Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Student snags maths prize - The Simplest Turing Machine that can compute any problem

Stephen Wolfram's $25,000 prize claimed.

The state of the head (up or down droplet) and the pattern of colour (orange, yellow and white) in a given row depends upon the row above. A simple start can lead to an incredibly complex picture. The state of the head (up or down droplet) and the pattern of colour (orange, yellow and white) in a given row depends upon the row above. A simple start can lead to an incredibly complex picture.Wolfram Institute

A twenty-year-old university student has answered a challenge by one of the world's most well-known mathematicians.

Alex Smith, a undergraduate electrical engineering student at the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom, has proven that a primitive type of computer known as a 2,3 Turing machine can solve every computational problem there is. Proving the "universality" of the 2,3 Turing machine was the subject of a US$25,000 challenge from entrepreneur and mathematician Stephen Wolfram.

Wolfram, founder and chief executive of Wolfram Research in Champaign, Illinois, issued the challenge this May to satisfy his own curiosity about how complexity emerges from simple systems. The idea is that a properly applied set of basic rules can create an enormously intricate result. "It's actually a lot easier to make complexity than one might have thought," he says. "I find it particularly tantalizing."

Turing machines were imagined by the British mathematician Alan Turing in 1936, and consist of a read–write head that can be put into one of several states and a long strip of tape on which can be written a set of colours. At each step, the machine looks at the state of the head and the colours on the tape. It then uses a set of fixed rules to move the state of the head into a new position and write a new row of colours on the tape (see picture).

Intricate patterns

The machine specific to Wolfram's prize has a head with only two states and a tape that can hold three colours. It is one of the simplest kind of Turing machines, but depending on the first row on the tape, the results can be remarkably intricate, according to Smith. "Even if you know the rules, you don't necessarily know how it will behave," he says. Smaller, simpler Turing machines are possible (such as 1,2 for example) but these are not thought to be capable of universality.

Smith learned about Wolfram's challenge in an Internet chat room and almost immediately went to work fiddling with the machine. After learning its behaviour, he set about proving that it was computationally equivalent to another type of simple, conceptual computer known as a tag system.

Mathematicians have already shown that tag systems can compute any problem, so proving the two were equivalent effectively proved the power of Wolfram's machine. Smith's proof is 44 pages long.

The solution isn't hugely relevant to modern computer science, says Scott Aaronson, a computer scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts. "Most theoretical computer scientists don't particularly care about finding the smallest universal Turing machines," he wrote in an e-mail. "They see it as a recreational pursuit that interested people in the 60s and 70s but is now sort of 'retro'."

Nevertheless, Lenore Blum, a researcher at the Carnegie Mellon University in Pittburgh, Pennylvania, who served on Wolfram's Prize committee, says the find is interesting enough on its own to warrant attention. "This could stimulate some new work," she says.

For his part, Smith, now in the third year of his electrical engineering degree, says that he has no big plans for his prize money. "I'm just going to put it in the bank," he says.

Find a gallery of more Turing machine outputs on the Wolfram prize site.

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photos, videos, music -- visual search

things we built


photos - visual search interface for stock photos  (/card is for photo greetings)

http://picturesandbox.com
http://picturesandbox.com/card


videos - visual search interface for videos  (/card is for video greetings)

http://footagesandbox.com
http://footagesandbox.com/card


music - visual music discovery interface for indie and mainstream music

http://mp3sandbox.com/index2.php   (mainstream artists)
http://mp3sandbox.com/cdbaby      (indie artists)


visual news is next -- filtered and prioritized news/rss, with drag-2-share

then a visual social networking (MySpace, Facebook, and LinkedIn are too text heavy and takes too much work, in my opinion)

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power to the consumers

Recent Phone Call Reports

This is a user supplied database of phone numbers of telemarketers, non-profit organizations, charities, political surveyors, SCAM artists, and other companies that don't leave messages, disconnect once you answer, ignore the Do-Not-Call List regulations, and simply interrupt your day.

If you received a strange call, most likely you are not the only one. Search for this phone number to see the reports of others. If there are no reports yet, leave your comment to start a conversation.

  • pre recorded message, hung up... they have called before
  • I have been getting phone calls from this number thesedays as well. They call 3 times a day - 9:30am, 1:30pm, 3:30pm. Who is it?   I am worrying that they may charge for listening their ...
  • I am on O2 and keep getting calls from this number it is doing my head in. I can't wait to answer there call so I can tell them to F**K OFF
  • can someone please send me a fax program with an autodialer...    i got a call from these people this morning, called the # to ask to be removed from the list and they hung up!
  • This is a bogus call center who is using the Iraq war as a means to get money.  This is not sponsored by the Navy or anyone who is directly connected to the military.  If you wish to ...

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footagesandbox vs spffy video

FootageSandbox.com vs Spffy.com (video)

video search is an entirely different beast; and video for stock purposes is an entirely different planet. So we split off to a different site. The use cases are also very very different. YouTube videos are unlikely to be useful as stock. And we do one-click preview that remains on the site, rather than sends the user to YouTube - search results are identical for keyword "ferrari."

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picturesandbox vs spffy photos

PictureSandbox.com vs Spffy.com

I believe that by offering more thumbnails in the search results, PictureSandbox enables image buyers to more efficiently find suitable images -- I call it "glance test," which is faster than paginating. Also, look closely at the results for the keyword "flowers" -- different collections have different strengths.

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