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Mind at Light Speed is the ultimate story of artificial
intelligence -- and how it will revolutionize the world in which we live. David
Nolte, Professor of Physics at Purdue University, and his research colleagues
have devoted their lives to building computers that use light instead of electricity
for computation. These machines will be so fast and efficient that they will generate
a new kind of intelligence, which for centuries has only been dreamed of by visionaries
and mystics. That science fiction is now real. Since
the invention of the laser right up to the recent news that a light particle was
halted as if it were a baseball caught in a mitt, we have watched the manipulation
of light grow ever more sophisticated and ingenious. That line of research is
about to pay off more dramatically than we could have hoped. Nolte's and his colleagues'
simple yet revolutionary idea is that, while electric charge may have always done
the calculating in our computers -- and inside our brains -- we can build
machines that compute with light, with photons, instead. Such optical computers
would operate at light speed and in the process redefine intelligence. That technololgy
is happening. The much-discussed bandwidth revolution
is being driven by fiber-optic cables that make optical computing inevitable.
Nolte shows how the photons that travel down those cables will soon stop not at
the curb in front of your house but flow right inside your home and inside your
computer, passing information from chip to hard-drive -- and then the photons
will move right onto the chips themselves. These machines will be the first light
computers. Their hard drives will be holograms able to access everything at once
and, in time, their switches will become quantum switches. Nolte already holds
patents on the optical processors that will be the heart of these new machines,
and, in a goldmine appendix on the light speed economy, he lists the optical research
and development companies he finds most intriguing. If
machines ever become beings, their minds, to borrow a phrase from Herman Hesse,
will be a "glass bead game" in a stream of light. Combining expertise
in linguistics, information sciences, computer science, physics, and engineering,
this account from the pinnacle of human technological endeavor reveals the future
of intelligence, and of our lives. David D. Nolte
is Professor of Physics at Purdue University. He received his Ph.D. from the University
of California at Berkeley and is now a leading researcher of the physics of optical
materials and devices, with several U.S. patents on adaptive holographic films.
He was elected a Fellow of the Optical Society of America for his pioneering work
on dynamic holography in semiconductor nanostructures and has won the Presidential
Young Investigator Award of the National Science Foundation. He lives in West
Lafayette, Indiana. |