How Photonic Computing Could Redefine High Performance Processing
A Computer That Thinks With Light Instead of Electricity For decades, we have built computers around a simple idea. Push electrons through tiny channels etched into silicon, switch them on and off at absurd speeds, and somehow—almost magically—you get spreadsheets, video games, online banking, and increasingly, artificial intelligence. It works. It works so well that we rarely stop to question the foundation. But now, a group of researchers in China is suggesting something that sounds almost poetic. What if we stopped relying on electricity altogether and started computing with light? Not metaphorically. Literally with photons. They recently published a theoretical framework describing what they call parallel optical matrix matrix multiplication, or POMMM. The name is technical and admittedly a bit clunky. However, the idea underneath it is surprisingly elegant. Instead of sending electrons through circuits, you send photons through optical systems. And instead of processing one ...