Fifth generation computer
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The Fifth Generation Computer Systems project (FGCS)
was an initiative by Japan's Ministry of International Trade and Industry,
begun in 1982, to create a "fifth generation computer" (see History of computing hardware)
which was supposed to perform much calculation using massive parallel processing.
It was to be the result of a massive government/industry research project in
Japan during the 1980s. It aimed to create an "epoch-making computer"
with supercomputer-like performance and to
provide a platform for future developments in artificial intelligence.[1]
The term fifth generation was intended
to convey the system as being a leap beyond existing machines. Computers using vacuum tubes were called the first generation; transistors and diodes,
the second; integrated circuits, the
third; and those using microprocessors, the fourth. Whereas
previous computer generations had focused on increasing the number of logic
elements in a single CPU, the fifth generation, it was widely believed at the
time, would instead turn to massive numbers of CPUs for added performance.[2] The project was to create the computer over a
ten year period, after which it was considered ended and investment in a new,
Sixth Generation project, began. Opinions about its outcome are divided: Either
it was a failure, or it was ahead of its time.
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