The Universal Constraint Engine: Neuromorphic Computing Without Neural Networks
Posted by skinney_uce 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by aappleby 1 day ago
"...demonstrates its capabilities through worked examples" - The hell it does, your "examples" are three lines long. If you're going to compare it with LLMs, then have it do something LLM-ish. Or hell, the MNIST number recognition task would be better than the "hey look i modeled a flip-flop in my funny language" example.
Am I being harsh? Yes, I am. The author is claiming that they have a system that can automatically generate code for "quantum" and "spintronic" computers, yet offers zero proof of that.
Comment by skinney_uce 1 day ago
Comment by colechristensen 1 day ago
Comment by mbowring 1 day ago
Comment by skinney_uce 1 day ago
The difference is what you're constraining. Bricken works with containment and distinction. UCE works with conserved quantities — closer to physics than logic. You define constraints over those quantities, and computational behaviors like memory, oscillation, and logic gating fall out of satisfying them simultaneously.
The other big difference is the output. UCE doesn't produce a proof or a reduction — it produces a state-transition graph that compiles directly to hardware. Same rules, different substrates. That's what the Embodiment Mapper layer does.
Comment by convolvatron 1 day ago
Comment by skinney_uce 1 day ago
Comment by rramadass 1 day ago
Comment by skinney_uce 1 day ago
Comment by rramadass 18 hours ago
Any books you can recommend? I see a bunch on Amazon but not sure which are the good technical ones. Something with more information about the various hardware approaches (eg. non-ISA/hybrid/etc.) would be welcome.
Comment by skinney_uce 1 day ago