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- <text id=90TT0397>
- <title>
- Feb. 12, 1990: Harnessing The Speed Of Light
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 12, 1990 Scaling Down Defense
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 71
- Harnessing the Speed of Light
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>AT&T moves closer to creating superfast optical computers
- </p>
- <p>By Thomas McCarroll
- </p>
- <p> When Alan Huang revealed his plans to build an optical
- computer, most of his fellow scientists dismissed the idea as
- hopelessly quixotic. It was impractical, if not impossible,
- they said, to create a general-purpose computer that could use
- pulses of light rather than electrical signals to process data.
- During one of Huang's lectures on the subject, a third of the
- audience walked out. At another talk, some of the scientists in
- attendance laughed and heckled the researcher, calling him a
- quack and a dreamer. Recalls the 41-year-old engineer at AT&T
- Bell Laboratories: "I began to have computer nightmares, but
- I never doubted that it could be done. I wanted the last
- laugh."
- </p>
- <p> That was several years ago. Few of the doubters were
- smirking last week when Huang and AT&T unveiled an experimental
- computing machine based on optics rather than electrons, the
- first of its kind. The device--a crudely configured
- collection of lasers, lenses and prisms--could serve as the
- basis for future optical computers 100 to 1,000 times as
- powerful as today's most potent supercomputers. The potential
- applications are stunning: robots that can see; computers that
- can design aircraft from scratch; processors that can swiftly
- convert spoken words into written text and vice versa. Such
- practical optical computers are still years--some would say
- light-years--away. Yet many scientists are already predicting
- that the device will have an impact similar to that of the
- integrated circuit, which made small personal computers
- possible. David Casasent, director of Carnegie Mellon
- University's Center for Optical Computing, calls Huang's work
- </p>
- <p>new technology.
- </p>
- <p> Photons, the basic unit of light beams, can in theory be
- much better than electrons for moving signals through a
- computer. For one thing, photons can travel about ten times as
- fast as electrons. And while electrons react with one another,
- beams of photons, which have no mass or charge, can cross
- through one another without interference. Thus while electrons
- must be confined to guide wires, photons can move in free
- space. This could open the door to radically new and different
- computer designs, including so-called parallel processors that
- could work on more than one problem at a time instead of one
- after another, as today's serial computers do.
- </p>
- <p> But harnessing the computing power of light has proved to
- be a daunting challenge. The earliest attempts to build an
- optical computer date back to the late 1950s, when researchers
- experimented with mercury-arc lamps and even sunlight. Not much
- happened until the early 1960s brought the invention of lasers,
- devices that could concentrate light into powerful,
- high-precision beams. IBM spent four years and $100 million
- trying to develop a machine that could use laser beams to
- operate the multiple "on-off" switches that are the heart of all
- computers. Unfortunately, the switching operations required
- too much energy, and the devices often overheated. Eventually
- the company virtually abandoned the project as unfeasible.
- </p>
- <p> The field of optical computing faded into relative
- obscurity, but it was revived in 1986 by a breakthrough at AT&T
- Bell Labs. Research scientist David Miller developed the
- world's tiniest optical switch, a thin chip that in its latest
- version measures no more than 10 micrometers (0.00004 in.) on
- a side. Made of advanced synthetic materials, the device can
- turn on and off a billion times a second without overheating.
- </p>
- <p> Miller's switches became the building blocks for Huang's
- optical processor, which took five years to develop. His team
- finished construction around Christmas but did not get the
- machine to work until last month. The device is far cruder than
- even the most basic computers: it has no permanent memory, and
- the only function it can perform is counting simple numbers.
- Just a small fraction of the thousands of switches are
- connected. Nonetheless, Huang insists, the machine proves that
- his principle works. He thinks computer makers will soon
- replace wiring inside their machines with optical circuits. By
- 1995, he contends, some 30% of supercomputers will use optical
- interconnections.
- </p>
- <p> Huang has not convinced everyone, however. Says one
- scientist: "Huang is like the boy who cried wolf. He's been
- promising an optical computer for years, and he's still
- promising. I'm waiting for him to prove that it's practical
- rather than it's possible." Others are skeptical that optics
- can compete with electronic computers. Says Bernard Soffer,
- senior scientist at Hughes Aircraft Research: "Optical computers
- would have to be ten to 100 times better than electronic ones
- to justify retooling." Even enthusiasts are guarded. Says
- optical-computing pioneer Joseph Goodman, a Stanford
- electrical-engineering professor who was once Huang's teacher:
- "The first commercial general-purpose optical computer will
- appear between the year 2000 and infinity, and it may be closer
- to infinity."
- </p>
- <p> When it finally does appear, it may not be American. A group
- of 13 Japanese companies, including Mitsubishi and Nippon
- Electric, has teamed with the government's Ministry of
- International Trade and Industry to launch a ten-year
- optical-research program. Given the Japanese record in
- electronics, their interest in optical computers may be the
- best evidence that Huang and AT&T are on to something big.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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