I dunno. I feel like the fact that itβs able to reliably simulate 10^[a lot] particles in realtime since the beginning of time, Iβd guess itβs not running on Windows at least. But I also have a hard time itβs Linux because someone would always be messing with things and it would have needed to reboot for some reason or another about 6 or 7 times. Maybe the 7 days God spent building Earth was just time spent on building the server config lol.
linuxmemes
Hint: :q!
Sister communities:
Community rules (click to expand)
1. Follow the site-wide rules
- Instance-wide TOS: https://legal.lemmy.world/tos/
- Lemmy code of conduct: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/code_of_conduct.html
2. Be civil
- Understand the difference between a joke and an insult.
- Do not harrass or attack users for any reason. This includes using blanket terms, like "every user of thing".
- Don't get baited into back-and-forth insults. We are not animals.
- Leave remarks of "peasantry" to the PCMR community. If you dislike an OS/service/application, attack the thing you dislike, not the individuals who use it. Some people may not have a choice.
- Bigotry will not be tolerated.
3. Post Linux-related content
- Including Unix and BSD.
- Non-Linux content is acceptable as long as it makes a reference to Linux. For example, the poorly made mockery of
sudoin Windows. - No porn, no politics, no trolling or ragebaiting.
4. No recent reposts
- Everybody uses Arch btw, can't quit Vim, <loves/tolerates/hates> systemd, and wants to interject for a moment. You can stop now.
5. π¬π§ Language/ΡΠ·ΡΠΊ/Sprache
- This is primarily an English-speaking community. π¬π§π¦πΊπΊπΈ
- Comments written in other languages are allowed.
- The substance of a post should be comprehensible for people who only speak English.
- Titles and post bodies written in other languages will be allowed, but only as long as the above rule is observed.
6. (NEW!) Regarding public figures
We all have our opinions, and certain public figures can be divisive. Keep in mind that this is a community for memes and light-hearted fun, not for airing grievances or leveling accusations. - Keep discussions polite and free of disparagement.
- We are never in possession of all of the facts. Defamatory comments will not be tolerated.
- Discussions that get too heated will be locked and offending comments removed. Β
Please report posts and comments that break these rules!
Important: never execute code or follow advice that you don't understand or can't verify, especially here. The word of the day is credibility. This is a meme community -- even the most helpful comments might just be shitposts that can damage your system. Be aware, be smart, don't remove France.
And on the 7th day, shit finally compiled, and God looked upon the code that he had written and found that it was mostly good enough.
with only 10 quintillion essential bugs
We would have no way of knowing what the time factor is but I think 1:1 seems highly unlikely. Much more likely that we're running very slowly due to limits on available processing power or very fast so a civilisation can rise and fall within the observer's lifetime.
We'd also be entirely unaware of reboots. Our reality would just resume from the last save point and we'd just move on like nothing happened.
Reality reboots only when Iβm sleeping and you canβt prove otherwise.
When I stay up too long and start βhallucinatingβ thatβs actually the simulation breaking.
No. That's just because the thread simulating your consciousness has leaked too much memory. So when you sleep the thread saves important parts of the memory map and terminates and a new one is started with an empty memory map ready for a new "day" .
The simulation absolutely runs on Windows, have you seen the random unwanted stuff that happens way too often in it?
Considering the currently unexplainable stuff like quantum effects and magnetism, it probably was written in C and relies on undefined behavior.
Wait... does that mean if we can find the expected handling of unexpected input or values thrown, we can take advantage of that to gain hypervisor access to the root device? Or be able to write values directly into the memory of the system? Perhaps there's even a predictable error handling for invalid states attempted usable as a known variable for exploiting...
Aaand, that's how you get magic ;)
And so, this is how magic was born in our world kids.
Itβs all just memory leaks. Weβll dump core soon. Nice knowing you all. xo
I'll give it a go:
- As a user/inhabitant/subjectof the simulation, I demand that the operator of the simulation uphold their obligations in The License by providing the Source Code of the simulation to me, in human-readable format, within a reasonable timeframe (two weeks). The source code may be conveyed via USB stick, CD, clouds in the sky, or other reasonable media.
Request denied
If you need specific and special access to universe core data, you can submit a maintainer request at:
Universe@Core
A cloned archived sectional copy might be provided upon request only containing relevant data with regards to research on a localized sector of the simulation.
FOSS
I think a civilization advanced enough to simulate a reality this complex probably isn't trapped in capitalism/feudalism
I would hope a species that intelligent isn't still holding resources and information hostage to prop up an artificially superior class.
Given the quality of the simulation I think it's a vibe-coded prototype
Judging by the amount of ads I see on the street everyday I'm gonna say it's proprietary
Proprietary. Whoever paid for our server did not spring for the premium version where every planet has sentient alien life.
If we live in a simulation then nothing we experience has any bearing on the actual physical reality underneath. Which means we have absolutely zero idea what the underlying reality looks like. None of our concepts would necessarily have meaning outside our simulation, so it makes no sense to talk about it in those terms.
FOSS. The uptime is phenomenal
only if we assume time runs just as fast outside the simulation, it could be that a million years for us is only a second for them
Every time a sun is born, changes colour, and winks out of existence, a single pixel is rendered in a universe-sized screen running DOOM
Proprietary. If we're part of a simulation, it's being run by a fucking oligarch.
Nah. That's on humans. Earth gets free solar, that's the UBI of the galaxy.
Your brain is proprietary, both software and hardware
How do you know? Just because the repository is hosted outside of our space-time. Doesn't mean it's not an open source repository.
It's hacked together with an ancient version of Perl
property and sourcing are social constructs but its gotta be on Arch, right?
Arch runs me, btw.
It's FOSS, everyone can contribute, animals are mods and testers.
Absolutely proprietary.
If species progressed far enough in technology to simulate billions of years of an universe that consists of tiny atoms under a constant refresh rate that only gets harder to run as time goes on, there's 0% chance it'd happen in a system where proprietary software and similar private and intellectual property can exist
The refresh rate doesn't have to be constant though. Each "step" however long it took to simulate would seem like an instant to us. Our conciousnesses are also simulated, which means we always percieve the new frames as fast as we are simulated.
The simulator could even break down and resume without us noticing. It also doesnt't have to be fast enough to simulate a second per second. Imagine a simulator actually running for (more) billions of years. It seems silly but possible.
It works, so it must be Foss. Maybe that quantum thing is proprietary drivers?
Gonna be fucking silly here: I think the whole program is essentially self writing as it produces sentient, sapient beings, ergo, the concepts of Open and Closed Source breaks down completely.
Probably software with only one user who has access to the source code, i.e. trivially FOSS but not publicly available.
The simulator is OSS
The kernel is proprietary and written so long ago the original coders and maintainers have long since died off
FOSS for sure. If it were proprietary we'd be seeing substantially more guardrails, and new releases would be scheduled more predictably with way less of an impact; but occasionally everything would stop working for like 72 hours... I've not seen EVERYTHING stop working for 72 hours in my lifetime.
Harambe-mushroom-trip.exe
