First, wear your dust mask. Who knows where these machines have been?

  • MonkderZweite@feddit.ch
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    11 months ago

    Probably not especially. But aren’t they basically wires burnt in circuit, made programmable via (UV?) light.

    • anlumo@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      They’re still digital (a wire is either 0 or 1), which isn’t more useful for this than a regular CPU.

      What they do excel in is doing stuff in parallel, because there is no linear list of instructions, everything can happen at the same time (unless you specifically block something until a certain signal is sent).

    • WaterWaiver@aussie.zone
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      11 months ago

      No. Modern FPGAs do not use any UV light or have any windows. For storage they use flash memory (same as what’s used in MicroSD cards, USB sticks and SSDs). Some (most?) require you to provide this yourself externally.

      Old EPROM (not EEPROM) storage had windows and needed UV to erase, but that’s decades old. I’m not sure if FPGA was common nomenclature back then (PAL/GAL/CPLD were probably the market).