Memory-Centric Computing: Security Benefits and Challenges of Processing-in-DRAM (opens in new tab)
Today's computing systems are processor-centric: they require frequent data movement between processing elements (e.g., CPU) and main memory (DRAM), leading to significant inefficiencies in performance and energy consumption. Memory-centric computing instead moves computation to the data, enabling computation capability in and near all places where data is generated and stored, and greatly reducing the performance and energy overheads of data ac...
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