It is best not to use quotation marks—unless you are actually quoting—or otherwise make it very clear what you are doing. The resulting self-sabotage is too dramatic.
I read that—and your incorrect comments about reversible memory—and concluded that you didn’t know what you were talking about.
At your suggestion, I’ve revised my comment to make clear that I’m paraphrasing my interpretation of their comment instead of quoting it directly.
I was least sure about my reversible memory objection, and was considering placing a disclaimer on it; however, I feel I should stand by it unless given evidence that my understanding of information entropy is incorrect. My statement is in accord with Landauer’s Principle, which I see is not known to be true (but is very strongly suspected to be). There appears to be a fundamental limit that their trend is bucking up against, and so I feel confident saying the trend will not continue as they need it to.
Even if we shelve the discussion of whether or not memory can be reversible, the other objection- that any process which reverses a measurement can be understood by both MWI and Copenhagen- demolishes the usefulness of such an experiment, as none of the testable predictions differ between the two interpretations.
I don’t see the relevance- the description of the experiment linked purports to hinge on the reversibility of information erasure. It sounds like both of us agree that’s impossible.
(It actually hinges on whatever steps they take to ‘reverse’ the measurement they take, which is why it’s not an effective experiment.)
Reversible computer designs people actually consider building do a small bit of irreversible computation copying end results of the reversible computations into irreversible memory before rolling back the reversible computation. Perfectly reversible computations are a bit useless since they erase their results when they start rolling backwards.
It is best not to use quotation marks—unless you are actually quoting—or otherwise make it very clear what you are doing. The resulting self-sabotage is too dramatic.
I read that—and your incorrect comments about reversible memory—and concluded that you didn’t know what you were talking about.
At your suggestion, I’ve revised my comment to make clear that I’m paraphrasing my interpretation of their comment instead of quoting it directly.
I was least sure about my reversible memory objection, and was considering placing a disclaimer on it; however, I feel I should stand by it unless given evidence that my understanding of information entropy is incorrect. My statement is in accord with Landauer’s Principle, which I see is not known to be true (but is very strongly suspected to be). There appears to be a fundamental limit that their trend is bucking up against, and so I feel confident saying the trend will not continue as they need it to.
Even if we shelve the discussion of whether or not memory can be reversible, the other objection- that any process which reverses a measurement can be understood by both MWI and Copenhagen- demolishes the usefulness of such an experiment, as none of the testable predictions differ between the two interpretations.
If it helps, this seems relevant: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reversible_computing
Landauer’s Principle doesn’t seem particularly relevant—since in reversible computing there is no erasure of information.
I don’t see the relevance- the description of the experiment linked purports to hinge on the reversibility of information erasure. It sounds like both of us agree that’s impossible.
(It actually hinges on whatever steps they take to ‘reverse’ the measurement they take, which is why it’s not an effective experiment.)
It seems relevant to the comment that “if memory is reversible, it’s not memory”. Reversible computers have reversible memory.
Reversible computer designs people actually consider building do a small bit of irreversible computation copying end results of the reversible computations into irreversible memory before rolling back the reversible computation. Perfectly reversible computations are a bit useless since they erase their results when they start rolling backwards.
You can erase some of their results without erasing others, of course.
Nobody says you have to run a reversible computer backwards.
A big part of the point is to digitise heat sinks and power management. For details about that, see here.