Ternary Computing 375
eviltwinimposter writes: "This month's American Scientist has an article about base-3 or ternary number systems, and their possible advantages for computing and other applications. Base-3 hardware could be smaller because of decreased number of components and use ternary logic to return less than, greater than, or equal, rather than just the binary true or false, although as the article says, '...you're not going to find a ternary minitower in stock at CompUSA.' Ternary also comes the closest of any integer base to e, the ideal base in terms of efficiency, and has some interesting properties such as unbounded square-free sequences. Also in other formats."
Does this mean (Score:4, Funny)
Trits? (Score:4, Funny)
Awww...they shied away from the obvious choice, tits.
No, please don't! (Score:2, Funny)
10 seconds
3 9 27 81...ummmm...crap
10 seconds
This'll make all my computer-numbering knowledge obsolete
Trinary Digits (Score:2, Funny)
[schlockmercenary.com]
http://www.schlockmercenary.com/d/20001226.html
Re:Less than, greater than, or equal? (Score:5, Funny)
Nope: one, zero, and CowboyNeal.
Re:Does this mean (Score:3, Funny)
Good... Hopefully this will let us design computers with much less Bill gates.
Re:Faster to just get rid of 0's (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Trits? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Trits? (Score:5, Funny)
No, I think that was a good decision. When I think of tits, I always imagine them in pairs.
Best Quote (Score:2, Funny)
I can always go for a cheap three-some.
Pat
Two? Such a number is not possible! (Score:1, Funny)
<highlander> THERE CAN ONLY BE ONE!</highlander>
(and zero)
Yes! Tits! (Score:5, Funny)
And, instead of a 'nibble' being four bits, we'd have a 'suckle' equaling three tits, like that babe in the movie Total Recall.
Instead of dealing in megabits or gigabytes, we'd have gigatits, which could be abbreviated as DD, saving vast amounts of bandwidth -- which might as well be called handwidth now -- or terateets [terapatrick.com], abbreviatable as DDD.
With all the sexual content in technical lingo (e.g., male and female plugs, master/slave, unix, etc.) this is only a natural development, and given that half of these machines are used for nothing but downloading pictures of naked breasts anyways...
And there's already a language for it! (Score:3, Funny)
TriINTERCAL [muppetlabs.com]! (the link is about INTERCAL, chapter 6 is about the TriINTERCAL extension)
I can't wait until college courses are taught in this truly wonderous and -- who would have thought -- futuristic language.
Re:The future holds that... (Score:4, Funny)
You're all wrong.
There can BE only ONE!
:)
Units? (Score:4, Funny)
Obviously, there's the basic unit of storage (1, 0, -1; on, off, undefined; true, false, maybe; whatever). We called this a trit for obvious reasons of parallel to the binary world.
Ok, good enough so far. Then, there's the basic unit that's used to store characters or very simple numbers. We decided that 9 trits would be good (this was to allow for UNICODE-like representations). This seemed to be a shoe-in for the title, tryte.
Then, you occasionally want to have something that is used in firmware to sub-divide trytes into various fields. In binary we call this a nibble, so in honor of Star Trek we called this one (3 trits) a tribble.
But, there it stopped, as we soon realized what we'd be measuring the system's word-size in.... Man, I thought SCSI was a painful phrase to use all the time
Intercal (Score:3, Funny)
The answer... (Score:2, Funny)
Any system that can't spell "42" is not worth it.
Obligatory Futurama Quote: (Score:1, Funny)
Fry: It was just a dream, Bender. There's no such thing as 2.
-- Futurama