深夜突发!宣布两个大消息!!
环球局势动向 2021-12-14 11:41
01
两个大消息,同时来袭,今晚整个
科技圈都被刷屏了。
第一个大消息:
华为麒麟芯片,阿里倚天芯片之后
,中国第三款顶级芯片今天终于面
世。
169. Don't let yesterday use u
p too much of today. 别留念昨天
了,把握好今天吧。(Will Rogers
) 170. If you are not brave en
ough, no one will back you up.
你不勇敢,没人替你坚强。171.
If you don't build your dream,
someone will hire you to buil
d theirs. 如果你没有梦想,那么
你只能为别人的梦想打工。172. B
eauty is all around, if you ju
st open your heart to see. 只要
你给自己机会,你会发现你的世界
可以很美丽。173. The differenc
e in winning and losing is mos
t often...not quitting. 赢与输
的差别通常是--不放弃。(华特·迪
士尼) 174. I am ordinary yet u
nique. 我很平凡,但我独一无二。
175. I like people who make me
laugh in spite of myself. 我喜
欢那些让我笑起来的人,就算是我
不想笑的时候。176. Image a new
story for your life and start
living it. 为你的生命想一个全
新剧本,并去倾情出演吧!177. I
'd rather be a happy fool than
a sad sage. 做个悲伤的智者,不
如做个开心的傻子。178. The fut
ure belongs to those who belie
ve in the beauty of their drea
ms. 未来属于那些相信梦想之美的
人。(埃莉诺·罗斯福) 179. Even
if you get no applause, you s
hould accept a curtain call gr
acefully and appreciate your o
wn efforts. 即使没有人为你鼓掌
,也要优雅的谢幕,感谢自己的认
真付出。180. Don't let dream j
ust be your dream. 别让梦想只停
留在梦里。181. A day without l
aughter is a day wasted. 没有笑
声的一天是浪费了的一天。(卓别林
) 182. Travel and see the worl
d; afterwards, you will be abl
e to put your concerns in pers
pective. 去旅行吧,见的世面多了
,你会发现原来在意的那些结根本
算不了什么。183. The key to ac
quiring proficiency in any tas
k is repetition. 任何事情成功关
键都是熟能生巧。《生活大爆炸》
184. You can be happy no matt
er what. 开心一点吧,管它会怎样
。185. A good plan today is be
tter than a perfect plan tomor
row. 今天的好计划胜过明天的完美
计划。186. Nothing is impossib
le, the word itself says 'I'm
possible'! 一切皆有可能!“不可
能”的意思是:“不,可能。”(奥
黛丽·赫本) 187. Life isn't fa
ir, but no matter your circums
tances, you have to give it yo
ur all. 生活是不公平的,不管你
的境遇如何,你只能全力以赴。18
8. No matter how hard it is, j
ust keep going because you onl
y fail when you give up. 无论多
么艰难,都要继续前进,因为只有
你放弃的那一刻,你才输了。
When Paul Jobs was mustered o
ut of the Coast Guard after Wo
rld War II, he made a wager wi
th his crewmates. They had arr
ived in San Francisco, where t
heir ship was decommissioned,
and Paul bet that he would fin
d himself a wife within two we
eks. He was a taut, tattooed e
ngine mechanic, six feet tall,
with a passing resemblance to
James Dean. But it wasn’t hi
s looks that got him a date wi
th Clara Hagopian, a sweet-hum
ored daughter of Armenian immi
grants. It was the fact that h
e and his friends had a car, u
nlike the group she had origin
ally planned to go out with th
at evening. Ten days later, in
March 1946, Paul got engaged
to Clara and won his wager. It
would turn out to be a happy
marriage, one that lasted unti
l death parted them more than
forty years later. Paul Reinho
ld Jobs had been raised on a d
airy farm in Germantown, Wisco
nsin. Even though his father w
as an alcoholic and sometimes
abusive, Paul ended up with a
gentle and calm disposition un
der his leathery exterior. Aft
er dropping out of high school
, he wandered through the Midw
est picking up work as a mecha
nic until, at age nineteen, he
joined the Coast Guard, even
though he didn’t know how to
swim. He was deployed on the U
SS General M. C. Meigs and spe
nt much of the war ferrying tr
oops to Italy for General Patt
on. His talent as a machinist
and fireman earned him commend
ations, but he occasionally fo
und himself in minor trouble a
nd never rose above the rank o
f seaman. Clara was born in Ne
w Jersey, where her parents ha
d landed after fleeing the Tur
ks in Armenia, and they moved
to the Mission District of San
Francisco when she was a chil
d. She had a secret that she r
arely mentioned to anyone: She
had been married before, but
her husband had been killed in
the war. So when she met Paul
Jobs on that first date, she
was primed to start a new life
. Clara, however, loved San Fr
ancisco, and in 1952 she convi
nced her husband to move back
there. They got an apartment i
n the Sunset District facing t
he Pacific, just south of Gold
en Gate Park, and he took a jo
b working for a finance compan
y as a “repo man,” picking t
he locks of cars whose owners
hadn’t paid their loans and r
epossessing them. He also boug
ht, repaired, and sold some of
the cars, making a decent eno
ugh living in the process. The
re was, however, something mis
sing in their lives. They want
ed children, but Clara had suf
fered an ectopic pregnancy, in
which the fertilized egg was
implanted in a fallopian tube
rather than the uterus, and sh
e had been unable to have any.
So by 1955, after nine years
of marriage, they were looking
to adopt a child. Like Paul J
obs, Joanne Schieble was from
a rural Wisconsin family of Ge
rman heritage. Her father, Art
hur Schieble, had immigrated t
o the outskirts of Green Bay,
where he and his wife owned a
mink farm and dabbled successf
ully in various other business
es, including real estate and
photoengraving. He was very st
rict, especially regarding his
daughter’s relationships, an
d he had strongly disapproved
of her first love, an artist w
ho was not a Catholic. Thus it
was no surprise that he threa
tened to cut Joanne off comple
tely when, as a graduate stude
nt at the University of Wiscon
sin, she fell in love with Abd
ulfattah “John” Jandali, a M
uslim teaching assistant from
Syria. Jandali was the younges
t of nine children in a promin
ent Syrian family. His father
owned oil refineries and multi
ple other businesses, with lar
ge holdings in Damascus and Ho
ms, and at one point pretty mu
ch controlled the price of whe
at in the region. His mother,
he later said, was a “traditi
onal Muslim woman” who was a
“conservative, obedient house
wife.” Like the Schieble fami
ly, the Jandalis put a premium
on education. Abdulfattah was
sent to a Jesuit boarding sch
ool, even though he was Muslim
, and he got an undergraduate
degree at the American Univers
ity in Beirut before entering
the University of Wisconsin to
pursue a doctoral degree in p
olitical science. In the summe
r of 1954, Joanne went with Ab
dulfattah to Syria. They spent
two months in Homs, where she
learned from his family to co
ok Syrian dishes. When they re
turned to Wisconsin she discov
ered that she was pregnant. Th
ey were both twenty-three, but
they decided not to get marri
ed. Her father was dying at th
e time, and he had threatened
to disown her if she wed Abdul
fattah. Nor was abortion an ea
sy option in a small Catholic
community. So in early 1955, J
oanne traveled to San Francisc
o, where she was taken into th
e care of a kindly doctor who
sheltered unwed mothers, deliv
ered their babies, and quietly
arranged closed adoptions. Jo
anne had one requirement: Her
child must be adopted by colle
ge graduates. So the doctor ar
ranged for the baby to be plac
ed with a lawyer and his wife.
But when a boy was born—on F
ebruary 24, 1955—the designat
ed couple decided that they wa
nted a girl and backed out. Th
us it was that the boy became
the son not of a lawyer but of
a high school dropout with a
passion for mechanics and his
salt-of-the-earth wife who was
working as a bookkeeper. Paul
and Clara named their new bab
y Steven Paul Jobs. When Joann
e found out that her baby had
been placed with a couple who
had not even graduated from hi
gh school, she refused to sign
the adoption papers. The stan
doff lasted weeks, even after
the baby had settled into the
Jobs household. Eventually Joa
nne relented, with the stipula
tion that the couple promise—
indeed sign a pledge—to fund
a savings account to pay for t
he boy’s college education. T
here was another reason that J
oanne was balky about signing
the adoption papers. Her fathe
r was about to die, and she pl
anned to marry Jandali soon af
ter. She held out hope, she wo
uld later tell family members,
sometimes tearing up at the m
emory, that once they were mar
ried, she could get their 别让
梦想只停留在梦里。181. A day w
ithout laughter is a day waste
d. 没有笑声的一天是浪费了的一天
。(卓别林) 182. Travel and see
the world; afterwards, you wi
ll be able to put your concern
s in perspective. 去旅行吧,见
的世面多了,你会发现原来在意的
那些结根本算不了什么。183. The
key to acquiring proficiency
in any task is repetition. 任何
事情成功关键都是熟能生巧。《生
活大爆炸》 184. You can be hap
py no matter what. 开心一点吧,
管它会怎样。baby boy back. Art
hur Schieble died in August 19
55, after the adoption was fin
alized. Just after Christmas t
hat year, Joanne and Abdulfatt
ah were married in St. Philip
the Apostle Catholic Church in
Green Bay. He got his PhD in
international politics the nex
t year, and then they had anot
her child, a girl named Mona.
After she and Jandali divorced
in 1962, Joanne embarked on a
dreamy and peripatetic life t
hat her daughter, who grew up
to become the acclaimed noveli
st Mona Simpson, would capture
in her book Anywhere but Here
. Because Steve’s adoption ha
d been closed, it would be twe
nty years before they would al
l find each other. Steve Jobs
knew from an early age that he
was adopted. “My parents wer
e very open with me about that
,” he recalled. He had a vivi
d memory of sitting on the law
n of his house, when he was si
x or seven years old, telling
the girl who lived across the
street. “So does that mean yo
ur real parents didn’t want y
ou?” the girl asked. “Lightn
ing bolts went off in my head,
” according to Jobs. “I reme
mber running into the house, c
rying. And my parents said, ‘
No, you have to understand.’
They were very serious and loo
ked me straight in the eye. Th
ey said, ‘We specifically pic
ked you out.’ Both of my pare
nts said that and repeated it
slowly for me. And they put an
emphasis on every word in tha
t sentence.” Abandoned. Chose
n. Special. Those concepts bec
ame part of who Jobs was and h
ow he regarded himself. His cl
osest friends think that the k
nowledge that he was given up
at birth left some scars. “I
think his desire for complete
control of whatever he makes d
erives directly from his perso
nality and the fact that he wa
s abandoned at birth,” said o
ne longtime colleague, Del Yoc
am. “He wants to control his
environment, and he sees the p
roduct as an extension of hims
elf.” Greg Calhoun, who becam
e close to Jobs right after co
llege, saw another effect. “S
teve talked to me a lot about
being abandoned and the pain t
hat caused,” he said. “It ma
de him independent. He followe
d the beat of a different drum
mer, and that came from being
in a different world than he w
as born into.” Later in life,
when he was the same age his
biological father had been whe
n he abandoned him, Jobs would
father and abandon a child of
his own. (He eventually took
responsibility for her.) Chris
ann Brennan, the mother of tha
t child, said that being put u
p for adoption left Jobs “ful
l of broken glass,” and it he
lps to explain some of his beh
avior. “He who is abandoned i
s an abandoner,” she said. An
dy Hertzfeld, who worked with
Jobs at Apple in the early 198
0s, is among the few who remai
ned close to both Brennan and
Jobs. “The key question about
Steve is why he can’t contro
l himself at times from being
so reflexively cruel and harmf
ul to some people,” he said.
“That goes back to being aban
doned at birth. The real under
lying problem was the theme of
abandonment in Steve’s life.
” Jobs dismissed this. “Ther
e’s some notion that because
I was abandoned, I worked very
hard so I could do well and m
ake my parents wish they had m
e back, or some such nonsense,
but that’s ridiculous,” he
insisted. “Knowing I was adop
ted may have made me feel more
independent, but I have never
felt abandoned. I’ve always
felt special. My parents made
me feel special.” He would la
ter bristle whenever anyone re
ferred to Paul and Clara Jobs
as his “adoptive” parents or
implied that they were not hi
s “real” parents. “They wer
e my parents 1,000%,” he said
. When speaking about his biol
ogical parents, on the other h
and, he was curt: “They were
my sperm and egg bank. That’s
not harsh, it’s just the way
it was, a sperm bank thing, n
othing more.” Silicon Valley
The childhood that Paul and Cl
ara Jobs created for their new
son was, in many ways, a ster
eotype of the late 1950s. When
Steve was two they adopted a
girl they named Patty, and thr
ee years later they moved to a
tract house in the suburbs. T
he finance company where Paul
worked as a repo man, CIT, had
transferred him down to its P
alo Alto office, but he could
not afford to live there, so t
hey landed in a subdivision in
Mountain View, a less expensi
ve town just to the south. The
re Paul tried to pass along hi
s love of mechanics and cars.
“Steve, this is your workbenc
h now,” he said as he marked
off a section of the table in
their garage. Jobs remembered
being impressed by his father’
s focus on craftsmanship. “I
thought my dad’s sense of des
ign was pretty good,” he said
, “because he knew how to bui
ld anything. If we needed a ca
binet, he would build it. When
he built our fence, he gave m
e a hammer so I could work wit
h him.” Fifty years later the
fence still surrounds the bac
k and side yards of the house
in Mountain View. As Jobs show
ed it off to me, he caressed t
he stockade panels and recalle
d a lesson that his father imp
lanted deeply in him. It was i
mportant, his father said, to
craft the backs of cabinets an
d fences properly, even though
they were hidden. “He loved
doing things right. He even ca
red about the look of the part
s you couldn’t see.” His fat
her continued to refurbish and
resell used cars, and he fest
ooned the garage with pictures
of his favorites. He would po
int out the detailing of the d
esign to his son: the lines, t
he vents, the chrome, the trim
of the seats. After work each
day, he would change into his
dungarees and retreat to the
garage, often with Steve taggi
ng along. “I figured I could
get him nailed down with a lit
tle mechanical ability, but he
really wasn’t interested in
getting his hands dirty,” Pau
l later recalled. “He never r
eally cared too much about m18
9. It requires hard work to gi
ve off an appearance of effort
lessness. 你必须十分努力,才能
看起来毫不费力。190. Life is l
ike riding a bicycle.To keep y
our balance,you must keep movi
ng. 人生就像骑单车,只有不断前
进,才能保持平衡。(爱因斯坦) 1
91. Be thankful for what you h
ave.You'll end up having more.
拥有一颗感恩的心,最终你会得到
更多。192. Beauty is how you f
eel inside, and it reflects in
your eyes. 美是一种内心的感觉
,并反映在你的眼睛里。(索菲亚·
罗兰) 193. Friendship doubles
your joys, and divides your so
rrows. 朋友的作用,就是让你快乐
加倍,痛苦减半。194. When you
long for something sincerely,
the whole world will help you.
当你真心渴望某样东西时,整个宇
宙都会来帮忙。echanical things
.” “I wasn’t that into fixi
ng cars,” Jobs admitted. “Bu
t I was eager to hang out with
my dad.” Even as he was grow
ing more aware that he had bee
n adopted, he was becoming mor
e attached to his father. One
day when he was about eight, h
e discovered a photograph of h
is father from his time in the
Coast Guard. “He’s in the e
ngine room, and he’s got his
shirt off and looks like James
Dean. It was one of those Oh
wow moments for a kid. Wow, oo
oh, my parents were actually o
nce very young and really good
-looking.” Through cars, his
father gave Steve his first ex
posure to electronics. “My da
d did not have a deep understa
nding of electronics, but he’
d encountered it a lot in auto
mobiles and other things he wo
uld fix. He showed me the rudi
ments of electronics, and I go
t very interested in that.” E
ven more interesting were the
trips to scavenge for parts. “
Every weekend, there’d be a j
unkyard trip. We’d be looking
for a generator, a carburetor
, all sorts of components.” H
e remembered watching his fath
er negotiate at the counter. “
He was a good bargainer, becau
se he knew better than the guy
s at the counter what the part
s should cost.” This helped f
ulfill the pledge his parents
made when he was adopted. “My
college fund came from my dad
paying $50 for a Ford Falcon
or some other beat-up car that
didn’t run, working on it fo
r a few weeks, and selling it
for $250—and not telling the
IRS.” The Jobses’ house and
the others in their neighborho
od were built by the real esta
te developer Joseph Eichler, w
hose company spawned more than
eleven thousand homes in vari
ous California subdivisions be
tween 1950 and 1974. Inspired
by Frank Lloyd Wright’s visio
n of simple modern homes for t
he American “everyman,” Eich
ler built inexpensive houses t
hat featured floor-to-ceiling
glass walls, open floor plans,
exposed post-and-beam constru
ction, concrete slab floors, a
nd lots of sliding glass doors
. “Eichler did a great thing,
” Jobs said on one of our wal
ks around the neighborhood. “
His houses were smart and chea
p and good. They brought clean
design and simple taste to lo
wer-income people. They had aw
esome little features, like ra
diant heating in the floors. Y
ou put carpet on them, and we
had nice toasty floors when we
were kids.” Jobs said that h
is appreciation for Eichler ho
mes instilled in him a passion
for making nicely designed pr
oducts for the mass market. “
I love it when you can bring r
eally great design and simple
capability to something that d
oesn’t cost much,” he said a
s he pointed out the clean ele
gance of the houses. “It was
the original vision for Apple.
That’s what we tried to do w
ith the first Mac. That’s wha
t we did with the iPod.” Acro
ss the street from the Jobs fa
mily lived a man who had becom
e successful as a real estate
agent. “He wasn’t that brigh
t,” Jobs recalled, “but he s
eemed to be making a fortune.
So my dad thought, ‘I can do
that.’ He worked so hard, I r
emember. He took these night c
lasses, passed the license tes
t, and got into real estate. T
hen the bottom fell out of the
market.” As a result, the fa
mily found itself financially
strapped for a year or so whil
e Steve was in elementary scho
ol. His mother took a job as a
bookkeeper for Varian Associa
tes, a company that made scien
tific instruments, and they to
ok out a second mortgage. One
day his fourth-grade teacher a
sked him, “What is it you don
’t understand about the unive
rse?” Jobs replied, “I don’
t understand why all of a sudd
en my dad is so broke.” He wa
s proud that his father never
adopted a servile attitude or
slick style that may have made
him a better salesman. “You
had to suck up to people to se
ll real estate, and he wasn’t
good at that and it wasn’t i
n his nature. I admired him fo
r that.” Paul Jobs went back
to being a mechanic. His fathe
r was calm and gentle, traits
that his son later praised mor
e than emulated. He was also r
esolute. Jobs described one ex
ampl What made the neighborhoo
d different from the thousands
of other spindly-tree subdivi
sions across America was that
even the ne’er-do-wells tende
d to be engineers. “When we m
oved here, there were apricot
and plum orchards on all of th
ese corners,” Jobs recalled.
“But it was beginning to boom
because of military investmen
t.” He soaked up the history
of the valley and developed a
yearning to play his own role.
Edwin Land of Polaroid later
told him about being asked by
Eisenhower to help build the U
-2 spy plane cameras to see ho
w real the Soviet threat was.
The film was dropped in canist
ers and returned to the NASA A
mes Research Center in Sunnyva
le, not far from where Jobs li
ved. “The first computer term
inal I ever saw was when my da
d brought me to the Ames Cente
r,” he said. “I fell totally
in love with it.” Other defe
nse contractors sprouted nearb
y during the 1950s. The Lockhe
ed Missiles and Space Division
, which built submarine-launch
ed ballistic missiles, was fou
nded in 1956 next to the NASA
Center; by the time Jobs moved
to the area four years later,
it employed twenty thousand p
eople. A few hundred yards awa
y, Westinghouse built faciliti
es that produced tubes and ele
ctrical transformers for the m
issile systems. “You had all
these military companies on th
e cutting edge,” he recalled.
“It was mysterious and high-
tech and made living here very
exciting.” In the wake of th
e defense industries there aro
se a booming economy based on
technology. Its roots stretche
d back to 1938, when David Pac
kard and his new wife moved in
to a house in Palo Alto that h
ad a shed where his friend Bil
l Hewlett was soon ensconced.
The house had a garage—an app
endage that would prove both u
seful and iconic in the valley
—in which they tinkered aroun
d until they had their first p
roduct, an audio oscillator. B
y the 1950s, Hewlett-Packard w
as a fast-growing company maki
ng technical instruments. Fort
unately there was a place near
by for entrepreneurs who had o
utgrown their garages. In a mo
ve that would help transform t
he area into the cradle of the
tech revolution, Stanford Uni
versity’s dean of engineering
, Frederick Terman, created a
seven-hundred-acre industrial
park on university land for pr
ivate companies that could com
mercialize the ideas of his st
udents. Its first tenant was V
arian Associates, where Clara
Jobs worked. “Terman came up
with this great idea that did
more than anything to cause th
e tech industry to grow up her
e,” Jobs said. By the time Jo
bs was ten, HP had nine thousa
nd employees and was the blue-
chip company where every engin
eer seeking financial stabilit
y wanted to work. The most imp
ortant technology for the regi
on’s growth was, of course, t
he semiconductor. William Shoc
kley, who had been one of the
inventors of the transistor at
Bell Labs in New Jersey, move
d out to Mountain View and, in
1956, started a company to bu
ild transistors using silicon
rather than the more expensive
germanium that was then commo
nly used. But Shockley became
increasingly erratic and aband
oned his silicon transistor pr
oject, which led eight of his
engineers—most notably Robert
Noyce and Gordon Moore—to br
eak away to form Fairchild Sem
iconductor. That company grew
to twelve thousand employees,
but it fragmented in 1968, whe
n Noyce lost a power struggle
to become CEO. He took Gordon
Moore and founded a company th
at they called Integrated Elec
tronics Corporation, which the
y soon smartly abbreviated to
Intel. Their third employee wa
s Andrew Grove, who later woul
d grow the company by shifting
its focus from memory chips t
o microprocessors. Within a fe
w years there would be more th
an fifty companies in the area
making semiconductors. The ex
ponential growth of this indus
try was correlated with the ph
enomenon famously discovered b
y Moore, who in 1965 drew a gr
aph of the speed of integrated
circuits, based on the number
of transistors that could be
placed on a chip, and showed t
hat it doubled about every two
years, a trajectory that coul
d be expected to continue. Thi
s was reaffirmed in 1971, when
Intel was able to etch a comp
lete central processing unit o
nto one chip, the Intel 4004,
tronic amplifier. “So I raced
home, and I told my dad that
he was wrong.” “No, it needs
an amplifier,” his father as
sured him. When Steve proteste
d otherwise, his father said h
e was crazy. “It can’t work
without an amplifier. There’s
some trick.” “I kept saying
no to my dad, telling him he
had to see it, and finally he
actually walked down with me a
nd saw it. And he said, ‘Well
I’ll be a bat out of hell.’
” Jobs recalled the incident
vividly because it was his fir
st realization that his father
did not know everything. Then
a more disconcerting discover
y began to dawn on him: He was
smarter than his parents. He
had always admired his father’
s competence and savvy. “He w
as not an educated man, but I
had always thought he was pret
ty damn smart. He didn’t read
much, but he could do a lot.
Almost everything mechanical,
he could figure it out.” Yet
the carbon microphone incident
, Jobs said, began a jarring p
rocess of realizing that he wa
s in fact more clever and quic
k than his parents. “It was a
very big moment that’s burne
d into my mind. When I realize
d that I was smarter than my p
arents, I felt tremendous sham
e for having thought that. I w
ill never forget that moment.”
This discovery, he later told
friends, along with the fact
that he was adopted, made him
feel apart—detached and separ
ate—from both his family and
the world. Another layer of aw
areness occurred soon after. N
ot only did he discover that h
e was brighter than his parent
s, but he discovered that they
knew this. Paul and Clara Job
s were loving parents, and the
y were willing to adapt their
lives to suit a son who was ve
ry smart—and also willful. Th
ey would go to great lengths t
o accommodate him. And soon St
eve discovered this fact as we
ll. “Both my parents got me.
They felt a lot of responsibil
ity once they sensed that I wa
s special. They found ways to
keep feeding me stuff and putt
ing me in better schools. They
were willing to defer to my n
eeds.” So he grew up not only
with a sense of having once b
een abandoned, but also with a
sense that he was special. In
his own mind, that was more i
mportant in the formation of h
is personality. School Even be
fore Jobs started elementary s
chool, his mother had taught h
im how to read. This, however,
led to some problems once he
got to school. “I was kind of
bored for the first few years
与前两款更难能可贵的是,这次突
破的芯片,与以往的芯片领域都不
同。这次是我国乃至全球芯片领域
的一个重大突破!全新的一款芯片
!
全世界第一款!独属于我们中国!
这个芯片就是全球首款基于DRAM的
3D键合堆叠的存算一体芯片!
你没看错!存算一体芯片!正式诞
生了!
并且是由我们中国第一个研发出来
的,比美国,日本,韩国,比这三
大芯片强国更快一步面世!
图片
可能很多人还不知道存算一体芯片
!有多厉害,不知道这个对于我们
中国,以及我们中国科技圈,意味
着什么:
1,“ 存 ”代表存储,“ 算 ”代
表计算,算力。
细心的人应该有注意,我们平时使
用的智能手机,笔记本电脑,台式
电脑,以及智能电视机,各种智能
电子产品。
只要使用了一段时间,一年,两年
等等,里面的内存就会自动“ 缩小
”。比如你的手机,或者电脑是1
00G的内存,用了一年后,哪怕全部
格式化,恢复出厂设置,你也会发
现,内存不够100G了。
这种“ 损耗 ”!在今天之前,是
任何一个电子产品都无法避免的。
最主要的原因就是:在我们平时使
用手机或者电脑的时候,运行的时
候,其实都是一边存储我们的内容
,操作;一边又不断的高轮度的开
启强大的计算能力,运算能力;
每天大频繁的进行数据搬运,计算
;给这些电子产品带来了巨大的能
量消耗。最主要的一个体现就是,
我们如果同时打开了几个游戏,或
者几十个网页,我们的智能产品立
即就会提示功耗过高、性能、内存
、温度,等等的预警。。
美国,日本,韩国,中国,欧盟;
无数大国都在拼命研发,都想第一
个攻克这个难题。
02
原因,很简单。就跟第一个研发出
电脑系统的美国一样。
任何新技术,新科技,只要哪个国
家是第一个研发出来的,就立即拥
有着绝对的国际话语权、定价权。
。
特别是在当今全球几十亿人都在使
用电脑,手机的大背景下;谁都知
道,第一个研发出这个技术的国家
,将获得多么巨大的利益。。
从上世纪90年代至今,以美国,韩
国,日本为首的半导体,芯片强国
,一年又一年无数的科学家,海量
的资金,铺天盖地的都在往这方面
堆人才!
虽然,大家都还没有研发出来,但
是无论是美国,日本,韩国还是欧
洲,大量科学家公认的一个点已经
确认:
存算一体芯片是目前解决以上问题
的最佳途径——它类似于人脑,将
数据存储单元和计算单元融合为一
体,能够最大幅度的减少我们的智
能产品,包括手机,电脑等等设备
,在运行的时候,数据搬运的时候
,降低损耗!
从而起到极大的提高智能产品的计
算力和能效。
当然,降低了损耗,也就意味着我
们手上的电子产品,以后性能能够
用的更持久。
知道是一回事,但要想攻克存算一
体这个新的技术,却是极其艰难。
。
有多难?你们看一看美国,日本,
韩国等等技术大国,过去几十年业
界对存算一体芯片的研究就知道了
。
这个技术攻克的太艰难了。哪怕是
美国投入如此众多的科学家,都进
展无比无比缓慢。
3,天佑中国,我们竟然率先攻克了
。
受限于技术不能公开的原因,马云
的阿里达摩院没有将具体攻克这项
存算一体化芯片的技术,公布出来
。
但,马云的阿里刚刚已经正式向全
球发出了宣告!
图片
新突破!
世界第一款存算一体芯片!诞生了
!!
毫无疑问!马云的阿里达摩院率先
完成了这项技术的攻克!我们中国
现在成为了全球第一个攻克此项技
术的国家!
不用怀疑,在全球都没有人研发成
功的背景下,我们的这个技术,百
分百是属于自己自研!自主创新!
全球首款存算一体芯片!来了!
性能提升10倍以上,效能比提升高
达300倍!
真的不敢相信,华为被美国封杀之
后,我都快绝望了。本以为至少要
到2025年才有可能,我们中国再次
诞生世界顶级,一流的芯片。
没想到,今天马云的阿里竟然给了
我们如此巨大的惊喜!
真是天佑中国!!
可能很多人对马云的阿里达摩院了
解不多,我简单说一下:
1、达摩院由马云的阿里巴巴于201
7年创办,迄今为止三年多,已经烧
了1000多亿现金!(看似今天简简
单单的一个技术突破,背后的付出
又有多少人知道呢?)
1000多亿的资金研发投入,在最近
三年多,我们中国民营企业里面投
入的研发费里,仅次于华为,位居
中国第二。
2、你们能想到的顶级卡脖子技术、
前言技术,很多很多都在里面设立
了专项研究实验室。
包括量子技术、AI人工智能驾驶、
芯片、关键技术可应用(如数据库
)的架构,等等。
截止目前,达摩院已正式建立14个
顶级实验室。我给你们看一个图,
你们就知道这些领域,对于我们中
国的科技有多么大的帮助。
图片
3、除此之外,达摩院还在杭州、北
京、上海、新加坡、以色列、西雅
图、硅谷等全球8个地区设立了科技
研究中心。
每一个实验室、研究中心,都收拢
着无数来自全球各个领域的顶尖大
拿、科学家;
仅世界各大名校的教授级别人物就
高达30多人,而达到世界顶级的IE
EE Fellow 级别的科学家,更是聚
集了10多人。
有人说,今天这个技术的诞生,可
能是运气。
其实,这世间哪有那么多运气,特
别是在做不得一丝假的科技面前,
看似一个技术的简单突破;
这背后,谁又知道人家付出了多少
,谁又知道又有多少科学家,在日
日夜夜的熬夜研发,拼命为国家,
为我们的科技突破默默的做了多少
贡献。
03
第二个大消息:浙大刚刚传来大消
息。
一项重大的医疗科学技术攻克了。
软骨、关节修复术!!
我把简单的要点说一下:
浙江大学基础医学系教授欧阳宏伟
,带领的团队最近攻克了一项关键
技术。
研发出一种“ 关节油漆 ”,当细
胞接触并吸收“ 油漆 ”后,就会
诞生新的软骨。受损关节也可得到
修复,全程只需三四周。
什么意思呢?
就是我们每个人身上,手、脚,都
有很多关节。
一般随着人的年纪越来越大,劳累
越来越多,身上的关节都会出现不
同程度的磨损。
特别是我们的膝盖,手腕这些使用
频繁的关节。很多人都会出现软骨
损伤。
以前,碰到这种情况,要么我们就
不管,要么就只能等严重水肿之后
,或者出现严重疼痛之后去打消炎
针,或者去医院动手术修复。
而现在浙大传来的这个大消息,则
意味着此次研发的“关节油漆”,
有望解决上述问题。
目前进行的实验中,以兔实验和猪
实验为主,经“油漆”处理后,此
前存在缺损的兔和猪的软骨表面,
均可恢复光滑。
图片
按照研发者的介绍:
它的原理是通过抑制软骨细胞凋亡
、维持软骨细胞表型,并保留部分
软骨缺损中糖胺聚糖的含量。
简单来说,这个技术的突破,意味
着我国第一个用于关节软骨缺损的
仿生组分的组织粘合剂即将要诞生
了。
如果后续实验顺利,那就意味着我
国医疗技术,将再次攻克了一个卡
脖子的技术!!
写在最后:
芯片技术!医疗技术!两个重大领
域,同时迎来重大突破!
在目前我们面临美国科技封锁、技
术封锁的大背景下,真的是天佑中
国!真的是来之不易。。
今天!让我们向每一位为中国科技
、中国关键技术领域做出贡献的科
学家,研究者、工作人员,表示感
谢。
谢谢,你们的默默付出!!
时至今日,我依然忘不了中国科技
进程,最早期时留下的这一段话:
图片
推荐个卖鞋的朋友微信,款式多,
质量靠谱!扫描图片二维码添加
图片
1937年10月,日军占领清华园!
赵忠尧与梁思成一起冒死潜返清华
取回这50毫克的镭元素;随后赵忠
尧则扮成难民,跟着逃难的人一起
千里跋涉前往长沙。
35岁的赵忠尧抱着咸菜坛子,里面
藏着中国当时唯一的50克镭元素!
整整走路,走了一个多月,从北京
走到长沙。
年轻的赵先生,变成了一个蓬头垢
面的乞丐……胸前后背,都挂着鲜
红的血印子。
直到走到长沙,真正见到了清华校
长,这个“ 乞丐 ”的手还紧紧的
抱着坛子。。
历经千万险阻,躲避日军的四处追
查,最终将这个关系中国科技命运
的“ 坛子 ”,安全的带到了长沙
。
他叫赵忠尧,是我们中国的原子能
之父!
中国第一颗原子弹爆炸
中国第一枚氢弹爆炸
中国第一艘核潜艇入水
中国第一座核电站破土动工
一半以上的技术都来自于他与他的
学生。。。
不知道为什么,今天看到祖国的科
技蓬勃发展,历史性的一下子出现
两个重大领域的突破,自然而然的
脑海里就想起了赵老先生。。
这就像一种传承!一种爱国的精神
,科技的精神,钻研的精髓,一代
又一代,源远流长!
朋友们,今天我写下这篇文章,没
有其他意思。只是想清楚的告诉大
家。
科技的崛起、进步之路,虽没有一
兵、一炮、一枪;但对于一国之影
响,一国之命运,却起着无可替代
的重大作用!
我国科技进程早期的时候,日本围
堵我们;如今我们科技进步了一些
,美国又开始围堵;但这就是大国
竞争、科技竞争!!
真的非常非常残酷!与国有关,有
你,与我,我们每一个人都息息相
关。。
今天,虽然我们两个关键领域的技
术都突破了;但我深深的明白,这
还远远不够。
美国对于我们科技的封锁,依然还
没有解除。。。
中国,加油!中国科技,加油!
吾辈当自强!!
希望各位老铁看完后点右下角的“
在看”以示鼓励
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