John Oliver, Roland Geyer, Alan Savage, Frederic T. Chong, Rajeevan Amirtharajah, Venkatesh Akella
The dark side of Moore’s Law is our society’s insatiable need to constantly upgrade our computing devices. As a result, the typicalprocessor is only used for a fraction of it’s expected lifetime, despite the immense cost to produce a processor. While the rapid advanceof technology makes silicon obsolete in a few years, we propose that chips should be reused for less demanding computing tasks. Thisre-use strategy creates a food chain of computing devices which amortizes the energy required to build processors over severalcomputing generations.This paper is structured into two parts. First, we describe a proposed a processor re-use strategy, showing that processor re-usemakes sense for low-power, embedded processors. These re-usable processors occupy a design space that requires us to implementflexible and reliable processors. The second part of this paper describes student efforts centered around re-usable processors atCalifornia Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo as well as the University of California, Santa Barbara.
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