Fabian Giesen@rygorous·Nov 11, 2020Replying to @leonard_ritter and @PaniQno such thing as a Turing machine in physical reality. It's all FSMs.6
Fabian Giesen@rygorous·Nov 11, 2020Replying to @leonard_ritter and @PaniQhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_principle… https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe…12
Fabian Giesen@rygorous·Nov 11, 2020Replying to @leonard_ritter and @PaniQyou don't need the string theory bits for this https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bekenstein_bound…12
'(·)@allgebrahReplying to @rygorous and @PaniQnot 100% convinced, the bekenstein limit looks like a bandwidth constraint to me, not a storage one (but then again, all counterexamples I can currently think of would be somewhat outside causality)8:02 PM · Nov 11, 2020·Twitter Web App1 Like