Difference between revisions of "Beating the Second Law"

From Simia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 7: Line 7:
 
{{tag|Web}} {{tag|Semantic Web}}
 
{{tag|Web}} {{tag|Semantic Web}}
 
<noinclude>{{simiapost|english}}</noinclude>
 
<noinclude>{{simiapost|english}}</noinclude>
 
__SHOWFACTBOX__
 

Latest revision as of 15:39, 19 March 2019

Yihon Ding has an interesting blogpost taking analogies to the laws of thermodynamics and why this means trouble for the Semantic Web.

I disagree in one aspect: I think it is possible to invest the amount of human power to the system and to still keep it going. I can't nail it down exactly -- I didn't read "Programming the Universe" yet, so I can't really discuss it, but the feeling goes along the following lines: the value of a network increases superlinearly, if not even quadratic (Metcalfe's Law), whereas the amount of information increases sublinearly (due to redundancies in human knowledge). Or, put it in another way: get more people and Wikipedia or Linux gets better, because they have a constrained scope. The more you constrain the scope the more value is added by more people.

This is an oversimplification.

Web
Semantic Web

Previous entry:
Blogging from an E90
Next entry:
England eagerly lacking cofidence