Computing Limit - Computerphile

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 922

  • @ZipplyZane
    @ZipplyZane 7 лет назад +1143

    From Wikipedia: "The Fredkin gate is a circuit or device with three inputs and three outputs that transmits the first bit unchanged and swaps the last two bits if, and only if, the first bit is 1."
    "It is universal, which means that any logical or arithmetic operation can be constructed entirely of Fredkin gates."
    It even shows how you can make AND, OR, and NOT from Fredkin gates. So it truly can replace everything.
    Also, oddly enough, you can implement them using AND, OR, NOT, and XOR. It's so weird.
    We NEED a video on these things, Sean!

    • @LoLrand0mness
      @LoLrand0mness 7 лет назад +54

      ok, we need not only a video on these things, we prolly need every chip manufacturer to start using these gates instead.
      the initial investment cost would be out weighted by the reduction of the sustained energy cost by a lot.

    • @SlimThrull
      @SlimThrull 7 лет назад +99

      Yeah, I've been programming for 30+ years (though as a hobby, not professionally) and this is the first time I've heard about these gates. I'd really like to see a video on them as well, please.

    • @ZVdP
      @ZVdP 7 лет назад +135

      I think the power argument currently only works for quantum implementations of the gates. Power consumption of classical gates is still dominated by switching losses and leakage. Classical implementations of a Fredkin gate would still have these losses, so there would be no benefit. It is only when we could eliminate switching losses or reduce them so much that information loss becomes important, that Fredkin gates would be useful in everyday electronics.

    • @PvblivsAelivs
      @PvblivsAelivs 7 лет назад +42

      "the initial investment cost would be out weighted by the reduction of the sustained energy cost by a lot."
      Would it? Be very careful. Either you store all those extraneous data indefinitely. Or you still erase it and incur the energy penalty. I mean, it's interesting and all. But it looks very impractical from here.

    • @logiconabstractions6596
      @logiconabstractions6596 7 лет назад +8

      I'm not sure that's how it work. I mean maybe - but then perhaps programming paradigmsge would find ways to take advantage of that. Most likely actually, and we probably can't really understand how right now.
      I mean would you envision OOP if you're staring at a Turing machine (I mean the actual one he was working on?)

  • @RobinHilton22367
    @RobinHilton22367 7 лет назад +100

    Your mantra at 0:50 is pretty much how I went through university.
    Also another good one that I follow is: "A complex thing is just lots of simple things put together" (which means that if it is too hard you haven't broken it down enough yet)

  • @BergerKing064
    @BergerKing064 6 лет назад +69

    It's important to note that reversible computing is not a free lunch. The crucial bit he omitted is that a reversible computation with no energy input is a random walk, it diffuses forwards and backwards through the computation and may take infinite time to reach the output state you desire.
    However, you may add energy system to drive the computation forwards. So there is a fundamental tradeoff between energy cost and computation speed.

    • @andrewberger1882
      @andrewberger1882 4 года назад +1

      @Hubert Jasieniecki Not for fully reversible computing, that's the whole point of it.

    • @JD-pi2ce
      @JD-pi2ce 2 месяца назад

      ​@@andrewberger1882 how would any computing (reversible or not) operate without energy input?

  • @stofan
    @stofan 7 лет назад +484

    Informæætion

    • @CujoSound
      @CujoSound 5 лет назад +6

      That is out iPod ????

    • @rich1051414
      @rich1051414 5 лет назад +26

      Give the guy a bræk...

    • @bjarke7886
      @bjarke7886 4 года назад +7

      @@rich1051414 bræk means vomit in danish

    • @j.d.4697
      @j.d.4697 3 года назад +4

      Celtic information > information

    • @briankrebs7534
      @briankrebs7534 3 года назад

      Imagin æ æ æ tion 🌈

  • @chrisjonesowns
    @chrisjonesowns 7 лет назад +432

    What an excellent presenter. Had me engaged from start to finish.

    • @callofdutymuhammad
      @callofdutymuhammad 7 лет назад +7

      Chris Jones Agreed

    • @UltraJordanGaming
      @UltraJordanGaming 7 лет назад +5

      Me too.

    • @mezza205
      @mezza205 7 лет назад +4

      check out his other videos in sixty symbols

    • @Slithy
      @Slithy 7 лет назад +2

      It's Professor Moriarty in the flesh, of course he's excellent :D

  • @bjhghjkjgj
    @bjhghjkjgj 7 лет назад +473

    9:34 The whistle was roughly 1180 Hz

    • @bjhghjkjgj
      @bjhghjkjgj 7 лет назад +75

      The closest musical note is a D6

    • @garciat
      @garciat 7 лет назад +4

      What is its relationship to the note he was playing on the guitar?

    • @novafawks
      @novafawks 7 лет назад +58

      It's 1300 Hz. I put it through FL Studio (FabFilter Pro Q). You're a note off, it's a E6 not a D6 ;)
      Can't fool a decade-long producer :3
      @gabriel - He played a D3 on the guitar and whistled an E6

    • @bjhghjkjgj
      @bjhghjkjgj 7 лет назад +11

      I only used a spectrum analyzer from an app on my phone ("phyphox") and it probably caught the later part of the whistle, where the pitch drops quite a bit. But honestly D6 sounds way closer to me when I play it side by side.

    • @saltyman7888
      @saltyman7888 7 лет назад +12

      D6 = E6 Baroque.

  • @fasulia67
    @fasulia67 7 лет назад +487

    I could do with an electrical engineering phile

    • @gingerman4121
      @gingerman4121 7 лет назад +24

      Would watch

    • @DanieleGiorgino
      @DanieleGiorgino 7 лет назад +19

      EEVblog

    • @fasulia67
      @fasulia67 7 лет назад +10

      DanieleGiorgino I like the computerphile/60 symbols structure

    • @DeoMachina
      @DeoMachina 7 лет назад +1

      I recommend BigClive

    • @DeoMachina
      @DeoMachina 7 лет назад +4

      I'm no engineer myself, but I think you could swing it. Have videos for each of the various principles, explain the nuances of generation and transmission..there's certainly no lack of theory to cover!

  • @apacheglider
    @apacheglider 6 лет назад +22

    He explains things like opening wikipedia tabs all over the place and closing them one after the other.. takes some focus to keep up with his goal but like it

  • @peterfriedman2830
    @peterfriedman2830 5 лет назад +6

    This guy's infinite enthusiasm and unbounded love for his subject matter is self-evidently just way off the charts. See what I did there? Infinite and unbounded? Off the charts? Those things are just as true in terms of what he's talking about as they are of how passionately he tries to get things accross It's just that he does it all so much more spontaeously and infectiously than I ever could. Simply awesome.

  • @gingerman4121
    @gingerman4121 7 лет назад +1026

    'I have a theoretical degree in physics'

    • @smitemus
      @smitemus 7 лет назад +90

      It does sound funny when you think about it. :)

    • @sebastianelytron8450
      @sebastianelytron8450 7 лет назад +29

      Brilliant

    • @Klaevin
      @Klaevin 7 лет назад +34

      so do I. you'll have to theorize my degree in order to see it, though...

    • @jason-ge5nr
      @jason-ge5nr 7 лет назад +2

      That makes you smarter than neil degrasse tyson if you reckoned Christ as your savior

    • @helmutsvanags756
      @helmutsvanags756 7 лет назад +13

      man of culture spotted

  • @luciengrondin5802
    @luciengrondin5802 7 лет назад +63

    5:10 : "Is that not just because we have two inputs and only one output?" LoL Phil has a very appropriate reaction here. That question was indeed a very neat insight about the whole thing.

    • @seanspartan2023
      @seanspartan2023 5 лет назад +5

      Agreed... Everything boils down to injective functions

    • @AllYourMemeAreBelongToUs
      @AllYourMemeAreBelongToUs Месяц назад

      @@seanspartan2023Yup the fredkin gate would allow for a bijection between the inputs and outputs permitting for a zero increase in information entropy. Pretty cool.

  • @erikwiberg85
    @erikwiberg85 7 лет назад +17

    One of the best episodes, IMO. It tied several interesting concepts together very nicely. Great job!

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 2 года назад

      how fast can you compute depends on which matters more core count or clock speed cause core count increases power a lot as you add more cores to the cpu count

  • @ElagabalusRex
    @ElagabalusRex 7 лет назад +10

    This is one of the most interesting Computerphile videos I've seen in a long time. It's one of those topics that you don't ever hear about in when doing a bachelor's degree or working in software, but is still incredibly fascinating.

    • @123TeeMee
      @123TeeMee 3 года назад

      Yup, somehow never heard of it in my bachelor’s CS degree

  • @JustOneAsbesto
    @JustOneAsbesto 7 лет назад +73

    Prof Moriarty has always been one of my favourites, but I think this might be his best video yet.

    • @twobyfour
      @twobyfour 7 лет назад +5

      I like it when Prof Moriarty gets excited. Granted, it doesn't take much.

  • @morbid1.
    @morbid1. 7 лет назад +385

    "Uncertainty principle" Is great name for progressive technical death metal.

    • @hiperalee
      @hiperalee 7 лет назад +11

      Prog never ceases to amaze me

    • @UFTyop
      @UFTyop 7 лет назад +10

      The thought of a band named “Uncertainty Priciple “ sounds awfully hipster.

    • @Blast-Forward
      @Blast-Forward 7 лет назад +6

      Sounds like some christian rock band.

    • @EgoShredder
      @EgoShredder 7 лет назад +6

      Makes me think of the classic Thrash Metal album by Kreator - Terrible Certainty. ruclips.net/video/ulbFJ0Cvfic/видео.html

    • @ValterVogeli
      @ValterVogeli 7 лет назад +1

      who listens to Tiamat in 2017 ? :D interesting to hear that 10 to the 50 number.. will robots then replace humans?

  • @LukeVilent
    @LukeVilent 5 лет назад +19

    Dear Computerphie team. I have added accurate English captions as well as Russian captions about a year ago. Could you please review and perhaps publish them, should you be satisfied. Thank you!

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan2023 5 лет назад +10

    Mathematically speaking, this reminds me of inverse functions. The system is reversible if every final position can be paired with at most one initial condition. Which in math terms is like saying the mapping from the initial condition set to the final condition set must be injective (i.e. must be a monomorphism).

  • @SpikeTheSpiker
    @SpikeTheSpiker 7 лет назад

    That was MIND BLOWING. Totally understood exactly why he took so long to explain it, he had to set up prior knowledge at each point so you could follow along. Amazing that we have actually figured this out.

  • @Yashmnash
    @Yashmnash 7 лет назад +24

    I think this is Phil's best video yet.

  • @enkoid
    @enkoid 7 лет назад +1

    "Here’s the fascinating thing: What costs the energy is not the computation itself, it’s erasing information."
    Phil once again blows my goddamn mind with something that ought to be obvious. I love you, man.

  • @Fiifufu
    @Fiifufu 7 лет назад +72

    I'm only a recreational physicist. Is this why I can't find the link?

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  7 лет назад +14

      +MyyMeli ruclips.net/video/mBdCE5hOexM/видео.html

    • @Fiifufu
      @Fiifufu 7 лет назад +3

      Thank You!

    • @LukeVilent
      @LukeVilent 7 лет назад +1

      Well, the link seems really to be missing, though all the pieces of the puzzle are there. I am no physicist at all, but here is what I've sorta learned from other sources (copying from my other comment):
      Ok, so less time means more energy, but why is the energy limited? Just pump more and more.
      The reason is: you need something to transmit energy. Say, to perform an erasure, you need a photon. The shorter the time, the more energy this photon is to have. Now, E=mc2, so the photon's mass grows proportionally to the energy.
      Now, there is the limit for the mass a photon may have in our Universe - it is the critical mass, after which it will collapse into a black hole (that's why it went about black holes in the video). This sets the upper bound for the mass hence the upper bound for the energy hence the lower bound for the computation time.

  • @flymypg
    @flymypg 7 лет назад

    This video captures so many aspects of what makes science/math popularization work:
    - Both Phil and Sean are clearly excited about the topic. The synergy between them creates a dynamic tension surrounding the core principles being discussed.
    - The topic itself doesn't just cross the boundaries between math, computing and physics, it unifies and annihilates them.
    - The topic also neatly covers so many orders of magnitude, lending a perceptible scale to the entire topic.
    - The most advanced math used was the AND gate. The demos were a dead tennis ball and a guitar. So much from so little!
    - Fundamentals! "Long time, narrow frequency band. Short time, wide frequency band." Awesome.
    Well done!

  • @wktodd
    @wktodd 7 лет назад +187

    coding as a way of explaining maths… now that would make an interesting series :-)

    • @keashavnair6772
      @keashavnair6772 6 лет назад +5

      Bill Todd machine learning is all about programming maths.

    • @matthewhatfield9535
      @matthewhatfield9535 5 лет назад +3

      I did(and still do) some of that to teach myself code.
      I'd concoct some sort of maths and try to translate it into Python. If I hit a wall(or relied on spamming if/else too much), I'd google better ways to do it and usually learn something new.

    • @wliaputs
      @wliaputs 3 года назад

      Coq

  • @Acid113377
    @Acid113377 7 лет назад

    I think this is the best video I have seen on here. My favourite professor/presenter over from minutephysics talking about fundamentals of computer science. Just amazing. Thank you so much for this!

  • @soraaoixxthebluesky
    @soraaoixxthebluesky 4 года назад +6

    Teacher: “You there. Explain what Quantum Physics is”
    Me: “Hold my acoustic guitar”

  • @dingo137
    @dingo137 7 лет назад

    Thank you, that's the best short explanation of the Uncertainty Principle I've seen. I also took a while to come to that realisation, and any time anyone asks me to explain it I've gone for a very similar explanation to the one you gave there. Far too many "explanations" confuse it with measurement issues.

  • @f4z0
    @f4z0 5 лет назад +47

    But can it run crysis?
    Sorry I had to. Imagine gaming in a dual blackhole Intel cpu.

  • @babyplaze
    @babyplaze 5 лет назад

    Wow, I got goosebumps at the end of the video when you explain how far away we actually are from the computational limit.

  • @RMoribayashi
    @RMoribayashi 7 лет назад +20

    When sending Morse code (or any digital transminnion) you often run into the frequency vs bandwidth problem. You can use a verry narrow audio filter with slow speeds but that same filter is useless at high speeds. The filter resonates or "rings" and you hear a nearly steady tone and all information is lost.

    • @James_Haskin
      @James_Haskin 7 лет назад

      Can you elaborate? Morse code is traditionally an analog system.

    • @RMoribayashi
      @RMoribayashi 7 лет назад +10

      While it's usually received by ear it is a digital signal, on or off. Its bandwidth is determined by the frequency it's sent and the time it takes to go from 0 to full signal. The faster both of these are the more transients or clicks there are and the more bandwidth it takes up. To take advantage of limited space Hams often crowd together only a few hundred Hertz apart. They need to hear as narrow a part of the audio spectrum to isolate just the signal they want to decode but too narrow a filter and the begining and end of each element will be less destinct making fast signals smear together. These problems occur in all modes of information transmission from analog TV and radio to digital signals on fiber optic cable. Hope that helps.

    • @rhamph
      @rhamph 7 лет назад +4

      Related reading:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist_rate
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shannon%E2%80%93Hartley_theorem

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk 6 лет назад +1

      +JamesHaskin The system itself is digital. So what you have shown is you don't know the difference between an analog system and a digital system.

  • @boringmanager9559
    @boringmanager9559 7 лет назад

    Well, I wish youtube and this channel existed back in the days when I was an undergrad.
    Love you, guys

  • @Ramonatho
    @Ramonatho 7 лет назад +98

    Could we actually get an electric engineering phile channel?

    • @ashwith
      @ashwith 7 лет назад +3

      Ramonatho as an electronics engineer, I approve!

    • @julius4858
      @julius4858 7 лет назад +4

      Ashwith Rego as a cs Student i still approve

    • @yanwo2359
      @yanwo2359 7 лет назад +2

      I think RUclips channel W2EAW has excellent electrical engineering content.

    • @Ritefita
      @Ritefita 5 лет назад

      ELECTROBOOM =)

  • @dancollins4372
    @dancollins4372 7 лет назад +2

    Best Computerphile show yet IMHO.

  • @mikejohnstonbob935
    @mikejohnstonbob935 7 лет назад +56

    so when do we get consumer level machines with 10^50 flop processors? and can it run crysis?

    • @descai10
      @descai10 7 лет назад +5

      it can run crysis at roughly 10^37 fps
      written out that's
      ~10000000000000000000000000000000000000 fps

    • @MrBLARG85
      @MrBLARG85 5 лет назад +6

      Oh... it'll CAUSE a crysis.

    • @illusions77
      @illusions77 5 лет назад

      Crystal meth maybe.... j/k :)

    • @Dirtfire
      @Dirtfire 4 года назад

      Ray Kurzweil estimates we'll reach the absolute limits of computing before 2100. That might not seem like a long time, but Kurzwel always points out that progress is always accelerating.

    • @Anankin12
      @Anankin12 4 года назад

      @@Dirtfire I seriously doubt that since to hit the limit you need to use systems unusable safely within the solar system

  • @ilkoderez601
    @ilkoderez601 4 года назад

    I did a search for "computational limits" and this is one of the few relevant videos. Great video. Thank you. I first read about the limits of computation in "The Singularity is Near" and I realized the connection to reversibility in the YT video "Quantum Computing for Computer Scientists". I would love to see more on this topic.

  • @YingwuUsagiri
    @YingwuUsagiri 7 лет назад +7

    I was listening to Prof. Moriarty while working away on my own stuff and I look over and suddenly there's a guitar.

  • @thejumperkin
    @thejumperkin 6 лет назад

    "is that not just because we've got 2 inputs and only 1 output"... quite possibly the best question i've heard on any related channel... fantastic

  • @tanvach
    @tanvach 7 лет назад +22

    Yes to electrical engineering-phile!

  • @DrDress
    @DrDress 7 лет назад

    I have a take-home exam right now. Damn you Computerphile!
    That was his best video to date. There were sooo many interesting aspects of physics and information that was so well explained.

  • @sofarky
    @sofarky 7 лет назад +455

    Why are there pink fluffy ears on the desk

    • @jeffirwin7862
      @jeffirwin7862 7 лет назад +78

      Phil dressed as a sexy animal for Halloween.

    • @DiamondzFinder_
      @DiamondzFinder_ 7 лет назад +32

      Because there needs to be.

    • @MaxContagion
      @MaxContagion 7 лет назад +42

      it is adressed at the end of the video. i read the comments early. hadn't even noticed them. he likes his props it seems. it does help translate harder to understand concepts into much simpler ones.

    • @zemc77
      @zemc77 7 лет назад +9

      There's also what appears to be a tree branch leaning against the wall.

    • @Rubrickety
      @Rubrickety 7 лет назад +26

      Harry Potter, The Death of Expertise, Maxwell's Demon, and pink bunny ears are the essential accoutrements of any working physicist. Especially those into metal.

  • @robinwells8879
    @robinwells8879 5 лет назад +2

    This man has a truly awesome gift for information transfer! I envy his students.

  • @1ucasvb
    @1ucasvb 7 лет назад +52

    Yay, I have the exact same mantra as a student. I always try to code stuff to truly "get it". If I can explain a concept to a dumb machine, I must know it.

    • @mikejones-vd3fg
      @mikejones-vd3fg 7 лет назад +3

      can you code quantum mechanics? didnt they say about quamtum mechanics , if you understand it you dont understand it

    • @rozaepareza
      @rozaepareza 7 лет назад +3

      I think codes exist for it, but the problem is that it's too computationally intensive for more than a few particles. This is because you have to represent the state of the system as a "probability distribution" over every possible arrangement of the particles, to take account of entanglement. (Caveat: not really probability, since it's complex-valued.)
      Sources:
      ruclips.net/video/w7398u8G588/видео.htmlm8s
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schr%C3%B6dinger_equation#Particles_as_waves

    • @crabsynth3480
      @crabsynth3480 7 лет назад +1

      Same here ... Now imagine ... what if Everyone on the Planet did this... instead of Conflict there'd be World Peace... haha

    • @General12th
      @General12th 3 года назад +1

      @@crabsynth3480 What? Why?

    • @mikicerise6250
      @mikicerise6250 2 года назад

      IBM has classical simulations of quantum computing. Someone had to code them. :)

  • @howdlej123
    @howdlej123 7 лет назад

    As a programmer I do have say programming a (to me) complex bit of maths helps me understand so much more about it. I don't understand how this works, for years people have told me if you're programming you're doing maths, but to me personally it just feels so different, so much more friendly and specific.

  • @BrianFrichette
    @BrianFrichette 7 лет назад +40

    Buy some new strings

  • @DeBukkIt
    @DeBukkIt 4 года назад +2

    My computer science professor told me that another aspect would limit the speed of computers: The speed of light. If we increase the speed of CPUs more and more, the electrons have to cross the CPU chip in a shorter and even shorter time. At some point, they will reach a physical speed limit (practically not even close to the speed of light), so they won't be able to travel the 2-5 centimetres of one edge of the CPU to the other during that single flop.
    According to the professor, if we reach that limit, our only chance to further increase computing speed would be parallelization of multiple of those close-to-the-limit chips.

    • @DeBukkIt
      @DeBukkIt 4 года назад +1

      I did the calculation for some Intel Core i7 chip (37.5 mm length, 3.7 GHz clock)
      37.5 mm (that's 0.0375 m
      ), 3.7 GHz (that's 1/(3.7E9) seconds per flop)
      ==> (0.0375 m) / (1/(3.7E9) s) = 138,750,000 m/s (that's already 46.25% speed of light, and not in a vacuum but in solid matter!)

    • @MrUwU-dj7js
      @MrUwU-dj7js 4 года назад

      @@DeBukkIt But does CPUs work by electrons moving around the whole CPU on a frequency-derived velocity?

  • @xanthirudha
    @xanthirudha 7 лет назад +3

    They asked me how well I understood theoretical physics. I said I have a theoretical degree in physics. They said welcome aboard!

  • @kdmjf12000
    @kdmjf12000 3 года назад

    I don't know if anyone had already pointed this out, but 1 FLOP (floating point operation per second) isn't equivalent to 1 bit of operation per seconds used by the MIT paper. Floating point math are complex operation, and there are multiple types of floating point function. 1FLOPS on average roughly translate to 20,000 bits of operation per second according to some paper. So we are five orders of magnitude closer to the fundamental limit than this video suggested at the end.
    There is also another issue to compare FLOPS with figure given by this paper. Notice FLOPS is per second, While the 10^50 figure isn't divided by time. They simply convert a kilogram of mass into pure energy and calculate how much calculation this much energy can perform. When we talk about Laptop level we usually associated this with its power envelop. Based on some rough calculation from their numbers for a 100W laptop the fundamental limit would be around 3x10^31 FLOPS.

  • @TheDuckofDoom.
    @TheDuckofDoom. 7 лет назад +6

    10**50 operations per second in what frame? Per watt, compute thread, cubic meter of cpu?

    • @Kobrar44
      @Kobrar44 5 лет назад +8

      Per kilogram of mass, look up Bremermann's limit.

  • @lehw916
    @lehw916 7 лет назад

    50-hours video on the Observer's Paradox, I'd GLADLY watch it!

  • @severalthngs
    @severalthngs 7 лет назад +24

    How is the spelling of the "fredgen gates" that he mentions at 5:54? I would like to read more about them but Googles autocorrection doesn't point me into the right direction.

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  7 лет назад +39

      +severalthngs en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fredkin_gate

    • @severalthngs
      @severalthngs 7 лет назад +14

      Computerphile Thank you for the link and all the hard work that you invest in the production of this videos. Keep going!

    • @BobOgden1
      @BobOgden1 7 лет назад +13

      Computerphile you don't think that you can just casually mention these and walk away do you? 😃 we need to have an episode on these

  • @jasx
    @jasx 7 лет назад +1

    Watching this (and Numberphile..) makes me feel so nerd and happy... I really enjoyed this video, thanks!

  • @BeCurieUs
    @BeCurieUs 7 лет назад +73

    I really love Prof Moriarty, thanks for putting up with what you had to put up with...I really appreciate it.

    • @yojimmybob
      @yojimmybob 7 лет назад +25

      He brought a fair amount of it on himself, though.

    • @Oksa_L
      @Oksa_L 7 лет назад +12

      Sigh, 2017 in a nutshell, being a decent person is now "bringing it on yourself".

    • @yojimmybob
      @yojimmybob 7 лет назад +20

      Well the argument about sexual dimorphism was one thing... I was thinking more along the lines of him not acting like a decent person when he made repeated personal attacks instead of proper debate.

    • @forrestorange
      @forrestorange 7 лет назад +8

      No, nobody's talking about that, you and moriarty seem to misunderstand things in exactly the same way.....

    • @DeoMachina
      @DeoMachina 7 лет назад +3

      Weird how it's always the people with no education or expertise in science that accuse actual scientists of denying biology. I don't believe he doxed anybody, I think you're making that up.

  • @PauloConstantino167
    @PauloConstantino167 6 лет назад

    I understand you. I did mathematics as my undergrad, and I almost switched to electronics engineering, and I still don't understand why I didn't swap, because today I am doing a masters degree in microelectronics. But the mathematics background gives me a strong foundation, and a mind that can grasp anything. I advise anyone who wants to get into the hard sciences to first get a maths degree if you can, and only then go into your chosen subject, be it physics, chemistry, computer science, electronics, whatever. Maths is the queen of science as Gauss said.

  • @Ambroiseur
    @Ambroiseur 7 лет назад +29

    Where’s the physicists’ video?

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  7 лет назад

      +Ambroisie oops link coming

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  7 лет назад +4

      +Computerphile ruclips.net/video/mBdCE5hOexM/видео.html

    • @Kenshar1984
      @Kenshar1984 7 лет назад +1

      I have so many questions for Prof. Moriarty! Tell him to get a twitter!

  • @alexengel9236
    @alexengel9236 7 лет назад

    That Lloyd paper is a good read. Some notes / takeaways:
    * The ultimate laptop is arbitrarily chosen to be 1 kg and 1 liter, which gives it 10^51 ops/second and 10^31 bits of memory. While processing power is simply proportional to mass (here it's 10^51 ops/second), the memory is more complicated, but for a fixed energy density it is an extrinsic property, i.e. double the energy and the volume will give double the memory.
    * The mass & volume choice also sets the "degree of parallelization." For his choices the system is highly parallel (10^10 degree of parallelization). It would be very inefficient if given a serial task. If we want to do serial computation, we compress the computer which reduces its memory and parallelization. At the extreme, a black hole is fully serial, and for 1 kg it would store 4x10^16 bits while still achieving 10^51 ops/second.
    * Then there's the matter of waste / energy consumption. Lloyd notes that error correction will require eliminating incorrect bits. Any removal of information to the environment comes at an energy cost (it's an irreversible operation). And there is a limit to how quickly we can do this (analogous to a computer's ability to cool itself) which suggests that the ultimate laptop can't handle more than 10^(-10) errors/operation. If it's at this limit it will also consume 4x10^26 watts of power. For systems that are less parallel, this is less of a problem (error rate threshold ~ 1/(degree of parallelization)).
    Two comments:
    * This applies to both quantum and classical computers (and presumably any yet-to-be-discovered type). However, the benefit of quantum algorithms is that they can change the cost formula, e.g. Grover's algorithm does a search which would take N operations classically in just sqrt(N) operations. Therefore, even if the number of operations that we can perform is physically limited, there is no clear limit on what we can actually do with a given number of operations; it changes anytime we discover new algorithm types that have lower costs.
    * Personally, I'm skeptical about reversible computations. Intuitively if we perform some complex operation on a reversible computer, all the initial information must still be present at the end for reversibility to work. Yet so much of 'intelligence' follows this pattern: consume lots of data, filter it to find something interesting, and then do lots of processing (often expanding the data) on that specific finding. In a reversible computer, all that initial data that was filtered out has to remain in the computer, as what basically amounts to garbage bits. I could be wrong, but I think all emulations of irreversible algorithms with reversible gates result in this sort of garbage. At some point we will have to clear these bits to make room for more processing, and doing some comes at the standard kTln(2) energy cost per bit. So instead of just considering the removal of error bits, I would argue that if we're interested in performing any useful/intelligent calculation, there is going to be some rate of cleared bits per operation in order to complete the calculation and bring the computer back to its initial state (in which the memory is not full of garbage). It will be characteristic of the algorithms/computations being done, but probably much higher than the 10^(-10) error rate required for this ultimate laptop to operate (which would just mean we would have to settle for a somewhat less 'ultimate' version).

  • @TheSpacecraftX
    @TheSpacecraftX 7 лет назад +116

    This episode felt all over the place.

    • @tharagleb
      @tharagleb 7 лет назад +6

      I watched the first 9 minutes and he had not even begun to talk about computing limits.

    • @hpekristiansen
      @hpekristiansen 7 лет назад +1

      Yes we know the speed of this episode.

    • @TGC40401
      @TGC40401 7 лет назад +5

      It reminds me of one of my tangential rants which find an even cooler topic, and then never full explain the first thing I said.

    • @benaloney
      @benaloney 7 лет назад +10

      "What if I do this? ... What if I do this!" *plays some death metal to explain quantum physics

    • @recklessroges
      @recklessroges 7 лет назад +11

      The information density had a high fluctuation, (lecturers have to fill time and say things multiple ways to cover the various ways that people learn) but the information is still useful.

  • @TheRoboticLlama
    @TheRoboticLlama 4 года назад

    This video was a roller coaster from start to finish

  • @Tsanito
    @Tsanito 7 лет назад +5

    That was some quick thinking for the explanation of the fluffy ears. Nice

  • @jacobjones8099
    @jacobjones8099 4 года назад

    Does Phil teach? From start to finish he was throurough and his analogies were perfect. I feel like I could actually make it through a university level physics class if he was teaching. Thank you for the content everyone.

  • @Scum42
    @Scum42 7 лет назад +3

    Man I love Prof. Moriarty. He's one of my favorite things about Sixty Symbols and his very rare appearances here are great.

  • @TheOnlyToblin
    @TheOnlyToblin 7 лет назад

    Holy crap. That ending comparing height to the observable universe really set things into perspective.

  • @AnastasisGrammenos
    @AnastasisGrammenos 7 лет назад +4

    The whistle was 1150 Hz

  • @mustochio123
    @mustochio123 5 лет назад

    I have been eating up videos from this channel. Not a clue for most of it but I love it, cheers :)

  • @nahco3994
    @nahco3994 7 лет назад +3

    I'm a simple man. I see a video with Prof. Moriarty, I press like.

  • @flymypg
    @flymypg 7 лет назад +2

    Another aspect, or perspective, on the lower limits of the computational scale in both space and time concerns being able to distinguish a Zero from a One. The smaller and faster your computing elements become, the more errors that are inevitably going to occur. Error correction techniques can mitigate these errors, but it soon gets to the point that the computation for error correction greatly exceeds the computation of the problem we seek to solve.
    We are already seeing this in quantum computer designs. One recent design required 28 qubits to create a single stable and reliable qubit for computation. In other words, only 3.6% of the qubits are used for computation, and 96.4% of the qubits are needed just to make the computation work in the real world.
    This is the "Law of Diminishing Returns", which is actually Murphy's Law writ large.

  • @pyromen321
    @pyromen321 7 лет назад +178

    Phil is such a great presenter. I don't care if he has different political opinions; when it comes to science, he's fantastic.

  • @ProfRonconi
    @ProfRonconi 6 лет назад

    These videos are just amazing. Congratulations to the professors and to whoever had the idea of making them (the videos, not the professors. Though they deserve some credit too (the professor makers, I mean)). They surely make me wish I had studied at Nottingham.

  • @fandyus4125
    @fandyus4125 7 лет назад +134

    That accent...

  • @j.d.4697
    @j.d.4697 3 года назад

    Love this topic so much, it's my life - trying to understand what kind of place I am living in within.

  • @MrBunters
    @MrBunters 7 лет назад +10

    But can it run Crysis ?

  • @lemonke8132
    @lemonke8132 2 года назад +1

    Hmm... there seems to be a misconception about what information is here, or I am not totally understanding it. Information is the same as entropy, aka the measure of disorder in a system. Before the ball is dropped, it is actually in a state of LOW information, because all the energy can be easily represented (represented with fewer bits) as potential energy. However, after the energy is "lost" due to friction, information has increased because the energy is randomly dispersed in the environment.

  • @swankitydankity297
    @swankitydankity297 7 лет назад +32

    I don't agree with phils political views either but would you leave the hate out of a video where he's not spouting his political views - its educational there's nothing to dislike about it

    • @trbry.
      @trbry. 7 лет назад +4

      Swankity Dankity, didn't he sanctions a deplatform campaign, maybe wasn't him then I'm with you.

    • @NNOTM
      @NNOTM 7 лет назад +12

      +TRBRY Why does it matter whether it was him? This video had nothing to do with it in either case.

    • @trbry.
      @trbry. 7 лет назад +2

      Nnotm, if he is that kind of person I would find it odd if people complain that people do the same thing to him. People deplatforming are trying to make someone a social pariah.

  • @rafaelsanjuan3611
    @rafaelsanjuan3611 7 лет назад

    Thanks to Professor Moriarty and the Computerphile team, it was a very interesting topic.

  • @razean22
    @razean22 7 лет назад +3

    Link to the paper: arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/9908043.pdf

  • @Q0T0J
    @Q0T0J 7 лет назад

    Damn, Phil Moriarty is realy good at explaining advanced computerscience in a way that's comprehenseable. Love to see more of him!

  • @baganatube
    @baganatube 7 лет назад +15

    I thumb up every video that sends me to Wikipedia.

    • @Nalianna
      @Nalianna 7 лет назад

      Likewise. I like to think and learn.

  • @Aaronage1
    @Aaronage1 7 лет назад

    Love videos with Prof. Moriarty, always super engaging

  • @lierdakil
    @lierdakil 7 лет назад +4

    I'm a physicist and there's no card neither a link in the description. Guess I'm too early.

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  7 лет назад +3

      +Nikolay Yakimov ruclips.net/video/mBdCE5hOexM/видео.html

    • @lierdakil
      @lierdakil 7 лет назад +1

      Thanks

  • @justjoe7313
    @justjoe7313 7 лет назад

    Have a total geekcrush on dr. Moriarty! :) This video touches some very interesting and far out points in a very nice and understandable way. Am a computer engineer, love the phisics in this video. Thank you for a great work you do at Computerphile and the Nottingham University.

  • @benaloney
    @benaloney 7 лет назад +3

    This probably needs the word RANT in the title...

  • @stickmasterlukeRBX
    @stickmasterlukeRBX 6 лет назад

    I love the idea of information and energy being the same.

  • @dreammfyre
    @dreammfyre 7 лет назад +4

    The limit is Crysis.

  • @skepsisology
    @skepsisology 6 лет назад

    This explanation is phenomenal

  • @donaldkjenstad1129
    @donaldkjenstad1129 7 лет назад +3

    Assembly language. The only fun way to go.

  • @andrew_hd
    @andrew_hd 5 лет назад

    - в видео говорится про фундаментальный предел скорости вычислений
    - чувак рассказывает что он физик, но раньше программировал, "если я не могу запрогроммировать, я это не понимаю"
    - что компы делают? вводим данные, производим вычисления, получаем данные
    - обратимые (reversible) вычисления, аналогия с мячиком: теряется исходная информация, после вычислений и нельзя сказать что было на входе, так же как теряется энергия в механических системах
    - 3:54 есть прямая зависимость между обратимостью вычислений и содержимым выходных данных
    - 4:59 есть несколько вариантов как получить 0
    - если юзать идеальный Вентиль Фредкина не будет потерь энергии при вычислении, т.к. потери появляются не при вычислениях, а при стирании информации
    - 7:46 если юзать Вентиль Фредкина, то всё равно упрёшься в принцип неопределённости Гейзенберга
    - 9:20 если нота звучит долго, можно легко понять какая у неё частота, если коротко - то сложно т.к. там много разных частот
    - 11:15 (с большим упрощением) есть зависимоть между частотой и временем
    - чем больше частота операций, тем больше энергии понадобится чтобы оперировать на ней
    - 12:20 в научной работе говорится про ultimate laptop - по сути это компьютер это плазма дико высокой температуры, это не суперкомпьютеры сегодняшнего дня
    - компы 2020 года = 1 ЭКЗАФЛОП (10^18). Компы 2030г = ЗЕТАФЛОТ (10^21). предел = 10^50
    - сравнивает рост человека к размерам обозримой вселенной:
    разница 26 порядков
    - разница между скоростью вычислений 29 порядков (если сравнивать 10^21 к 10^50 ФЛОПС)

  • @a1guitarmaker
    @a1guitarmaker 7 лет назад +4

    Approximately D above middle C, around 277Hz

  • @TheStigma
    @TheStigma 7 лет назад +2

    Wish I had had more teachers like this. Technology is actually really fun, but unfortunately without enthusiasm it can often be turned in to mind-numbing tedium.
    I guess this hard limit is essentially just pr. core though, because I can't see why you couldn't just scale up the number of logic processors if and when such limits ever became insurmountable.

  • @JansthcirlU
    @JansthcirlU 7 лет назад +50

    what's with all the negativity towards prof Moriarty?

    • @helko1
      @helko1 7 лет назад +37

      Jan U His political leaning is the reason why that is

    • @morscoronam3779
      @morscoronam3779 7 лет назад +87

      Jan U
      Probably because he's a criminal mastermind, whose intelligence is only beaten by Sherlock Holmes.
      Oh, you were talking about Professor Phil Moriarty? No idea.

    • @Hack3r91
      @Hack3r91 7 лет назад

      I see none here.

    • @ClockworkGidget
      @ClockworkGidget 7 лет назад +29

      rather simply he sided with some SJWs in one of those "questions for " videos

    • @Desmaad
      @Desmaad 7 лет назад +59

      Jan U He dared to express left-wing opinions and frothing bigots caught wind of them?

  • @D-Rguitar
    @D-Rguitar 7 лет назад

    Amazing, the ending blew my mind completely. Also, as a guitarist in a metal band I really enjoyed the explanation haha

  • @vp4744
    @vp4744 7 лет назад +5

    Not exactly the most organized presenter on this channel.

  • @Kommandant7
    @Kommandant7 7 лет назад +1

    Never figured the Prof. is a programmer type; thanks for sharing!

    • @Bartooc
      @Bartooc 3 года назад

      All physicists are in a sense a programmers trying to reverse-engineered the universe.

  • @tarcal87
    @tarcal87 7 лет назад +3

    Aww he put 0-0, 1-0, 0-1, 1-1, so not ascending ^^ just kidding, it doesn't change anything for the explanation

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund 7 лет назад +1

      Ah, but don't you want A to be the LSB and B to be the MSB? And you wouldn't put the B column before the A column, would you?
      (Yeah, it annoyed me too.)

  • @sethnuzum
    @sethnuzum 6 лет назад

    SUCH a great channel!!!! What an immense level of value!❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @StaryWymiatacz
    @StaryWymiatacz 7 лет назад +12

    I like Phil

    • @cgerman5
      @cgerman5 7 лет назад +4

      Considering he doxxed a fellow researcher because they had differing political opinions....yeah, I don't like phil

  • @xanthirudha
    @xanthirudha 7 лет назад

    Its about time you should do a video on Quantum Computation

  • @drifter5626
    @drifter5626 7 лет назад +7

    Love seeing you back, as assbackwards as you behaved i still love you and what you do, you made a Christmas tree out of atoms for feck's sake!

  • @w0ttheh3ll
    @w0ttheh3ll 6 лет назад

    Thank you so much for this video. Been interested in that topic for years, but never found any information on it.

  • @Antenox
    @Antenox 7 лет назад +19

    3k likes vs 193 dislikes. Thunderf00t's fanboys always try and fail to brigade these videos.

    • @pie3233
      @pie3233 7 лет назад +14

      Antenox Every video on youtube has alittle bit of dislikes. Get over yourself.

    • @Zeturic
      @Zeturic 7 лет назад +15

      "The only way somebody could possibly dislike this video is if they're a fanboy!" - Not the words of a fanboy, according to you.
      I mean, let's be honest - if Thunderf00t's fanbase *wanted* to brigade this with downvotes, I think they'd be able to to a bit better than 193. But, no, you think that every downvote ever has to ultimately trace back to him because that's not a ridiculous position at all.

    • @skun406
      @skun406 7 лет назад +3

      Wait, why would someone want to brigade this video? I'm honestly curious.

    • @pie3233
      @pie3233 7 лет назад +1

      skun406 because phil got into some political stuff and some people might not like him for that. Also people are allowed to dislike a video.

  • @heaslyben
    @heaslyben 7 лет назад

    Fantastic video! I really appreciate the link between the tennis ball system and the logic gate. Thanks!

  • @MrGeekGamer
    @MrGeekGamer 7 лет назад +14

    This guy doesn't believe in science or facts.

    • @ThePharphis
      @ThePharphis 7 лет назад +2

      I wouldn't go that far lol.
      He just places a lot of doubt on biological differences between men and women as an explanation for our differences in interest in education.
      It's part of his job, frankly. (to get more girls into physics)

    • @th3d3wd3r
      @th3d3wd3r 7 лет назад +9

      But there are a lot of biological differences between males and females. Also, why would you want to push more women into physics, they'll do it if they want to. I can name dozens of eminent female physicists, how did they end up as physicists, because that's what they wanted to do. Not because some fringe element of society pushed them to do it.

    • @ThePharphis
      @ThePharphis 7 лет назад +4

      I agree. He seems to hold to a default "50/50" position until proven otherwise, and doesn't seem to accept that this isn't a reasonable position to hold... since men and women are different there's no reason to expect a 50/50 ratio is anything, really.
      Noel plum has tried to make this clear to him in their interactions but it didn't go anywhere. Moriarty just tries to shift the burden of proof to someone else but no one else is claiming to know what ratio is "natural" except him

  • @noodled6145
    @noodled6145 5 лет назад +1

    Thats why you GO BEYOND. There's always improvements to be made, nothing is ever perfect.

    • @Ritefita
      @Ritefita 5 лет назад

      except the speed of light =)
      and the infinite energy needed just to "touch" the edge.
      then you probably need more than infinity.
      go beyond! ... this laptop won't have much time on batterys))