On 2019-02-03 10:19:AM, Matt Mahoney wrote:

The problem is power consumption. Mechanical adding machines are older than vacuum tubes and would have very low power consumption if we could shrink them to molecular size.

Copying bits in DNA, RNA, and protein costs less than a millionth as much energy as copying bits in RAM. The human body transcribes 10^19 bits of amino acids per second at a cost of 10^-17 J each. (We consume 30 g of protein per day and use 100 watts). The theoretical (Landauer) limit is kT ln 2 = 3 x 10^-20 J per bit copy at room temperature.


The Landauer limit applies to *deleting* bits not *copying* them. There's no corresponding

thermodynamic limit to copying - or any other process essential to computation - as illustrated

by computation-universal reversible cellular automata - and reversible cellular automata capable

of supporting self reproduction. No bits have to be deleted in order to compute things. That is

part of the interest in reversible computation.

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