Yes or no? 1 or 0? We can’t train computers to tell us when we ask a bad question, but can they adapt to provide a range of answers and probabilities? [Yes, but it requires a whole lot more from them than we’ve been able to ask to date](. Have You Heard of “TriFuel-238”? A single ounce could power your home for a year. Under half an ounce could get you from LA to D.C. And now, according to figures from the U.S. Energy Information Administration... The breakthrough known as "TriFuel-238"... Could trigger a wealth event unseen since the dawn of the internet... As it takes the throne as the cheapest source of energy on the planet. This has nothing to do with renewables or fossil fuels — or virtually anything you’ve ever seen before. Yet this strange substance could now claim the lion’s share of a $1.9 trillion opportunity... And hand early investors a potential life-changing fortune. [Get the urgent details now.]( Transistors on the latest generation of microprocessors are as tiny as five nanometers. That’s the size of about 10 silicon atoms. It’s about 1,600 times smaller than a human red blood cell. The push to shrink silicon chips with copper-based circuits has been enough until now. It no longer will suffice. What we need is a whole new level of capacity. We need the capacity to ask questions that can’t be easily broken down into simple yes-or-no calculations that we run once. We need thousands and millions and billions of iterations of the same big data number crunches. We need computers that consistently compare results, correct errors, and refine output. Humans were great at this until we got pushed out of the game. We need to regain this capacity. People are incredibly good at that at our own time scales, but that's no good anymore. Computers that are billions of times faster? Well, they could be, if only we made them that way instead of sacrificing data quality as a priority in Mrs. Canright’s day for the sake of saving money. That is coming full circle, though. What she and other human computers could do — push out tough computations and guarantee accuracy — is becoming possible again. More importantly, it is becoming economical. We lost something along the way out of a need for efficiency and savings. A BIG something. [Finally, o]([ne company's breakthrough fulfills that potential](. Take care, [Adam English] Adam English [follow basic]( [@AdamEnglishOC on Twitter]( Adam's editorial talents and analysis drew the attention of senior editors at [Outsider Club](, which he joined in mid-2012. While he has acquired years of hands-on experience in the editorial room by working side by side with ex-brokers, options floor traders, and financial advisors, he is acutely aware of the challenges faced by retail investors after starting at the ground floor in the financial publishing field. For more on Adam, check out his editor's [page](. *Follow Outsider Club on [Facebook]( and [Twitter](. Browse Our Archives [The Best 20 Bucks I Ever Lost]( [3 Stocks Investors Should Revisit NOW]( [Gold's Not Dead]( [2 Ways to Beat Inflation and the Food Crisis]( [The Fed Is Full of Crap and Wall Street's Buying It]( --------------------------------------------------------------- This email was sent to {EMAIL}. It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you've received this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, you may [unsubscribe here]( and view our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. To ensure that you receive future issues of Outsider Club, please add newsletter@outsiderclub.com to your address book or whitelist within your spam settings. For customer service questions or issues, please contact us for assistance. Outsider Club, Copyright © 2022, Outsider Club LLC and Angel Publishing LLC. All rights reserved. 3 E Read Street, Baltimore, MD 21202. Your privacy is important to us – we will never rent or sell your e-mail or personal information. Please read our [Privacy Policy](. Neither the publisher nor the editors are registered investment advisors. Subscribers should not view this publication as offering personalized legal or investment advice. Read our [Details and Disclosures.](

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