Editing Talk:395: Morning

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::: The memory would be your real constraint, along with network latency if it's a distributed computing system. (Hey, what if that's the cause of relativistic effects? A node having more data than usual to process, so it slowly lags behind other nodes...) As for the speed of the system, as long as it's turing complete and has sufficient storage for the data, it doesn't matter how fast each frame is processed from the viewpoint of the simulation's Users, the people inside the sim would still experience time as normal. Just ask a Dwarf Fortress player if their dwarves ever perceive the effects of FPS Death. [[Special:Contributions/108.162.246.194|108.162.246.194]] 12:28, 3 August 2021 (UTC)
 
::: The memory would be your real constraint, along with network latency if it's a distributed computing system. (Hey, what if that's the cause of relativistic effects? A node having more data than usual to process, so it slowly lags behind other nodes...) As for the speed of the system, as long as it's turing complete and has sufficient storage for the data, it doesn't matter how fast each frame is processed from the viewpoint of the simulation's Users, the people inside the sim would still experience time as normal. Just ask a Dwarf Fortress player if their dwarves ever perceive the effects of FPS Death. [[Special:Contributions/108.162.246.194|108.162.246.194]] 12:28, 3 August 2021 (UTC)
 
:::: Do you think it's a good idea for us all start rolling loads of dice to increase the latency of the simulation?  It'd be nice to screw with whatever's running the thing.  But would macroscopic "randomness" even affect a system that powerful?  It's something to think about. [[User:Lyricalcarpenter|Lyricalcarpenter]] ([[User talk:Lyricalcarpenter|talk]]) 04:15, 16 October 2021 (UTC)
 
  
 
IMO, the unspoken big picture is that during a prairie winter you can get "white out" conditions when an overcast sky matches the color of snow cover. This eliminates all shadows and you can walk face first into a snow drift without seeing it. The whole world looks like dead pixels. {{unsigned ip|108.162.216.87}}
 
IMO, the unspoken big picture is that during a prairie winter you can get "white out" conditions when an overcast sky matches the color of snow cover. This eliminates all shadows and you can walk face first into a snow drift without seeing it. The whole world looks like dead pixels. {{unsigned ip|108.162.216.87}}

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