The latest Technology Quarterly in The Economist is about "The Internet Of Things".

Python gets a mention in an article on "How to build a disposable microchip". It is quite a long article, so here are the relevant extracts.

"The goal is to produce a robust, bendable, mass-producible computer, complete with sensors and the ability to communicate with the outside world, for less than $0.01 apiece. A prototype version, shown off at Arm's headquarters in Cambridge, looks like a stiffer-than-usual piece of tape festooned with circuit traces."

"The chip uses a simple form of machine learning called a Bayesian classifier. Flexibility of use was sacrificed: to keep thinks as cheap and simple as possible the algorithm is etched directly into the plastic, meaning the chips are not reprogrammable."

"Since chip design is expensive, and chip designers scarce, he and his team have been working on software tools to simplify that task. The idea is to describe a new algorithm in Python, a widely used programming language, and then have software turn it into a circuit diagram that can be fed into Pragmatic's chipmaking machines. That approach has attracted interest from DARPA ..."

Hope this is of interest.

Frank Millman

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