Message from @Cielodiluna di Bisanzio
Discord ID: 558240337320083457
should i go take pics
oh wait i wont be able to
C L O U D S
☁ ☁ ☁
what a cancer
i want to live on a celestial body without an atmosphere
gokay you want to live on titan
and I appreciate that in fact titan is my favourite moon
I have even made an autistic pasta about it, I think jeez translated it to english at some point but i dont have it anyway
Based
Ping me if you find it
but you know that
you wont be able to see shit on titan
you wont even be able to enjoy the based saturn view
I just want to swim in the methane lakes with my protective gear
<:haha:318675605233336330>
The absolute state of Russia
10/10
Anyway I'm going out now, see ya
Math is more about just grinding and memorizing
Unless you're an actual mathematician who have to understand it fully
@Cielodiluna di Bisanzio I will explain what do I mean with this whole Titan thing. It is the largest moon of Saturn, which despite unfriendly conditions for biological life as we know it, may in the future be the major industrial and computing centre of the Solar System. It is also one of the richest reservoirs of readily available nitrogen, hydrogen and hydrocarbons, goods relatevily scarce in the Inner Solar System, and of which huge quantities will be needed to build artificial living spaces resembling the Earth. Therefore, Titan might be one of the major nodes of the future Sol trade network. But, paradoxically, the most important resource of Titan may be its extremely low temperature. The average temperature on the surface of the moon is about 98.3 Kelvin, compared to 228 Kelvin on Earth. This means that the very same thermal engine on Titan can achieve up to 3x higher efficiency than on Earth. Low temperature also allows you to achieve much more computing power. Due to the Landauer principle, switching one bit on Titan requires providing energy of just one zeptojule, that is, a processor with a clock frequency of 1 GHz, could work with a one billionth of a Watt. It can be assumed that Titan's energy budget, allowing the moon's temperature to remain at a relatively constant level, is 31 trillion watts. If the computers use only one of these trillions, it allows for a quadrillion GHz CPU. It is commonly assumed that from about 10 to 100 million GHz is enough to emulate the human brain. So, using only a few percent of Titan's energy budget, you could operate a supercomputer capable of emulating all of today's humanity, a million times over.
mfw he left when i translated it
-.-
no one left to appreciate my autism
More GHz doesn't mean more computing power
Just so you know
yeah im pretty sure one billion ghz processor is as fast as 1ghz one...
>math
>standard intelligence
<:thonking:318673885497262091>
maths is all about practice
i could care less about math class and school in general
so i am a mathlet as a result
everything is all about practice
yes
but i hated math since grade school
it makes me sick