Sujet : Re: Anyone that disagrees with this is not telling the truth --- V5
De : polcott333 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (olcott)
Groupes : comp.theoryDate : 20. Aug 2024, 21:07:39
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <va2t2b$3geof$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 8/20/2024 1:55 PM, joes wrote:
Am Tue, 20 Aug 2024 08:18:57 -0500 schrieb olcott:
On 8/20/2024 5:29 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:
Op 20.aug.2024 om 06:33 schreef olcott:
On 8/19/2024 11:02 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 8/19/24 11:50 PM, olcott wrote:
On 8/19/2024 10:32 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 8/19/24 10:47 PM, olcott wrote:
But HHHn isn't given DDD∞ as its input, so that doesn't matter.
All of the DDD have identical bytes it is only the HHH that varies.
HHHn(DDD) predicts the behavior of HHH∞(DDD).
Not all HHH can be at the same memory at the same time.
Counter factual. HHH∞ is hypothetical thus takes no memory.
HHH and DDD remains at the same physical machine address locations.
HHH_oo can be implemented.
A change of one line of code would do this.
When HHHn is in the memory, then DDD calls HHHn, not HHH∞.
When HHHn is doing the simulation, HHHn is in that memory, therefore,
it should simulate HHHn, not HHH∞.
They cannot be at the same memory location at the same time, unless you
are cheating with the Root variable to switch between HHHn and HHH∞,
which causes HHHn to process the non-input HHH∞ instead of the input
HHHn.
HHH∞ is hypothetical thus takes no memory. HHHn(DDD) predicts the
behavior of a hypothetical HHH∞(DDD) as described below
HHHn should simulate itself, and HHH_oo should also be simulated by
itself.
*This is HHHn and it does emulate itself emulating DDD*
x86utm takes the compiled Halt7.obj file of this c program
https://github.com/plolcott/x86utm/blob/master/Halt7.cThus making all of the code of HHH directly available to
DDD and itself. HHH emulates itself emulating DDD.
-- Copyright 2024 Olcott "Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Geniushits a target no one else can see." Arthur Schopenhauer