5/ You could imagine making a virtual machine of an abacus. This would be a software package that maintains 10 memory locations, each with 10 beads, and the machine allows a caller to move a bead on any wire left or right...but never add beads, never remove them, never add wire
-
-
16/ start at location 0, check your notes, see "ahh, we're going to location 9 million and 6 ...let's speed walk along this row of mailboxes till we get there". Instead you start at location 0 and then take a forking path: left, left, left, right, left, right, right right...
Show this thread -
17/ The language, the 16 opcodes, that run on this virtual machine, are called Nock. Nock is insanely difficult to program in, so Curtis wrote a higher level language ON TOP of Nock, called Hoon ... which is ALSO insanely difficult to program in.
Show this thread -
18/ OK, we're back to the part of the thread that normal people can follow. So, we've got this new programming language called Hoon, which runs on top of a new virtual machine. So what? Well, the software is free. You can download it and run it on your windows, linux, Mac >
Show this thread -
19/ and when you do, the software on your machine is in connection with every other person in the Urbit-verse, or, rather, the software running on THEIR machines. You can type at your local Urbit, and interact with other people and their local Urbits. These local things >>>
Show this thread -
20/ were once called "ships", then "yachts", and after three or four renamings they are now called "planets" or "comets". A planet or a comet is a bunch of things at once:
Show this thread -
21/ * a window you can type into * a store of information on your local disk * a "mailing address" that is unique from every other "mailing address" in the urbit-verse (kinda like an email addr, or a domain name, or an IP address) * NFT "property" that can be subdivided & sold
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.