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- Newsgroups: comp.parallel
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!hubcap!fpst
- From: eugene@nas.nasa.gov (Eugene N. Miya)
- Subject: Re: World's most powerful computing
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.161258.20481@hubcap.clemson.edu>
- Apparently-To: comp-parallel@ames.arc.nasa.gov
- Sender: news@nas.nasa.gov (News Administrator)
- Organization: NAS, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
- References: <1993Jan14.144705.18937@hubcap.clemson.edu> <1993Jan20.163842.1167@hubcap.clemson.edu> <1993Jan21.135931.4975@hubcap.clemson.edu>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 93 02:14:23 GMT
- Approved: parallel@hubcap.clemson.edu
- Lines: 103
-
-
- >In article <1993Jan20.163842.1167@hubcap.clemson.edu>,
- solman@athena.mit.edu (Jason W Solinsky) writes:
- >> That would make power inversely proportional to time used. Thus, imaginary
- >> computers are MORE important than installed computers
-
- I have to smile: This sounds like an MITism. It reminds me of this quote from
- Levy:
- Gosper realized that the ninth-floor hackers were in some sense
- deluding themselves, working on machines of relatively little power
- compared to the computers of the future--yet still trying to do it
- all, change the world right there in the lab.
- Full context of the quote follows sig.
-
- As George Michael says to me:
- If dreams could come true, then beggers would ride.
-
- And I can imagine a treatment for AIDS,
- and matter transporters ala Star Trek.
-
- In article <1993Jan21.135931.4975@hubcap.clemson.edu>
- pnm@goanna.cs.rmit.oz.au (Paul Big-Ears Menon) writes:
- >I say, this reminds me of the relativistic rule that the faster the body
- >goes, the heavier it gets.
-
- Lorentz transform.
- Not only heaiver, but HOW MUCH heavier.
-
- >Therefore, the fastest "thing" would naturally have no mass at all.
- >This supports the importance given to imaginary computers, as,
- >after all, they have no mass, thus can go as fast as theoretically possible.
- >
- >The only computer which could go faster would be one with negative mass. I
- >suppose this would be possible in good economic times, but not when there's a
- >credit squeeze on. Then again, with imaginary computers, we could be wandering
- >into the complex plane - which could permit negative mass computers. This
- >would be better than zero mass computers, as they could not operate at any
- >speed slower than c, only faster. All those propagation time problems would
- >be a thing of the past (get it??).
-
- 1988: "I hear the speed of light is constant every where except Armonk where
- I understand it goes a little bit faster."
- --Carl Conte, IBM
-
- >back to work on his improbability drive...
- > Paul Menon,
-
- I love it.
-
-
- What was the name of the British physicist who effectively killed the
- funding of AI in England?
-
-
- --eugene miya, NASA Ames Research Center, eugene@orville.nas.nasa.gov
- Resident Cynic, Rock of Ages Home for Retired Hackers
- {uunet,mailrus,other gateways}!ames!eugene
- Second Favorite email message: Returned mail: Cannot send message for 3 days
- A Ref: Mathematics and Plausible Reasoning, vol. 1, G. Polya
-
- from Hackers by Steven Levy
-
- [Bill] Gosper himself got a glimpse of the limits of the tight circle
- the hackers had drawn. It happened in the man-maded daylight of the 1972
- Apollo 17 moon shot. He was a passenger on a special cruise to the
- Caribbean, a "science cruise" timed for the launch, and the boat was
- loaded with sci-fi writers, futurists, scientists of varying stripes,
- cultural commentators, and, according to Gosper, "an unbelievable
- quantity of just completely empty-headed cruise-niks."
-
- . . .
- Apollo 17 was to be the first manned space shot initiated at night, and
- the cruise boat was sitting three miles off Cape Kennedy for an
- advantageous view of the launch. Gosper heard all of the arguments
- against going to the trouble of seeing a lift off -- why not see it on
- television, since you'll be miles away from the actual launch pad? But when
- he saw the damn thing actually lift off, he appreciated the distance.
- The night had been set ablaze, and the energy peak got to his very insides.
- The shirt slapped on his chest, the change in his pocket jingled, and the
- PA system speakers broke from their brackets on the viewing stand and
- dangled by their power cords. The rocket, which of course could never have
- held to so true a course without computers, leapt into the sky, hell-bent
- for the cosmos like some flaming avenger, a Spacewar nightmare; the
- cruise-niks were stunned into trances by the power and glory of the sight.
- The Indonesian crewmen went berserk. Gosper later recalled them
- running around in a panic and throwing their Ping-Pong equipment overboard,
- "like some kind of sacrifice."
- The sight affected Gosper profoundly. Before that night, Gosper had
- disdained NASA's human-wave approach toward things. He had been adamant
- in defending the AI Lab's more individualistic form of hacker elegance in
- programming, and in computing style in general. But now he saw how the
- Real World, when it hot its mind made up, could have an astounding effect.
- NASA had not applied the Hacker Ethic, yet it had done something the lab,
- for all its pioneering, never could have done. Gosper realized that the
- ninth-floor hackers were in some sense deluding themselves, working on
- machines of relatively little power compared to the computers of the
- future--yet still trying to do it all, change the world right there in
- the lab. And since the state of computing had not yet developed machines with
- the power to change the world at large--certainly nothing to make your
- chest rumble as did the NASA operation--all that the hackers wound up
- doing was making Tools to Make Tools. It was embarrassing.
-
-
-