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Continuing along current trends we can expect our algorithms to run many times faster on Desktop Computers in 10 years (let's pick a number) 1024x faster.

Do you know of any algorithms that are within 1024 times of running on average Desktop Systems and that would dramatically change the kinds of software we can write there?

I have my thoughts, but I'm more interested in the community's ideas.

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vote up 7 vote down

This guy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Kurzweil has something to say about that in his book http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Age_of_Intelligent_Machines.

Freely available here along with pretty much everything else the dude's written. http://www.kurzweilai.net/meme/frame.html?m=10

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entropy (second law of thermodynamics) will takeover. In simple terms it stated that an ordered state will go to a dis--ordered state. It is a one way street! The most cruel law there is.

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We'll be solving NP-complete problems in a life time.

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According to past experience: 1024 slower and larger versions of what we do now.

Ten years ago, my desktop machine did almost exactly what my current machine does. The big difference is that it now connects to way more computers (network applications) and more smaller devices (mostly iPod and cameras). Also, games have more polygons. I don't see why that will change anytime soon.

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Something that would use a BOINC-like project even more effectively, i.e. calculate and fight AIDS, cancer or solve other scientific problems.

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vote up 35 vote down

Visual Studio C++ Intellisense will finally work.

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If computers were 1024 times faster, we would lose the need to write in C++ "for extra performance." – Justice Feb 27 at 12:41
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There are applications that can use any amount of processing power. They will continue to be written in C++ or Quorf or whatever we're using by then. – David Thornley Mar 4 at 18:06
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+1 for Quorf. I anxiously await the day I can call myself a Quorf programmer. – Moose May 6 at 13:08
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Software that was a whole lot less efficient, yet still faster.

(Or is that just me?)

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vote up 46 vote down

We'll just eat up those advances with more layers of indirection, as we've done in the past.

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If you really feel this way, why don't use use an Apple ][e with the software of its era? – Jay Bazuzi Feb 7 at 1:29
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First one quibble 1024 orders of magnitude would be 10^1024x faster, not 1024x.

Clearly certain of graphics processing (games!) would benefit. Also video and audio processing software would do well.

Factoring - and consequently hacking public/private keys would be quite a bit faster and the typical key size would be moving up commensurately.

A lot of applications/systems won't be bound by CPU (and aren't now) - disk and network IO will continue to be the throttle.

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Raytracing for games is certainly within three orders of magnitude of feasibility.

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@Jay: much more realistic looking environments. Water and glass, as well as mirroring objects like metal will look much more realistic, especially being rendered in real-time. – dreamlax Feb 6 at 2:11
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vote up 15 vote down

I don't know for sure but I am pretty sure salesmen wouldnt have trouble traveling anymore :)

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You mean not if there were ~10 more cities (math?) – Overflown Feb 6 at 1:04
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But.. (as xkcd has taught us) since eBay, the traveling salesman is O(1) – Jens Roland Feb 6 at 1:49
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