On Feb 19, 2014, at 4:29 PM, John Gilmore <[email protected]> wrote:

> and I am puzzled.  Is this entropy the entropy of thermodynamics or
> information theory?  The quantity having the dimensions J/K, Joules
> per Kelvin?
> 
> In what sense is entropy ever 'generated'?
> 
> Or is this perhaps a technically loose figurative, metaphorical  way
> of talking about the heat generated by a "full" 256-bit address word
> memory, one physically containing 2^256 addressable units of 'real'
> storage.  If so, what storage technology was envisaged in these
> calculations.  Delay lines?  Ferrite cores?  CMOS?  Hadrons in
> quantum-mechanical storage?  Each of these technologies would have
> different power requirements.
> 
> Moreover, while no one has yet constructed  an instance of 'full'
> real 64-bit storage, this "failure" has not compromised the usefulness
> of AMODE(64) virtual storage.
> 
> Is this statement indeed susceptible of any definite interpretation?
> Or is it, as I suspect, essentially frivolous rhetoric?

I had to go to the wayback machine to find the original article, but here it 
is: 
https://web.archive.org/web/20070216075030/http://www.sun.com/2004-0914/feature/

The relevant quote is in the last paragraph:

“Logically, the next question is if ZFS' 128 bits is enough. According to 
Bonwick, it has to be. "Populating 128-bit file systems would exceed the 
quantum limits of earth-based storage. You couldn't fill a 128-bit storage pool 
without boiling the oceans.”

So my memory that he’d mentioned entropy was faulty. But the point that 128 
bits is enough stands.

-- 
Curtis Pew ([email protected])
ITS Systems Core
The University of Texas at Austin

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