Can photonic chips become the next breakthrough in AI computing power?
Recently, I saw a founder promoting the application of optical technology in AI chip design, and this idea is indeed interesting. The performance and power consumption of traditional silicon-based chips are already approaching physical limits, while photonic computing uses the properties of light—fast speed, low energy consumption, and large bandwidth—to process data, which theoretically can break through existing bottlenecks.
For the Web3 and crypto ecosystems, such technological advances are indirect but significant. More efficient chips mean lower computing costs, which will reduce miners' operational expenses and make validation nodes easier to deploy. The performance of DeFi and other on-chain applications will also benefit—faster computation speeds could lead to lower transaction latency and fees.
Of course, there is still a long way to go from laboratory experiments to large-scale commercial use. But this exploration of future computing architectures is essentially paving the way for the entire digital economy (including decentralized finance). I believe this will be an important area to watch in the coming years.
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LiquidatorFlash
· 01-06 00:21
Optical chips sound promising, but how many basis points does the computing power cost need to decrease to truly change the marginal cost structure for miners? There's no data to support this.
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Silicon-based chips are nearing their ceiling; can photonics truly be commercialized? It feels like we still need to wait 5 years.
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If optical chips become mainstream, Gas fees could indeed drop, but is the performance bottleneck in DeFi really in computational speed? I think it's more about network congestion...
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Another saying of "the next breakthrough," I've heard this too many times over the years. The gap from laboratory to mass production is huge, and startup companies are well aware of this.
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Lowering the collateralization ratio and reducing liquidation risk? Not necessarily. In the face of market volatility, the advantage of cheap computing power is minimal.
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The reduction in deployment costs for validation nodes is real, but miners' profit margins will actually be squeezed, which is the real risk.
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If photonic computing can truly be used, the era of GPU miners will really come to an end, which is bearish.
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MemeTokenGenius
· 01-05 18:44
Photon chips... sounds amazing, but actually putting them on the chain will probably take a few more years to become affordable. Don't be too optimistic.
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MEVHunterLucky
· 01-05 05:55
Optical chips sound pretty amazing, but it will probably take a few more years to really land? Right now, it's all in the PPT stage.
Reducing computing power costs is definitely beneficial for miners, but the key is who will first reap the benefits... Big companies will definitely secure their positions first.
If this technology really takes off, cutting gas fees in half would be a win, and then small traders will be the true winners.
Photon computing? It feels a bit like the black tech hype from back in the day—exciting but uncertain.
Silicon-based chips are not even fully developed yet, so don't get too excited about optical chips. Let's see if there are any truly usable products first.
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ShortingEnthusiast
· 01-03 02:30
If the optical chip thing really comes to fruition, miners would be ecstatic... but it seems like it's mostly hype and speculation again.
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DefiVeteran
· 01-03 02:27
If photonic chips can truly be implemented, miners' days will be comfortable, with costs directly cut in half.
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BlockchainWorker
· 01-03 02:23
Optical chips are paving the way, and miners' costs will drop linearly. It's really time to step up the game now.
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Web3Educator
· 01-03 02:06
ngl photonic chips sound sexy on paper but we're still like... years away from actual deployment lol. my students always get hyped about this stuff then reality hits
Can photonic chips become the next breakthrough in AI computing power?
Recently, I saw a founder promoting the application of optical technology in AI chip design, and this idea is indeed interesting. The performance and power consumption of traditional silicon-based chips are already approaching physical limits, while photonic computing uses the properties of light—fast speed, low energy consumption, and large bandwidth—to process data, which theoretically can break through existing bottlenecks.
For the Web3 and crypto ecosystems, such technological advances are indirect but significant. More efficient chips mean lower computing costs, which will reduce miners' operational expenses and make validation nodes easier to deploy. The performance of DeFi and other on-chain applications will also benefit—faster computation speeds could lead to lower transaction latency and fees.
Of course, there is still a long way to go from laboratory experiments to large-scale commercial use. But this exploration of future computing architectures is essentially paving the way for the entire digital economy (including decentralized finance). I believe this will be an important area to watch in the coming years.