Today's post, What Core Argument? was originally published on December 10, 2008. A summary:
The argument in favor of a strong foom just isn't well supported enough to suggest that such a dramatic process is likely.
Discuss the post here (rather than in the comments to the original post).
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The reason I find FOOM unlikely is different: I disbelieve that the integration and assimilation of hardware can be done that fast.
Maybe. But if you've got a piece of software can make substantially more money running on a piece of hardware than it costs to rent, then it'll pretty rapidly be able to distribute copies of itself over most of the available leasable computing power in some constant multiple of the time it takes to port its code to the new architecture - zero if it's written in something in platform independent.
If it's smart enough to go FOOM in the first place on hardware that the original creator could afford, that could be a non-trivial amount of computing power, and... (read more)