Yes I do. But I am not sure that the writers of the Star Trek the Next Generation Technical Manual did.
Furthermore the Control Data Corporation CDC 6600, had twelve peripheral CPUs, just to feed the sixty bit word length CPU. It's an old idea. I have forgotten whether or not the Illac IV, had them( this computer had 64 data processors(was to have much more))
But my essential point is that a computer system has to be Turing complete. In other words all Star Trek computers have to be Turing complete, meaning understandable.
To bring in another piece of the puzzle, a Klingon D-7 Battle Cruiser must have very weak computer systems...
Because Klingons are in a hurry, not wanting to wait unless it is absolutely necessary to. They want to know where their prey is. Not rather that there is a possibility that they may be the ones being hunted.
But Duotronics is what I have spent a lifetime on...
My greatest conclusion is that anything that I came up with, wouldn't be Duotronics...
My second is that it has to be something so fundamental in nature that only Dr. Daystrom would think of it.
But! Never fear, Smith is here, sorry wrong franchise. We will soon have something akin to Duotronics. Voice recognition - check, voice response - check, Library Computers - check; and so on...
If you don't understand it is the concept of Turing complete that holds out hope...
Some questions still to be answered, however like did the Class F Shuttlecraft have Duotronics? I don't think so.
I do think that we did see the "actual " Duotronic Computer system any time they showed auxiliary control.
Which gets my goat that the only decent color blueprints show a very small version there of...