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Try a 248-dimensional object on your rig...

Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2007 3:03 pm
by leoA4D
and then those 20+ hour MWR renderings will seem short and sweet. See "Manhattan-Size Calculation: Mathematicians Map One Of The Most Complicated Structures", http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 090520.htm.

Thanks lebbeus; you pointed to the site with this article in your thread.

Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2007 4:00 pm
by lebbeus
it's a great site isn't it!? 8)

Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2007 6:12 pm
by leoA4D
Yep. Nice find. I have it b'marked and will visit.

Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2007 7:17 pm
by Bubbaloo
Link doesn't work for me...

Nevermind... I did a search and found it.

Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2007 7:28 pm
by lebbeus
yeah--the article seems to have been removed from that site…

here's some other articles on the same 248-dimensional object:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17688055/

Scientific American

Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2007 11:42 pm
by Mattia Sullini
A must have UV projector...

Posted: Tue Aug 21, 2007 12:19 am
by dutch_designer
One of the best mathematicians of the country explained in a tv interview yesterday how many computers you would need to solve the problem of finding the fastest route through 100 points, he called it the traveling salesman problem.
He then went on to say, that if every atom in the whole universe was a computer (!!!), and not just the fastest computer you can get now, but what we think now is theoretically the fastest computer possible, and if those computers would have started to find this fastest route (by trying every route possible, the brute force way) at the start of the big bang, that they would be about halfway through the problem by now... isn't that something??? It truly boggles the mind.

Getting the noise to clear in those dark corners of the room suddenly seems so much simpler :lol:

edit: here's more about this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travelling ... an_problem