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That was my point. It couldn't have been- it would be physically impossible...unless you think that a single core with the energy budget of a POWER7 module was feasible for a desktop CPU. Theoretically I think it's closer to Galaxy Quest or Farscape than actual real life..I think you've missed my point. I know they can't make CPUs run at 20GHz. I'm talking about what could have been.
If you're musing on what might have been, there are plenty of "what if" scenarios that actually could have happened and would have substantially more impact on the industry:
1. Bob Noyce doesn't invest and supply start up capital for W. Jerry Sanders III. Without Noyce's investment, other backers shy away (as it was, Sanders only made the investor deadline with five minutes and $5K to spare). AMD kaput before it starts, IBM's second source for 8088 processors likely falls to National Semi, Motorola, or Zilog.
2. Gary Kildall actually gives a shit about running a company and keeps his appointment with IBM's reps rather than disappear to fly his plane. IBM choose CP/M for the Model 5150...Bill gates and MS-DOS don't get a look in.
3. Jim Harris, Bill Murto, and Rod Canion decide to go with the option of sinking their money into a Mexican restaurant. Compaq doesn't happen, the IBM ROM-BIOS isn't reverse engineered, and the IBM PC clone business either doesn't happen or is stalled past the tipping point where anyone can undercut big blue. More to the point, IBM would have then realized that personal computing's growth warranted more attention/budget that was being lavished on it's mainframe and minicomputer business.
These things all could have happened quite easily, just as Hewlett-Packard could have listened to Steve Wozniak when he approached them about building a personal computer
Actual intelligence (i.e. the brain) uses parallelization. Speed is pretty much a constant AFAIK limited by chemical and electromagnetic action. Boosting the latter seems to lead to erratic behaviour (analogous to cache misses ?), losing parallelization (lowering core count ?) leads to Alzheimer's and a new found love of reality TV.Better artificial intelligence would have probably been one of them.
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