IBM harnesses the power of the rodent for its latest AI chip

Credit: Wired
Credit: Wired

For the best part of a decade IBM has been attempting to produce a tiny computer chip with the power of a human brain and the TrueNorth project has just reached a significant milestone.

Over the past 12 months, IBM has taken the technology, transformed it and then slimmed it down to what is being dubbed in some corners "the computational equivalent of a mouse's brain".

Very low power consumption

In figures, the IBM architecture uses around 70 milliwatts of energy to power 5.4 billion transistors. To put that into context, modern processors use 35 to 140 watts to power just 1.4 billion transistors.

TrueNorth is still a long way away from commercial use and it would seem that the plan to create a similar architecture that has the computing power of the human brain is well on track for 2020.