The Landauer principle gives a lower bound for the energy needed for computation (specifically, irreversible information erasure). Is it possible that there is a heretofore undiscovered lower bound that is higher?
As an aside, modern computers perform computation like a car with square wheels --- in discrete steps, where all your energy is irreversibly discarded in each step. Theoretically, reversible computing [1] can do useful work with less energy without needing to erase information.
As an aside, modern computers perform computation like a car with square wheels --- in discrete steps, where all your energy is irreversibly discarded in each step. Theoretically, reversible computing [1] can do useful work with less energy without needing to erase information.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reversible_computing