this post was submitted on 12 Nov 2023
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I understand all that. I wrote my first 6502 assembler program in 1989 - and it was fun, by the way!
I am also aware that today's CPUs are nothing like the 8-bit CPUs of the 80s. So we're on the same page in that respect.
I understand what you're saying now. You're talking about programmable gate arrays, which is cool. But I still don't understand how "parallel programming" gate arrays comes with almost no safety compared to "serial programming" gate arrays. If you are not careful in either mode, you can introduce serious bugs in the programming.
Right, apologies for dumping it down so far, I find it hard to properly gauge the knowledge of others on the internet, and just try and play safe.
I wasn't aware that one could serial program gate arrays, as, as far as I know, the definition of serial programming is code that is governed by a processor, and which prohibits anything but serial execution of commands. So it's new to me that gate arrays can run serial code without any governance or serialization process, since gate arrays by themselves are anything but serial. Or rather, you need to synchronize anything and everything that is supposed to be serial by yourself, or use pre-built and pre-synced blocks, I guess.
Anyway, going by the definition that serial programming can only be performed using some kind of governance or synchronizing authority, that alone would be another layer of security.
As serial implies, it rid us, or lessened the burden, of those timing related issues, some of which included:
And the list goes on, but you know.
Serial also has a lot of pitfalls, and you can definitely screw things up bad, but at least you don't have to think much about clock or timing, or memory placement, unless communicating between devices or cores, and those sync problems tend to be rather tame and simple compared to intra-processor problems.
At least from my experience.
Oh if serial programming is not a thing in the electronics low level realm, then all is well. It's not news. It just doesn't exist. Apologies. I just assumed it was a thing since you said "parallel programming comes with almost no safety," and in my eyes, that implied that there existed other kinds of programming besides parallel in the context you were referring to.