Morning #randomness.. hey it's my morning..
(a la Sting)
Every click you make
Every poll you take
Every surfing day
Every game you play
They'll be watching you
Have I invented perfect random number generation computer chips?
So, last night I slept for a very long time. While I slept, I dreamed that I was explaining to a scientist how to do real random number generation with a computer chip. And, you know what, I think it would actually work.
Computers are not good at randomness
The only thing that computers are good at is giving you the same output for any given input each and every time. It is their predictability that makes them so darn useful.
This is a problem when what you need is randomness.
The closest we have to computer-generated randomness is algorithms that give outputs that are hard for humans to guess. The thing is, for any given seed value, you still get the same output. That’s why Minecraft seeds are a thing.
One of the better algorithms is the Mersenne Twister. This is what powers mt_rand()
in PHP.
Nevertheless, this sort of randomness is only pseudorandom. Accidentally use the same input, get the same output.
How can we do better?
One of the best ways to generate cryptographically secure randomness is to use some large external source of chaos. For example, Lavarand. Lavarand is powered by a wall of lava lamps, which the system takes photos of at intervals. The system then extracts some amount of the binary of the image, interprets it however the designers want (all things in computers are just binary, and we only know what sort of thing they are by leaving hints). This data is then used as the seed for pseudorandom generation.
The inclusion of a pseudorandom step means that although the randomness is pretty good in terms of being unguessable, it is still not truly random.
My answer to truly random numbers from a computer
We start with a 64-bit quantum chip. Quantum computing is different from the computing we know now. QBits sit between 1 and 0 until they are read. This allows for some very specific types of computation at speeds that we cannot currently reach with classical computing.
Qbits – quantum bits – suffer from a significant weakness. They are so tiny that a single photon can flip them. Rather than fight this data damage, we can harness it.
We choose 64 because qbits are a bit tricky to make at scale, and 64 bits is what our regular computers use. You could go for a bigger size, say 128, 256, 512, 1024, etc., for cryptographic uses.
One way would be to give the top of the chip a convex glass “lid” that encuredges light into the chip. Another would be to add a layer of tritium and a phosphor, which would glow and send off photons. You could also use some other radioactive matter as long as it gives off something that can flip a bit.
All of these flips are entirely unpredictable and non-repeatable. For the same seed, you will not get the same data.
With this set-up, you could start with a sudorandom seed and prime the quantum chip with it. Wait a reasonable length of time and recover the now changed and truly randomised data.
There are other quantum properties we can use to further enhance our randomness. One such property that creates headaches for classic for modern computing is quantum tunnelling. We are pretty much at the point of the nm scale that if we go much smaller, electrons may just elect to jump to another bit of the chip.
We can use that too. The chip that reads the randomised qbits could itself have a fine enough size that electrons will at times put themselves somewhere unintended. Use that for the data in and the data out, and we now have an array of bits that had three episodes of randomisation. This step is not necessary, but it would speed up the time to true randomness for each set of 64 bits.
The technology exists for true randomness
None of what I have suggested is beyond our current technology level. Other than the very small nm chip design, which might need a little R&D to perfect. We can make this if we want to.
I see a few possible uses for this idea:
How to steal this idea
If you are someone with the means to take this idea and turn it into a product, I ask only for accreditation and some company shares as a thank you.
Over to you
I’d love to hear your thoughts and comments. Agree, disagree, or point out a flaw in my thinking – it’s all good. Talk to me.
#flippedBits #MersenneTwister #noise #PHP #quantumComputing #randomness #RNG #Technology
When you realize that if you put your arms out and put your legs apart you're pretty close to the same shape as a starfish.
I was just reading something about ghosts and it dawned on me that.. ya never see people finding ghosts that speak other languages.. and.. statistically speaking.. that's pretty unlikely..
Somebody stole the hamburglar toy at work.
Burgleception
Is It An Aerial Photo When It Is This High?
Coming up with titles is sometimes hard. My brain's not awake right now. Sorry.
From the lovely fields north of Santa Barbara toward Solvang in California.
https://thecareyadventures.com/blog/is-it-an-aerial-photo-when-it-is-this-high/
Guest article by Dr. #Bernhard #Weßling: “#Origin of #randomness, #complexity, #crises and #time”
I like to put the #theses contained in his new book up for #discussion on my #science blog. That's why I'm now looking forward to possible, even “coincidental” #resonances and look forward to numerous #comments on the topic.
More at: https://philosophies.de/index.php/2025/03/16/zufall-krisen-zeit/
Guest article by Dr. #Bernhard #Weßling: “#Origin of #randomness, #complexity, #crises and #time”
I like to put the #theses contained in his new book up for #discussion on my #science blog. That's why I'm now looking forward to possible, even “coincidental” #resonances and look forward to numerous #comments on the topic.
More at: https://philosophies.de/index.php/2025/03/16/zufall-krisen-zeit/
Somebody at work keeps getting happy meals and leaving the toys around and I don't mind lol
#gaia #tippingpoint #blackswan #randomness #breakdown Have we just witnessed or witnessing one of those #seismic and totally #random events that really do change the course of #history. It does kind of have that feel, but I've never lived through one before.
#geopolitics #economy
Guest article by Dr. #Bernhard #Weßling: “#Origin of #randomness, #complexity, #crises and #time”
I like to put the #theses contained in his new book up for #discussion on my #science blog. That's why I'm now looking forward to possible, even “coincidental” #resonances and look forward to numerous #comments on the topic.
More at: https://philosophies.de/index.php/2025/03/16/zufall-krisen-zeit/
56KBPS?! That's madness. That defies the Shannon Limit. No good can come of this.
So.. I guess if they're eating employees you need to keep track of it..
Fellow agnostics, freaks and weirdos rejoice-- loving uncertainty can have psychological benefits. Open-mindedness, trying weird shit, etc. Things I'm a big fan of
https://www.discovermagazine.com/mind/learning-to-love-uncertainty-may-have-psychological-benefits
An Article in the Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics on Turbulence by KR Sreenivasan and J Schumacher
https://www.annualreviews.org/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-conmatphys-031620-095842
What is the turbulence problem, and when can we say it’s solved? This deep dive by Sreenivasan & Schumacher explores the math, physics, and engineering challenges of turbulence—from Navier-Stokes equations to intermittency and beyond. A must-read for anyone fascinated by chaos, complexity, and the unsolved mysteries of fluid dynamics!
A summary of the talk presented by KR Sreenivasan in December 2023 at the International Center for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS-TIFR) in Bengaluru, as part of a program on field theory and turbulence.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwVSBYh-KC4
"Field Theory and Turbulence" program link: https://www.icts.res.in/discussion-meeting/ftt
#FluidDynamics #Physics #NavierStokes #UnsolvedMystery #Mechanics #Dynamics #FluidMechanics #Science #Chaos #TurbulentMotion #Randomness #Chaotic #Fluid #ClassicalMechanics
#Turbulence
@CptSuperlative On randomness, still my favourite article of the past two decades, "If you can't choose wisely, choose randomly", by Michael Schulson:
As moderns, we take it for granted that the best decisions stem from a process of empirical analysis and informed choice, with a clear goal in mind. That kind of decision-making, at least in theory, undergirds the ways that we choose political leaders, play the stock market, and select candidates for schools and jobs. It also shapes the way in which we critique the rituals and superstitions of others. But, as the Kantu’ illustrate, there are plenty of situations when random chance really is your best option.
https://aeon.co/essays/if-you-can-t-choose-wisely-choose-randomly
Much more, and apparently heavy reliance on a couple of books I'd still like to read, by Michael Dove, Michael Stone's The Luck of the Draw: The Role of Lotteries in Decision Making, Robert Finlay's Politics in Renaissance Venice, and a few others.
So I'm watching the original Japanese Iron Chef and at the beginning of each show is a quote..
You've heard,
"You are what you eat"
but that's not really the original quote.. it's this.. beginning every episode.
"Tell me what you eat, and I'll tell you what you are"
Brillat-Savarin
What a completely different thought.
Ya ever think about pets from their perspective?
Like randomly somebody grabs you and starts rubbing you all over all the time. And do you really think there would ever be a time you would wander over to some creature 10 times your size and snuggle up to go to sleep?
It's pretty weird if you look at it from their perspective.