Sujet : Re: OT: Chinese tokamak
De : bill.sloman (at) *nospam* ieee.org (Bill Sloman)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 21. Sep 2024, 17:37:53
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vcmsp1$1ld58$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 22/09/2024 1:35 am, john larkin wrote:
On Sat, 21 Sep 2024 08:33:53 GMT, Jan Panteltje <alien@comet.invalid>
wrote:
That's easy. Thinking is harder.
>
No, you got all that wrong, 'thinking' is the noise in your head before the silence of seeing.
It's the mass, parallel, quantum cross-correlation machine looking for
connections across an impossibly large solution space.
Or in John Larkin's case, a random noise generator.
Meditation and things like that is an interesting field, one of the many things I practice.
I never 'think' a lot when designing or coding.. I do use google sometimes...
I have had ideas in the shower, if they were any good? The stuff did work.
I have ideas in the shower. Or when I'm asleep.
Some people have ideas when they are walking.
Lots of people report that ideas emerge when they weren't consciously thinking about the subject. The process doesn't seem to be subject to introspection.
The quality of the ideas is also variable. John Larkin claims to have lots of ideas, but he doesn't seem to have many patents.
One of my colleagues at EMI Central Research had the lab record for patent queries - 53 in one year - but no patents.
-- Bill Sloman, Sydney