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2008-01-09
, 18:38
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#12
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2008-01-09
, 18:38
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Posts: 52 |
Thanked: 21 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
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#13
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I would say that if measured by the knowledge and science involved the N800 is probably orders of magnitude more complex than a simple car like lets say from 20 years ago. I mean an Engine and all the other stuff in a car is plain Newtonian physics albeit on a high level. All it's parts could be produced with 60-70 year old machinery and a wokrking bare bone car could probably be produced with the tools and physics knowledge the old greeks had if enough effort had been put into it.
On the other side the knowledge needed to built something like the N800 is orders of magnitutes higher. It involves knowledge of complicated electromagnetic phenomena (just imagine how much you have to know about the nature of electromagnatic waves to build a working WiFi). It needs modern chemical science for it's display and extremely high tech laser technology as well as chemical science for it's CPU. Then it will need you to know a lot about mathematics including knowledge that is not even 60 years old. And it will need you some hundred thousand wokring hours for the programming. Maybe some hundred man hours if you have to rebuild everything from an assembler to a c compiler and so forth.
For the N810 you would have to know even more, for example building a GPS is impossible without knowledge of special and general relativity.
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2008-01-09
, 18:54
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Posts: 14 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#14
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2008-01-09
, 20:23
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#15
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I have to agree, that operating a car involves more care and has more regulations though. But from a technological point of view a general car is much less complicated.
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2008-01-09
, 20:26
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#16
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Cars these days have way more silicon than any internet tablet. The car is obviously far, far more complicated than any hopped up PDA.
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2008-01-09
, 20:32
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Posts: 2,869 |
Thanked: 1,784 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Po' Bo'. PA
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#17
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2008-01-09
, 22:05
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Posts: 14 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#18
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2008-01-09
, 22:37
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Posts: 145 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Seattle, WA USA
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#19
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... I never took one single computer class in school. In fact, they didn't have computers, just quill pens and inkwells...
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2008-01-09
, 22:39
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Posts: 4,030 |
Thanked: 1,633 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ nd usa
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#20
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How many people on this site have a computer science degree? I would bet that very few do, percentagewise. I never took one single computer class in school. In fact, they didn't have computers, just quill pens and inkwells...
On the other side the knowledge needed to built something like the N800 is orders of magnitutes higher. It involves knowledge of complicated electromagnetic phenomena (just imagine how much you have to know about the nature of electromagnatic waves to build a working WiFi). It needs modern chemical science for it's display and extremely high tech laser technology as well as chemical science for it's CPU. Then it will need you to know a lot about mathematics including knowledge that is not even 60 years old. And it will need you some hundred thousand wokring hours for the programming. Maybe some hundred man hours if you have to rebuild everything from an assembler to a c compiler and so forth.
For the N810 you would have to know even more, for example building a GPS is impossible without knowledge of special and general relativity.
Let me give you another even simpler example, if you compare the first car in the world (build by Daimler Benz) with the first programable turing complete Computer (The Zuse Z3) you will find, that the first car was nothing more than putting together an engine and a cart (a technology known by the old Egyptians) all science needed to build an engine is probably some newtonian physics + the knowledge that hot gases do expand. (Everyone with a fire and a closed box with water in it can find that out easily).
While for the Z3 you will need to know about binary numbers, electronics like realys and probably a lot more...
Let me also give a little comment on the command line thing that was pointed out earlier. I'm a Linux user for about 3 years and though I know how to handle my system without ever touching a command line, I do think that it's by far the greatest thing on my computer and I wouldn't miss it (In the sense that if I had to choose between losing my GUI and losing my command line I would rather live without the GUI). I mean, yes, it's old fashioned but for many tasks it's just the best tool there is (like managing a system and it's devices) And though it probably sounds wierd to most people for me the CLI is the most natural interaction with the computer and the most flexible one by orders of magnitude. Unlike the GUI my command line is turing complete and therefor can compute everything that is computable.
Last edited by niklas; 2008-01-09 at 18:51.