I don't see it. Any non trivial analog computation involves a very large circuit, which has the problems of normal programming (bugs) and graphic programming (write-only), but with the extra pitfalls of electronics (resistance, delay, the resulting oscillations). And then you have to read all the outputs. That's going to be slow and expensive to build.
In what concrete problems do you (or Veritasium) think analog computing could beat a GPU?
sushid|1 year ago
Veritasium explains it really well in general here (and demos the device) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVsUOuSjvcg
tgv|1 year ago
In what concrete problems do you (or Veritasium) think analog computing could beat a GPU?
liontwist|1 year ago
It’s unlikely to replace digital computers, but it might find a new specialized home in components.