Spyke

In addition, the generated Boolean function is almost zero tolerance to inaccuracy, otherwise, CPUs will be malfunctioned and cause a huge amount of loss. A recent case in 2017 is that the Intel Atom C2000 bug affected many famous vendors, among which Cisco prepared 125M dollars to replace related products32. [...] In this article, we report a RISC-V CPU automatically designed by a new AI approach, which generates large-scale Boolean function with almost 100% validation accuracy (e.g., > 99.99999999999% as Intel)

Oh good, that was going to be my question. A new CPU is all well and good, but if you don't validate it to prove it doesn't have some weird bug, then it's worthless.

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Let me know when they put the heat sink on a production model so we can REALLY test that bad boy.

3

From the same country that reported their fist x86 processor that was an Intel Core i3 in disguise. Or was a Pentium?

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An AI model designed a functional RISC-V CPU in less than 5 hours. - The Verge | Spyke