| I got involved when I was 17 years old back in 1981 reading about the Alto and Smalltalk in Byte magazine. Alan Kay and Dan Ingalls at Xerox PARC had build this amazing GUI, programming language and virtual machine [4]. By 1985 I was building my first Smalltalk Transputer Supercomputer and typing in the code listing of the Blue Book. Byte magazine even invited us to publish this supercomputer on their front page as a DIY construction kit for their readers. Things got really interesting in 1996 when Alan and Dan released Squeak Smalltalk with Etoys as free and open source with this almost metacircular virtual machine. In 2008 we had progressed to designing SiliconSqueak, a Smalltalk Wafer Scale Integration, a 10.000 manycore microprocessor with the late bound message passing Squeak Smalltalk as its IDE, operating system and the RoarVM virtual machine with adaptive compilation. We are still working on that, it costs $100K for the mask set that you send to the TSMC chip fab and you get back a 180nm wafer with the 10 billion transistor supercomputer for $600 a piece. Getting funding for mask sets at smaller nodes like $3 million for 28nm or the most advanced 3nm node what costs over 50 million for a million cores is a life's work. We have not been directly working for Alan Kay, Dan Ingalls or David Ungar but we exchange emails, write scientific papers [2], give lectures [1] and meet in online video sessions [1] with the vibrant Smalltalk community. When these researchers release the source code like the STEPS project, RoarVM or the Lively Kernel we try to port it to our SiliconSqueak supercomputer prototypes and of course we develop our own Smalltalk of the Future, parallel adaptive compilers, virtual machines and hardware X86 emulators. So to answer your first question, yes, there are hundreds of lectures and talks on Youtube and we share all this work with the world. Bret Victor's, Dans or Alans lectures are just a small part of that. The hard part of our research is getting $100K funding together for the 10.000 core supercomputer, a $2000 wafer scale integration (WSI) computer is a little to big an amount for a crowdfunding project. So I still hope YCombinator will fund me, but they have this silly 'no single founder' restriction. You seem to be a researcher at ETH Zurich, why don't you join me as cofounder? We make a 3 cent Smalltalk microcontroller (an ALTO on a chip) and a $1 version with 4 MB and gigabit ethernet, with Smalltalk, Etoys and Scratch built in you get a superior Raspberry Pi/Arduino successor that 5 year old children can program because Smalltalk and Etoys where designed with children in mind. Our Morphle WSI would be a great desktop supercomputer but the real advance would be the $20.000 (retail price) costing 3nm wafer scale integration. More than 40 trillion transistors, a runtime reconfigurable amount of 1 million cores and the full IDE, GUI and OS in 10.000 lines of Smalltalk language, IDE, GUI and OS at exaflops per second. Way more advanced than CUDA on a GPU. I gave a 2 hour talk on that: [1] https://vimeo.com/731037615 [2] https://scholar.google.nl/citations?user=mWS92YsAAAAJ&hl=en&... https://scholar.google.nl/citations?hl=en&user=6wa49gkAAAAJ [3] https://web.archive.org/web/20140501222143/http://www.morphl... [4] https://youtu.be/id1WShzzMCQ?t=519 |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIlzXEaOH1I