Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:23:45 AM |
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Looking to spice it up.
Try this...
Go to work and explain to any non-computer person why a computer counts from 0 instead of 1.
Or do you even know? Why does a computer start counting at 0? What is the meaning of computer zero?
I know... ..and you do too... ..but why??
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Eva Braun
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June 07, 2013, 02:24:21 AM |
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Sorry but this made no sense to me at all.
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worldinacoin
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June 07, 2013, 02:26:47 AM |
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The problem is I don't know, I guess 0 and 1 are just symbols for binary, it can be anything else in the world.
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Kaepora
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June 07, 2013, 02:27:32 AM |
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Looking to spice it up.
Try this...
Go to work and explain to any non-computer person why a computer counts from 0 instead of 1.
Or do you even know? Why does a computer start counting at 0? What is the meaning of computer zero?
I know... ..and you do too... ..but why??
Because there is only 1 & 0 in binary aka yes & no. Together they mean more than just 1 & 0 figure this out: 01101110011011110110111101100010
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:28:11 AM |
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Kind of...
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:29:04 AM |
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We're talking about a device (or artificial life) that thinks in terms of absolutes...
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:30:51 AM |
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Ha ha. not quite the '01101110011011110110111101100010' you think. noob
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Kaepora
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June 07, 2013, 02:35:20 AM |
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Ha ha. not quite the '01101110011011110110111101100010' you think. noob
std::cout<<"Welcome!"; return ;
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:36:12 AM |
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No, seriously though. The reason is cause computers are in the business of tracking everything. Even if that EVERYTHING is nothing. Therefore zero (0) is assigned to nothing. Because if you just left a data bank empty the computer would want to know what you meant. Nothing entered does not equal nothing to a computer. Nothing entered equals an empty variable. Nothing is represented as zero, or off. It is a calculated state of being. Therefore when asking a computer to count without programming interference it starts where it knows how to start. The first spot on the integer chain. i.e. zero. "What do you have first before you start anything?" Zero.
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Kaepora
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June 07, 2013, 02:39:03 AM |
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No, seriously though. The reason is cause computers are in the business of tracking everything. Even if that EVERYTHING is nothing. Therefore zero (0) is assigned to nothing. Because if you just left a data bank empty the computer would want to know what you meant. Nothing entered does not equal nothing to a computer. Nothing entered equals an empty variable. Nothing is represented as zero, or off. It is a calculated state of being. Therefore when asking a computer to count without programming interference it starts where it knows how to start. The first spot on the integer chain. i.e. zero. "What do you have first before you start anything?" Zero.
Computers use binary because modern circuits, in basic terms, basically have two states ON or OFF which is either 0 or 1, YES or NO. Cant wait for quantum computing!
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:41:51 AM |
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To: Kaepora Thanks
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:44:02 AM |
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Hmm. First step would be Quaternary. With simple silicon layers. Instead of on or off, you could have on / off / up / down. After that I'm sure it all peanuts... Buahaha. Not!
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raze
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June 07, 2013, 02:44:10 AM |
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Looking to spice it up.
Try this...
Go to work and explain to any non-computer person why a computer counts from 0 instead of 1.
Or do you even know? Why does a computer start counting at 0? What is the meaning of computer zero?
I know... ..and you do too... ..but why??
Because there is only 1 & 0 in binary aka yes & no. Together they mean more than just 1 & 0 figure this out: 01101110011011110110111101100010 It looks like a 32-bit single-precision floating point number to me... If I'm right, you're trying to represent the number 18,525,392,726,298,504,216,192,968,032 EDIT: Or maybe it's just an ordinary 32-bit number representing 1,852,796,770 but that's just boring.
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BTC --16FPbgyUZdTm1voAfi26VZ3RH7apTFGaPm LTC -- Lhd3gmj84BWqx7kQgqUA7gyoogsLeJbCXb PPC -- PRpKGjgjNLFv8eR7VVv7jBaP8aexDFqk4C
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:49:50 AM |
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The DX co-processor challenge...
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Kaepora
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June 07, 2013, 02:50:07 AM |
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Looking to spice it up.
Try this...
Go to work and explain to any non-computer person why a computer counts from 0 instead of 1.
Or do you even know? Why does a computer start counting at 0? What is the meaning of computer zero?
I know... ..and you do too... ..but why??
Because there is only 1 & 0 in binary aka yes & no. Together they mean more than just 1 & 0 figure this out: 01101110011011110110111101100010 It looks like a 32-bit single-precision floating point number to me... If I'm right, you're trying to represent the number 18,525,392,726,298,504,216,192,968,032 EDIT: Or maybe it's just an ordinary 32-bit number representing 1,852,796,770 but that's just boring. Depends how you interpret it sir it can be converted into either an integer or a string.
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:50:33 AM |
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...or was that SX? No. I think it was DX...
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:51:21 AM |
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...sorry. Too old school...
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raze
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June 07, 2013, 02:53:22 AM |
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Looking to spice it up.
Try this...
Go to work and explain to any non-computer person why a computer counts from 0 instead of 1.
Or do you even know? Why does a computer start counting at 0? What is the meaning of computer zero?
I know... ..and you do too... ..but why??
Because there is only 1 & 0 in binary aka yes & no. Together they mean more than just 1 & 0 figure this out: 01101110011011110110111101100010 It looks like a 32-bit single-precision floating point number to me... If I'm right, you're trying to represent the number 18,525,392,726,298,504,216,192,968,032 EDIT: Or maybe it's just an ordinary 32-bit number representing 1,852,796,770 but that's just boring. Depends how you interpret it sir it can be converted into either an integer or a string. Of course I didn't think of that one I guess I'm a 01101110011011110110111101100010.
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BTC --16FPbgyUZdTm1voAfi26VZ3RH7apTFGaPm LTC -- Lhd3gmj84BWqx7kQgqUA7gyoogsLeJbCXb PPC -- PRpKGjgjNLFv8eR7VVv7jBaP8aexDFqk4C
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:54:04 AM |
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OMG. The double or triple conversion using the Microsoft WingDings. That ALWAYS messes them up. (Use wingdings as the final conversion)
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Ximoxion (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 02:55:33 AM |
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Oooh. The WingDing of the MD5 Hash of the binary of the ASCII. To tell the boss to suck your butt & you quit!
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