Except it's wrong. I recently had the same misconception about the Plank constant somehow being some minimal unit, but it's not. This video from Fermilab's website helped set me straight https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rzB2R_qiC28
It's not wrong. And the Fermilab video doesn't really dispute it.
Planck's constant measures action, Hz per Joule of energy. Hz is really just a measure of oscillation, or change. It doesn't directly translate to framerate, but it gives us a ballpark figure in orders of magnitude. We don't have anything near 10^34 Hz en-silico, and even if we built a biological/chemical computer, that would be on the par of Avogadro's number, 10^23. So, just because we build a system that can _evolve_ to be intelligent, or hold intelligence within it, doesn't mean we have any ability to actually see it through to that.
Planck's constant measures action, Hz per Joule of energy. Hz is really just a measure of oscillation, or change. It doesn't directly translate to framerate, but it gives us a ballpark figure in orders of magnitude. We don't have anything near 10^34 Hz en-silico, and even if we built a biological/chemical computer, that would be on the par of Avogadro's number, 10^23. So, just because we build a system that can _evolve_ to be intelligent, or hold intelligence within it, doesn't mean we have any ability to actually see it through to that.