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Intel's 100-core chip could power intelligent toilet
The Register ^ | 3/6/05 | Ashlee Vance

Posted on 03/06/2005 9:09:18 PM PST by freedom44

Those of you who just do a bit of web surfing, typing and e-mail may be struggling to figure out how to get a little more out of that new 3.6GHz chip. Have no fear. In ten years time, you can try and figure out how to use 100 core processors many, many times more powerful than your current Pentium.

So said Intel senior fellow Justin Rattner today at the Intel Developer Forum. Intel is one of a number of companies turning today's single core processors into dual-core, four-core and then multicore chips. Much of this horsepower is aimed at the server market where some customers clamor for as much juice as possible. Rattner, however, thinks consumers can make use of the technology as well.

"Imagine a home that helps you live a healthy lifestyle," he said, during a keynote address. "It actually monitors as you live (and) looks for signs of early disease."

So there's Intel's 100-core chip helping your toilet examine the morning delivery for signs of blood or god knows what else. The powerful toilet can call the doctor and schedule an appointment if it notices suspicious stool - checking, of course, with your online calendar for an appropriate time. Or, should you collapse right then and there, the toilet can call for an ambulance. Brilliant!

All kidding aside, such a toilet could be helpful and even witty. Who wouldn't want a reminder like, "Easy, big boy. The 10 oz cut will do next time." in the morning. Or even, "You've got mail and a herpes outbreak."

Intel Inside indeed.

Rattner continued on by promising that future computers will use multi-core chips to deliver voice and sight interfaces beyond today's boring GUI.

"Instead of file not found, (the computer will ask), "Did you mean this or that?" he said. "Much like Google does today but expanded a hundred times."

As always seems to happen in these types of speeches, Rattner was forced to point to today's video gamers as the major users of fast PCs in the consumer market. They'll be the ones loving multi-core chips. What companies like Intel, Dell and Microsoft would do without gamers is beyond us. The futurists sure struggle on their own to talk about anything other than really smart fridges, toasters and walls.

Will these gamers help deliver intelligent toilets to people everywhere? Looks like it. 2015 can't come soon enough. ®


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Technical
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1 posted on 03/06/2005 9:09:18 PM PST by freedom44
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To: freedom44

A hypochondriac's wet dream!


2 posted on 03/06/2005 9:12:44 PM PST by thoughtomator (Gleefully watching the self-demolition of all things left-wing)
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To: freedom44
"Imagine a home that helps you live a healthy lifestyle," he said, during a keynote address. "It actually monitors as you live (and) looks for signs of early disease."

No way I'm ever going to buy a refrigerator that won't let me have a Peach Snapple or my Samuel Smith's Taddy Porter when I want it!

Mark

3 posted on 03/06/2005 9:14:50 PM PST by MarkL (That which does not kill me, has made the last mistake it will ever make!)
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To: freedom44
"It actually monitors as you live (and) looks for signs of early disease."

Oh, goody.

4 posted on 03/06/2005 9:17:26 PM PST by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: freedom44
The powerful toilet can call the doctor and schedule an appointment if it notices suspicious stool


5 posted on 03/06/2005 9:18:51 PM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (If you decide to kick the tiger in the ass...you'd better be prepared to deal with the teeth.)
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To: freedom44; Tijeras_Slim; Constitution Day; beyond the sea

Toilet: "Easy, big boy. The 10 oz cut will do next time."

Me: "STFU and clean yourself, willya?"


6 posted on 03/06/2005 9:19:27 PM PST by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: freedom44
So there's Intel's 100-core chip helping your toilet examine the morning delivery for signs of blood or god knows what else. The powerful toilet can call the doctor and schedule an appointment if it notices suspicious stool - checking, of course, with your online calendar for an appropriate time. Or, should you collapse right then and there, the toilet can call for an ambulance. Brilliant!

Oh no! A Swiss hygiene inspector installed in your very bathroom!

7 posted on 03/06/2005 9:20:39 PM PST by cinnathepoet (Directly, I am going to Caesar's funeral)
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To: freedom44
"The powerful toilet can call the doctor

Or any authority of the designers choosing.

8 posted on 03/06/2005 9:21:19 PM PST by endthematrix (Declare 2005 as the year the battle for freedom from tax slavery!)
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To: freedom44; Charles Henrickson; mikrofon
"Easy, big boy. The 10 oz cut will do next time."

Potty mouth.

9 posted on 03/06/2005 9:21:58 PM PST by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: freedom44
All kidding aside, such a toilet could be helpful and even witty. Who wouldn't want a reminder like, "Easy, big boy. The 10 oz cut will do next time."

The first time a toilet does that, I shoot it.

Seriously.

10 posted on 03/06/2005 9:23:36 PM PST by Lazamataz (Proudly Posting Without Reading the Article Since 1999!)
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To: freedom44

It would also have a motion picture camera that goes direct to a pervert web site.


11 posted on 03/06/2005 9:24:51 PM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran (When you compromise with evil, evil wins. AYN RAND)
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To: endthematrix
Or any authority of the designers choosing.

Technology may have us sh***ing outdoors and wearing furs before this is over.

12 posted on 03/06/2005 9:25:00 PM PST by Lazamataz (Proudly Posting Without Reading the Article Since 1999!)
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: freedom44

Will it be able to distinguish blood from a hemmorhoid from a more serious problem?


14 posted on 03/06/2005 9:31:01 PM PST by Zivasmate (" A wise man's heart inclines him to his right, but a fool's heart to his left." - Ecclesiastes 10)
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To: Lazamataz

Brings to mind an old chesnut about computers: "speeding up and making more efficient things that never should have been done in the first place"

POTTY MOUTH! Indeed!


15 posted on 03/06/2005 9:31:53 PM PST by CBart95
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To: freedom44
As always seems to happen in these types of speeches, Rattner was forced to point to today's video gamers as the major users of fast PCs in the consumer market. They'll be the ones loving multi-core chips. What companies like Intel, Dell and Microsoft would do without gamers is beyond us. The futurists sure struggle on their own to talk about anything other than really smart fridges, toasters and walls.

It'll be great for gamers, but the rest of us will get little more than posher-looking desktops, whizzier animated icons, and – maybe, if we're really lucky – usable voice recognition. For the forseeable future, marketing hype and planned obsolescence will be the only two things that drive PC sales for non-gamers.

16 posted on 03/06/2005 9:33:00 PM PST by Skibane
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To: Spann_Tillman
You sound like you're from Belmont!

Kansas City, acutally.

Mark

17 posted on 03/06/2005 9:33:06 PM PST by MarkL (That which does not kill me, has made the last mistake it will ever make!)
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To: freedom44
So there's Intel's 100-core chip helping your toilet examine the morning delivery for signs of blood or god knows what else. The powerful toilet can call the doctor and schedule an appointment if it notices suspicious stool -...........

"Unbeknownst to Harry before he sat down, his new Intel 100-Core Chip Version 2.0 toilet came equipped with a computer automated colonoscope that sent fiber optic images of his colon directly to his doctor's office computer."


18 posted on 03/06/2005 9:42:22 PM PST by Polybius
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To: freedom44

It's an R. Crumb poster brought to life.


19 posted on 03/06/2005 9:50:05 PM PST by denydenydeny
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To: freedom44
Or, should you collapse right then and there, the toilet can call for an ambulance. Brilliant!

Something Elvis could have used.

20 posted on 03/06/2005 10:00:57 PM PST by Moonman62 (Federal creed: If it moves tax it. If it keeps moving regulate it. If it stops moving subsidize it)
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