All this fifties reminscence made me hope that David Lynch has been in contact with Dana S. Scott. In 2014 Dana Scott published a paper entitled Stochastic Lambda Calculus: An extended abstract, in the Journal of Applied Logic 12. See https://eternaldoorman.blogspot.com/2020/09/journal-of-applied-logic-special-issue.html As far as I can tell this gives an operational semantics for lambda calculus which would allow one to produce a pedagogical system for exploring ideas about uncomputable functions and randomness. I spent most of the latter half of 2012 trying to persuade my ex-colleagues at Cambridge, principally Larry Paulson to take this idea seriously: see Logic. I failed to make any progress at all with either Larry or Roger Bishop-Jones. Maybe Dana Scott could support my application for political asylum in the United States? I have no more money for Internet. I don't know what all this songs of the fifties is about otherwise. I am stressed, please help me in some kind of concrete way. Communicate for fuck's sake!!
A derivative is linearisation, and differential calculus is essentially linear algebra, ... See Freya Holmér - Why Can't You Multiply Vectors? and Freya Holmér on Continuity of Splines . See also the MIT OCW page: Matrix Calculus For Machine Learning And Beyond (Alan Edelman, Steven G. Johnson) Subscribe to The Julia Programming Language . Alan Edelman talking about expressing mathematics as computer code. The idea is that you can use computer languages to communicate mathematical ideas precisely to other people. See my comments about functional programming languages here: https://prooftoys.org/ian-grant/hm/ Subscribe to TEDx Talks .
Listening to Freya Holmér last night I started to get glimmers of an idea I had long ago about how to represent vector spaces in computational processes using this recursive abstract type : abstype 'a point = POINT of {getx : 'a vector, diff : 'a point -> 'a point, move : 'a point -> 'a point, scale : 'a -> 'a point, proj : 'a point -> 'a} with fun new i (op +) (op -) (op * ) dot = let fun self x = POINT {getx = x, move = fn (POINT pr) => (self (x + (#getx pr))), diff = fn (POINT pr) => self (x - (#getx pr)), scale = fn i => (self (x * i)), proj = fn (POINT pr) => ...
I think this is the first time they've actually publicly announced anything about this project. See these posts: Eron Woolf on Why Open Source is Failing Matt Mikhailov and Vincent McKibbon on The Problem with Open Hardware Jason Kridner talking About BeagleBoard.org and Software Development . See these places: https://danielc.dev/rk/ https://github.com/petabyt/rk https://github.com/futo-org/ret See also https://pine64.org/devices/pinebook_pro/ . Subscribe to FUTO . See https://github.com/nir9/low-level-learning-resources/tree/master/setups/debian . Subscribe to Nir Lichtman . If you're looking for a cool init process, try https://ctx.graphics/terminal/ . See Artful Bytes - When to Use a RTOS and How to Create a Successful Open Source Project .
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