Let’s try again. Chaotic systems usually don’t do exactly what you want them to, and they almost never do the right thing 1000 times in a row. If you model a system using ordinary modeling techniques, chaos theory can tell you whether the system is going to be finicky and unreliable (in a specific way). This saves you the trouble of actually building a system that won’t work reliably. Basically, it marks off certain areas of solution space as not viable.
Also, there’s Lavarand. It turns out that lava lamps are chaotic.
Let’s try again. Chaotic systems usually don’t do exactly what you want them to, and they almost never do the right thing 1000 times in a row. If you model a system using ordinary modeling techniques, chaos theory can tell you whether the system is going to be finicky and unreliable (in a specific way). This saves you the trouble of actually building a system that won’t work reliably. Basically, it marks off certain areas of solution space as not viable.
Also, there’s Lavarand. It turns out that lava lamps are chaotic.
For what it’s worth, I think you’re getting downvoted in part because what you write seems to indicate that you didn’t read the post.