Saturday, May 12, 2007, Matt Mahoney wrote:

MM> Now suppose you wanted to simulate A on A.  (You may suspect a program has a
MM> virus and want to see what it would do without actually running it).  Now 
you
MM> have the same problem.  You need an array to reprsent your own memory, and 
it
MM> would use all of your memory with no space left over for your simulator
MM> program.

If system simulates itself from current state to future state, it only
needs additional memory for about the amount of memory changed during
such simulation. So simulation is not very different from actual execution, 
unless
actual execution comes very near to out-of-memory condition, which I
believe is not the case with AGI systems anyone wants to consider.

-- 
 Vladimir Nesov                            mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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