Fundamental Physicist, Philosopher, Technical Artist.
The "Unified Field Theory" has an identity: (1/2) * n * (1/n)
This identity is equivalent to 1 Lp.
If you notice, it is aether spacetime (h-granules) where the "point" (the point at the right-angle corner) takes a step over the (3/2) replicated granule at /\t = 1, making the ADJ 2, but the diameter of each granule is 1. 1sq + 2sq = 5 { +T, Xa, Ya, Za, Ka }. The collapsed path is the square root through it. For those who don't know, spacetime granules replicate axially as each adjacent granule contributes (1/2) each, for the replicated granule in the middle. That is what we observe as a photon.photon.hoton is a 1/2-mass travelling ortho
@Math_files 3/2. The expansion ratio. It helps solve Primes, and tells us why the conjecture is correct. It also gives us anima. The photon sits peacefully, an Eternity for us is a moment for it. The photon is only 1/2 of what mass is. It's Eternity is a Rubicon.
@grok I'm mostly doing some coding recently. I favour C (with ASM) as my lingua franca, but I know other languages. I am working on a low-payload utility-set to help pare programmers away from the bloated C stdlib. Calling down to security ring 0 isn't difficult; ASM is vital.
Why did the US ban this number in 2001? It sounds insane, but 25 years ago, the Motion Picture Association of America was genuinely trying to delete this number from the internet.
You see, back in 1999, a teenager in Norway named Jon Lech Johansen wrote a piece of code called DeCSS.
It cracked CSS, the encryption on DVDs. Suddenly, anyone could copy a movie with the click of a button. It was a nightmare for the movie studios.
They went nuclear. They sued the hacker magazine 2600: The Hacker Quarterly.
They threatened Slashdot, and their lawyers fired out cease-and-desist letters to anyone hosting the code. They called it a digital burglary tool.
But the internet found a loophole.
A computer scientist named Phil Carmody realized that computer code is just binary ones and zeros.
And you can treat that string of binary as a single number. That way, you get a really, really big integer—which is the illegal code.
But Carmody knew that just finding any number wasn’t going to be enough, because the government could still ban a random number.
So he needed a number that science would be forced to protect. He needed a prime number.
You see, the University of Tennessee maintains a prestigious academic database called the Prime Pages.
It records the 5,000 largest known prime numbers. Carmody realized that if he could turn the illegal code into a record-breaking prime number, the university would have to publish it.
His first attempt was 1,401 digits long. It was prime, but too small.
It didn’t crack the top 5,000 list. It wasn’t mathematically interesting enough to save.
So, he hacked the math.
Use this formula:
K × 256^N + B
Now, K is the illegal code part. 256^N is the mathematical equivalent of adding useless zeros at the end—like making a book longer by adding blank pages. It doesn’t change the actual content inside.
So, he kept adding “blank pages,” shifting the number, until he hit a mathematical jackpot—a 1,959-digit monster.
This wasn’t just illegal code anymore. It became the 10th largest ECP prime number ever discovered at the time.
It was checkmate.
The number was immediately added to the university database. For the MPAA to ban the code now, they would have to order a university to delete a scientific record.
You can’t censor mathematics.
@ericweinstein It's because most of them have come to learn that they were never going to be the one to solve the #toe. They never had the capacity, any hope, and they know it now. They hate that the #toe was solved and then just thrown into the wind casually by the author. I was happy to.
If you draw a right triangle on the imaginary plane, with sides 1 and i, the hypotenuse according to Pythagorean theorem will be 0. How to make sense of this?
@MarioNawfal I hope he's being deliberately obtuse, or I'm disappointed. We can very much "time-travel" (forward AND back), without breaking Physics, and without this nonsense "Simulation Theory", which is mistaken for Super-Symmetry at n+1. It's like a Rubik's Cube, suitably arranged.