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Old August 9th, 2008   #1
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Default On the Origin of Circuits

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In a unique laboratory in Sussex, England, a computer carefully scrutinized every member of large and diverse set of candidates. Each was evaluated dispassionately, and assigned a numeric score according to a strict set of criteria. This machine's task was to single out the best possible pairings from the group, then force the selected couples to mate so that it might extract the resulting offspring and repeat the process with the following generation. As predicted, with each breeding cycle the offspring evolved slightly, nudging the population incrementally closer to the computer's pre-programmed definition of the perfect individual.

The candidates in question were not the stuff of blood, guts, and chromosomes that are normally associated with evolution, rather they were clumps of ones and zeros residing within a specialized computer chip. As these primitive bodies of data bumped together in their silicon logic cells, Adrian Thompson– the machine's master– observed with curiosity and enthusiasm.

Dr. Adrian Thompson is a researcher operating from the Department of Informatics at the University of Sussex, and his experimentation in the mid-1990s represented some of science's first practical attempts to penetrate the virgin domain of hardware evolution. The concept is roughly analogous to Charles Darwin's elegant principle of natural selection, which describes how individuals with the most advantageous traits are more likely to survive and reproduce. This process tends to preserve favorable characteristics by passing them to the survivors' descendants, while simultaneously suppressing the spread of less-useful traits.
Damn Interesting On the Origin of Circuits



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Old August 9th, 2008   #2
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Default Re: On the Origin of Circuits

It is pretty interesting that the chip evolved and utilized science we haven't created practically yet ... that is "magnetic flux" ... making the inventor of the first "Magnetic Flux" control interface ... well a ... PC chip.



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