[computer-go] Can Go be solved???... PLEASE help!
Nick Apperson
apperson at gmail.com
Wed Jan 17 01:47:18 PST 2007
I bet Windows Vista would still run slow on God's computer though. Go
Microsoft! Sorry to get off topic, I just figure we have beat this subject
to death.
- Nick
On 1/17/07, Eduardo Sabbatella <eduardo_sabbatella at yahoo.com.ar> wrote:
>
> As far I know, just coffee speaking with some physics
> friends. WE ALL live in multi dimensional world.
> Indeed, if more then 3 dimensions exists, we exist in
> them, also our computers. The thing is, our eyes only
> see the first three ones.
>
> I think you are talking about the God's computer ;-).
>
>
> --- Don Dailey <drd at mit.edu> escribió:
>
> > On Tue, 2007-01-16 at 16:21 -0800, Christoph Birk
> > wrote:
> > > On Sat, 13 Jan 2007, Don Dailey wrote:
> > > > One of the theoretical limitations to
> > > > computing power (which was layed out in someones
> > posts) and I have
> > > > always understood to be the case, is related to
> > > > space - the physical size of the universe.
> > >
> > > The problem with higher dimensions is that they
> > are small AND they do
> > > NOT increase the 3-dimensional volume of our
> > universe.
> > > Imagine a 2 dimesional (finite) surface and bend
> > it in some way
> > > (eg. cylinder) ... even though your 2-dim
> > "universe" exists now in
> > > 3 dimensions, it did not increase in area.
> > >
> > > > If a computer can exist in 3
> > > > dimensions, couldn't an infinite number of them
> > exist with 1 more
> > > > dimension?
> >
> > I'm suggesting computers that might exist outside
> > our 3 dimensional
> > space, not confined to our 3 dimensional space.
> > Perhaps there are
> > beings that see our space as flat from their many
> > dimensions and any
> > physical objects they deal with, are infinitely
> > bigger that we can
> > observe.
> >
> > For instance if there existed 2 dimensional beings,
> > we could not show
> > them 3 dimensional objects, just reflections of them
> > and any of our
> > objects would be infinitely large to them. If we
> > could build
> > 2 dimensional computers, we could stack any number
> > of them
> > on top of each other and they would not take up any
> > extra space, no?
> >
> > - Don
> >
> >
> >
> > > Nope; see above.
> > >
> > > Christoph
> >
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> >
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> >
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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