In a world where data centers use 450 to 500 TWh each year, which accounts for about 1.5 percent of global electricity, efficiency matters most. Neuromorphic chips work well for edge computing and artificial intelligence. They take on demanding tasks with fewer resources.
In robotics, a neuromorphic chip reads data like sight and sound in real time. It uses very little power compared to a GPU. In smart homes, these chips work well with IoT devices that must stay on without draining batteries. In healthcare, they help wearables check vitals fast and on the spot.