#2,946 in Computers & technology books
Reddit mentions of Algorithms, Languages, Automata, And Compilers: A Practical Approach
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Reddit mentions: 1
We found 1 Reddit mentions of Algorithms, Languages, Automata, And Compilers: A Practical Approach. Here are the top ones.
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I like everything about what you just said. I'm familiar with the Van Allen Belt antimatter and Hugo de Garis but I wasn't familiar with Bill Stone, that's pretty awesome! And the Adams-Dormans book looks awesome! Currently I'm reading this book my friend lent me. (Glad I didn't have to pay for it!)
I am a big proponent of a genetic algorithm based tech tree that builds momentum towards a singularity end game. Not sure how it could be implemented at first. In an ideal world the engine is sufficiently advanced to model physics and the agents experiment with the physics engine. For the short term, I think breaking all technologies into their basic components based on physics would give a good "lego set" for building technologies. Each component could have a weight. Every time it gets used in a technology it gets a stronger weight. Etc. The momentum builds.
So you think hardware security makes AGI vulnerable? I suppose it's an engineering question. Right now it's vulnerable, but so were the worlds first single cell organisms. I'll bet security increases over time as neuromorphic chips become more complex; maybe not though.
So do you want to be a mod?