Richard P. Feynman made profoundly important and prescient contributions to the physics of computing, notably with his seminal articles ?There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom? and ?Simulating Physics with Computers.? These two provocative papers (both reprinted in this volume) anticipated, decades before their time, several breakthroughs that have s
Richard P. Feynman made profoundly important and prescient contributions to the physics of computing, notably with his seminal articles ?There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom? and ?Simulating Physics with Computers.? These two provocative papers (both reprinted in this volume) anticipated, decades before their time, several breakthroughs that have sHinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
I: Feynman's Course on Computation 1: Feynman and Computation 2: Neural Networks and Physical Systems with Emergent Collective Computational Abilities 3: Feynman as a Colleague 4: Collective Electrodynamics I 5: A Memory 6: Numercial Evidence that the Motion of Pluto is Chaotic II: Reducing the Size 7: There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom 8: Information is Inevitably Physical 9: Scaling of MOS Technology to Submicrometer Feature Sizes 10: Richard Feynman and Cellular Vacuum III: Quantum Limits 11: Simulating Physics with Computers 12: Quantum Robots 13: Quantum Information Theory 14: Quantum Computation IV: Parallel Computation 15: Computing Machines in the Future 16: Internetics: Technologies Applications and Academic Fields 17: Richard Feynman and the Connection Machine 18: Crystalline Computation V: Fundamentals 19: Information Physics Quantum: The Search for Links 20: Feynman Barton and the Reversible Schrodinger Difference Equation 21: Action or the Fungibility of Computation 22: Algorithmic Randomness Physical Entropy Measurements and the Demon of Choice
I: Feynman's Course on Computation 1: Feynman and Computation 2: Neural Networks and Physical Systems with Emergent Collective Computational Abilities 3: Feynman as a Colleague 4: Collective Electrodynamics I 5: A Memory 6: Numercial Evidence that the Motion of Pluto is Chaotic II: Reducing the Size 7: There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom 8: Information is Inevitably Physical 9: Scaling of MOS Technology to Submicrometer Feature Sizes 10: Richard Feynman and Cellular Vacuum III: Quantum Limits 11: Simulating Physics with Computers 12: Quantum Robots 13: Quantum Information Theory 14: Quantum Computation IV: Parallel Computation 15: Computing Machines in the Future 16: Internetics: Technologies Applications and Academic Fields 17: Richard Feynman and the Connection Machine 18: Crystalline Computation V: Fundamentals 19: Information Physics Quantum: The Search for Links 20: Feynman Barton and the Reversible Schrodinger Difference Equation 21: Action or the Fungibility of Computation 22: Algorithmic Randomness Physical Entropy Measurements and the Demon of Choice
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