This is the last I will be saying on the subject. I am not interested in teaching a course on thermodynamics.
> Well... A nuclear reactor produces 1GW, and thus produces 1PJ in > 10^6 s, that is approx. 11 days 14 hrs. Sure, you may be very > interested in Health & Safety compliance of nuclear reactors, but... But what? This in the same ballpark as you'd get from releasing a half-kilogram of antimatter on the world. It's big. There are no "but..."s about it. > Well... Currently, at a French equivalent of undergrad level (CPGE), > we're learning entropy is a theoretical quantity, that has no > real-world meaning There are two equivalent ways to define entropy, one using thermodynamics and one using statistical mechanics. When using the statistical mechanics definition it's easy to forget you're talking about the real world instead of just juggling around a lot of numbers and probabilities. When using the thermodynamic definition you get your fingers burned and that reminds you you're talking about *thermodynamics* -- how heat moves around in a system. > Well... If the operation the bit just underwent was a bitflip (and, > knowing the bruteforcing circuit, it's possible to know that), the > bit was a '0'. It was actually a 1. The two bits were 1 and 1. Knowing the second value was a 1 is of no help whatsoever in recovering the previous state. The previous state could have been anything. The bit has no memory of what it was before: that information is lost to the universe, and there is a corresponding increase in entropy (heat) associated with it. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
