gabriella (OP)
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December 06, 2013, 03:52:52 AM |
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in what field precisely? computer science? applied mathematics? economics? social science?
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oakpacific
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December 06, 2013, 03:58:47 AM |
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No one will choose it as their Ph.D project, the project is so massive in scale that it will take 10 years for a relatively talented postgraduate to lay down all the foundations. The field should definitely be cryptography, that's where all the works before his(b-money, bit gold, etc) were done.
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remotemass
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ASMR El Salvador
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December 06, 2013, 04:00:02 AM |
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Nope. A Masters or PhD thesis with less than 50 pages is too little. This could be published as an article on a journal of Cryptography, though. Or maybe a journal of Computing or Applied Maths.
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{ Imagine a sequence of bits generated from the first decimal place of the square roots of whole integers that are irrational numbers. If the decimal falls between 0 and 5, it's considered bit 0, and if it falls between 5 and 10, it's considered bit 1. This sequence from a simple integer count of contiguous irrationals and their logical decimal expansion of the first decimal place is called the 'main irrational stream.' Our goal is to design a physical and optical computing system system that can detect when this stream starts matching a specific pattern of a given size of bits. bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=166760.0 } Satoshi did use a friend class in C++ and put a comment on the code saying: "This is why people hate C++".
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bigdude
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December 06, 2013, 04:06:04 AM |
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only a Nobel Prize would be worthy
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kdrop22
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December 06, 2013, 04:30:50 AM |
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Closed minds might end up rejecting it, without giving it a good try.
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bryant.coleman
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December 06, 2013, 04:57:55 AM |
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Nope. A Masters or PhD thesis with less than 50 pages is too little.
Sadly that is true. A Ph.D thesis should have a minimum of 200-300 pages. That said, I don't think that it will be that hard to add some of the finer details to the original BTC paper and "elongate" it a bit.
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Mylon
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Mining FTW
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December 06, 2013, 05:25:30 AM |
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Nope. A Masters or PhD thesis with less than 50 pages is too little.
Sadly that is true. A Ph.D thesis should have a minimum of 200-300 pages. That said, I don't think that it will be that hard to add some of the finer details to the original BTC paper and "elongate" it a bit. Has anyone tried printing out the original bitcoin source code yet?
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"All Your Base Are Belong To Us" by CATS
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silvergoldandbitcoin
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December 06, 2013, 05:30:29 AM |
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Nope. A Masters or PhD thesis with less than 50 pages is too little.
Sadly that is true. A Ph.D thesis should have a minimum of 200-300 pages. That said, I don't think that it will be that hard to add some of the finer details to the original BTC paper and "elongate" it a bit. Has anyone tried printing out the original bitcoin source code yet? That would be an interesting piece of art if done correctly!
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richard_dein
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December 06, 2013, 06:59:17 AM |
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No one will choose it as their Ph.D project, the project is so massive in scale that it will take 10 years for a relatively talented postgraduate to lay down all the foundations.
It's not too big for an academic project, as in a project driven by a group of students, professors and researchers. It would be a particularly remarkable one. By the end of the project some of the students involved could have obtained a PhD degree for the work they have done. Just not the one single paper he published in the beginning. That said, John Nash's 28-page thesis on equilibriums of games was already enough for his PhD degree... A masters by the way is dead easy. Even at the highest standards you just have to do grunt work for the professor, some semi-original research over a few semesters, and pass all courses.
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disclaimer201
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December 06, 2013, 07:52:41 AM |
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If you need length, you can always attach the blockchain in printed form for proof of concept and proof of work.
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seanneko
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December 06, 2013, 08:33:00 AM |
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Sadly that is true. A Ph.D thesis should have a minimum of 200-300 pages.
This is why I hate academia. It's based on rubbish like how many references your paper gets, or how big your vocabulary is. Not so much the actual idea you're writing about. Sometimes I read an entire page which could be summarised in one sentence without losing any content at all. Source: I work with academics/researchers and see this every single day.
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Rannasha
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December 06, 2013, 08:44:09 AM |
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in what field precisely? computer science? applied mathematics? economics? social science?
Probably computer science. The Satoshi-paper mostly describes the setup of the Bitcoin network and doesn't really analyze the economic or social implications. The worked out concept of Bitcoin should be more than enough to earn a PhD, but typically a thesis is based on the contents of 3-4 papers (varies by country and field). A PhD degree for a single paper is exceptionally rare. There's plenty more to write about Bitcoin than what is in the Satoshi paper though.
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scintill
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December 06, 2013, 09:04:59 AM |
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This is why I hate academia. It's based on rubbish like how many references your paper gets, or how big your vocabulary is. Not so much the actual idea you're writing about. Sometimes I read an entire page which could be summarised in one sentence without losing any content at all.
Source: I work with academics/researchers and see this every single day.
IMO (having last read it a few months ago) the paper is not that great of an academic paper. I felt it left quite a few ideas undeveloped and glossed-over. We know Satoshi had answers to the things he left unfinished in the paper based on his source code, and the community has filled in gaps over the years, but the paper, while briefly introducing some revolutionary ideas, is fairly basic. Even from a computer science perspective, it is not a rigorous specification of the protocol, tx construction, script language, etc. The source code has served that purpose. I get the impression he wrote the paper to give people something to chew on, while writing the code which he considered more interesting or important ( "I'm better with code than with words"). If you were "there", feel free to correct any of this.
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1SCiN5kqkAbxxwesKMsH9GvyWnWP5YK2W | donations
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Mylon
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Mining FTW
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December 06, 2013, 09:25:26 AM |
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This is why I hate academia. It's based on rubbish like how many references your paper gets, or how big your vocabulary is. Not so much the actual idea you're writing about. Sometimes I read an entire page which could be summarised in one sentence without losing any content at all.
Source: I work with academics/researchers and see this every single day.
IMO (having last read it a few months ago) the paper is not that great of an academic paper. I felt it left quite a few ideas undeveloped and glossed-over. We know Satoshi had answers to the things he left unfinished in the paper based on his source code, and the community has filled in gaps over the years, but the paper, while briefly introducing some revolutionary ideas, is fairly basic. Even from a computer science perspective, it is not a rigorous specification of the protocol, tx construction, script language, etc. The source code has served that purpose. I get the impression he wrote the paper to give people something to chew on, while writing the code which he considered more interesting or important ( "I'm better with code than with words"). If you were "there", feel free to correct any of this. From his early email messages he clearly says somewhere, that he wasn't sure whether or not he could fix all the problems code wise. When finished working out all the major problems in the code, he wrote the white paper convinced it was possible. So in my opinion, his original code is what was most revolutionary.
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"All Your Base Are Belong To Us" by CATS
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indiekiduk
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December 06, 2013, 10:30:08 AM |
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Nope. A Masters or PhD thesis with less than 50 pages is too little.
Sadly that is true. A Ph.D thesis should have a minimum of 200-300 pages. That said, I don't think that it will be that hard to add some of the finer details to the original BTC paper and "elongate" it a bit. I've seen a 1 page PhD thesis before. It was just a single but mind-blowing equation.
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teukon
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December 06, 2013, 12:18:23 PM |
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My own PhD thesis was only about 60 pages long. In mathematics and computer science it's the content that counts, not the length (unless you have a terrible supervisor or examiner).
I believe that the content of the whitepaper is easily worthy of a PhD. However, it's not a thesis, it's a whitepaper. For a PhD thesis I expect Satoshi would be required to expand on most of the points made. Accompanied by some working code (bitcoin v0.1 alpha) and perhaps some data from a short simulation, I see no reason to dismiss the work.
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Rannasha
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December 06, 2013, 12:32:17 PM |
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Nope. A Masters or PhD thesis with less than 50 pages is too little.
Sadly that is true. A Ph.D thesis should have a minimum of 200-300 pages. That said, I don't think that it will be that hard to add some of the finer details to the original BTC paper and "elongate" it a bit. I've seen a 1 page PhD thesis before. It was just a single but mind-blowing equation. Show it.
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glub0x
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December 06, 2013, 12:36:55 PM |
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Isn't satoshi electible for economic noble prize? I mean how many of those "pontes" has already been proven wrong just by the existence of bitcoin?
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The cost of mediation increases transaction costs, limiting the minimum practical transaction size and cutting off the possibility for small casual transactionsSatoshi Nakamoto : https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf
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Bitcoinpro
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December 06, 2013, 02:36:47 PM |
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the Satoshi School of CryptoCurrency
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COM
CRYPTOCURRENCY CENTRAL BANK
LTC: LP7bcFENVL9vdmUVea1M6FMyjSmUfsMVYf
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