Comment by wav-part
9 years ago
Because futher down the stack, more reliable a tech has to be. Otherwise good luck debugging. Also agree with heisenbit.
9 years ago
Because futher down the stack, more reliable a tech has to be. Otherwise good luck debugging. Also agree with heisenbit.
Hmmm... on that note, if the universe is a simulation, then a bug in that could have some interesting ramifications.
"Don't use the bookshelf over there, physics is broken on that shiny spot." :D
// FIXME Trying to read both the position and the momentum of a particle reliably crashes the simulation.
// Workaround: Make the accessor method return fuzzy values for either of those values.
The problem with finding a physics bug is that it's liable to be amplifiable. Break conservation laws just a little bit and suddenly you have potential for exponential runaway leading to an unplanned reality excursion, and say goodbye to your light-cone.
Well, by definition the behaviour would be undefined so could go any which way. ;)
Modern day VM software has various levels of exception checking, and code to catch/mitigate/etc when bugs crop up.
So, a universe-capable simulator might have any kind of behaviour if/when a bug occurs. It doesn't need to be an unbounded, runaway scenario. :)
1 reply →
> Hmmm... on that note, if the universe is a simulation, then a bug in that could have some interesting ramifications.
> "Don't use the bookshelf over there, physics is broken on that shiny spot." :D
You know "The Animatrix - Beyond"?
Nope, just looked it up though:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Animatrix#.22Beyond.22
Seems like the same kind of concept. :)
I don't know why you were downvoted. I find this hilarious and thought-provoking.