Thursday, December 8, 2011

URLs, what are they?

Universal resource locator, they look around the building and locate a particular nested order, about all they do. The world wide web, as we think it, is not that, it is many fewer buildings packed with arrays of Linux driven disks. And these disk arrays are moving north, where it is cold, and they are getting more concentrated. What do these disk arrays do? Ultimately, they will run graph traversals, TE script with variable expressions. There are no humans there, the humans are down here, and the stuff just gets translated for the humans. But inside the North Pole, there are simply G machines, burned into the reduced instruction set layer. All of software does this, all of software is a Turing machine, a complete graph traversal. All of software can be written in nested order using TE script (with variable expressions).

So these machines find structural pattern matches, under human direction, and generate XML tags for the browsers and handhelds. When the humans tire of one protocol, they invent another, and just lodge a large TE program, up North, to do the translation, just another g graph.

So, then what is a URL with respect to one machine talking to another? 90% of the time it is going to be the nth disk array down a row in a 200,000 sq foot building, at the North Pole, reachable with 2 gig fiber optic. What is the protocol inside the building? Straight binary nested order.

Ultimately, the collective of machines will organize ontologies such that all of human query is solvable in -iLog(i) steps, where the i is the frequency of request. At that point most of what we humans know about anything will be represented by a virtual network of optimal Shannon channels. This is five years, maybe sooner folks, singularity stuff.

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