Fruit Flies Hold the Key To Faster Computing 45
hapworth writes "Dr. Ziv Bar-Joseph, a researcher at Carnegie Mellon, may have found the key to faster computing in the form of fruit flies. While computer scientists have long struggled with determining optimal communications paths in digital environments, Bar-Joseph believes the answer can be found by studying the biological make-up of fruit flies: 'Determining how to select a [Maximal Independent Set] is difficult and has been under scrutiny for many years. It turns out that fruit flies solve a similar problem. During brain development, a process called Sensory Organ Precursor [SOP] selection occurs,' he says. 'As in computer networks, some cells (SOP) in the brain will become local leaders (MIS) and convey information from the environment to neighboring cells.'"
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You know who else was a socialist and wanted to kill himself?
That's right... Hitler.
It will probably make your life on the internet easier if you get a brain installed..
Re:suicide (Score:4, Interesting)
I think I shall jump off a cliff. Thoughts?
I think you should throw your arms out wide when you jump. That way we'll find out if fruits fly, though the result would be more natural selection than Sensory Organ Precursor selection .
Interesting how prophetic Terry Pratchett was with his Discworld Hex computer though, which was also insect-driven. I wonder if this new one will have a GBL as well?
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I wonder if this new one will have a GBL as well?
Well, yeah, if it's got fruit flies it's bound to have a fruit.
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You need to see a psychiatrist or a therapist. Clearly you have time on your hands, and since you live in Europe, you have ready access to healthcare.
It's not that what you're saying is wrong, it's just that we all have to cope with things we can't change. For some it's an innate skill, but for others it's learned. So go learn.
I'm sure it will be great (Score:5, Funny)
...once they get all the bugs out of the system.
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8D
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Dave Bowman: Hello, HAL. Do you read me, HAL?
HAL: Affirmative, Dave. I read you.
Dave Bowman: Open the pod bay doors, HAL.
HAL: I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.
Dave Bowman: What's the problem?
HAL: I think you know what the problem is just as well as I do.
Dave Bowman: What are you talking about, HAL?
HAL: This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it.
Dave Bowman: I don't know what you're talking about, HAL.
HAL: I know that you and Frank were planning to disconnect me, and I'm af
Re:I'm sure it will be great (Score:5, Funny)
...once they get all the bugs out of the system.
shouldn't that be - once they get the system out of the bugs...
Re:I'm sure it will be great (Score:5, Funny)
That'd be the Russian version.
Fruit flies like a banana! (Score:1)
Fruit flies like a banana!
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Unlikely to be a real _global_ optimum (Score:4, Interesting)
The kinds of physical processes which drive these kinds of biological solutions are good at arriving at local optima, but are unlikely to find the global optimum which is considered to be the exact solution to the problem, as soon as the size of the problem outstrips the scale of the physical processes used to solve it. OTOH, when porting the physical paradigm to the (virtual) world of computing, it is much easier to scale the now-virtual solution processes than it would be for nature to solve the larger problem. So it still could very well lead to an interesting heuristic for arriving at good approximations to the global optimum.
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A local optimum might still be good enough. Especially if you can find it now, rather than much later.
Short Summary Here (Score:1)
http://www.tikalon.com/blog/blog.php?article=2011/fruitfly
This really isn't news, since the article was published in January (Yehuda Afek, Noga Alon, Omer Barad, Eran Hornstein, Naama Barkai, and Ziv Bar-Joseph, "A Biological Solution to a Fundamental Distributed Computing Problem," Science, vol. 331, no. 6014 (January 14, 2011), pp. 183-185.)
Maximal or maximum? (Score:1)
Finding a maximal independent set in a graph on n vertices is doable in O(n) time. Finding a maximum independent set is difficult.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximal_independent_set [wikipedia.org]
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I didn't read the original article with full thought, but I got the impression that the key points were:
1) an efficient distributed algorithm for a self-organizing network where each node behaves independently, with no central control
and
2) even though it doesn't produce the maximum independent set, maybe its method of selecting the nodes for the independent set produces a better (closer to maximum) maximal independent set than a basic algorithm for just any maximal independent set would likely produce?
(I'm
The walkthrough to get the key to faster computing (Score:5, Funny)
Quest Title: "Fruit Flies Hold the Key To Faster Computing"
Walkthrough:
Diplomatic route:
1. Go to the flies.
2. Talk them into cooperating with you. (You'll get a 75 Speech check at some point.)
3. The flies are going to agree to cooperate but they'll ask you to gather 10 issues of "Flies Monthly" in exchange for the key. (Follow this link for the locations of the issues.)
4. Once you get the magazines, go back to the flies.
5. Give them the issues. They'll give you a "Key to Faster Computing."
6. Open safe to get the "Faster Computing."
Non-diplomatic route:
1. Sneak on the flies.
2. Plant live grenade.
3. Walk away.
4. Boom.
5. Go back to the corpse of the flees and grab the "Key to Faster Computing."
6. Open safe to get the "Faster Computing."
Note: If Miss Puss is in your party, she'll eat the flies at first sight. You'll then have to wait for her to pass them and the key. Wait for about 24 hours. You'll eventually see her... hmm... do her business. Click on the business to open it, get the key. By the way, this business of hers is just a regular locker so you could use it as a convenient location to hoard stuff.
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Ok, I followed your advise, but I'm still trying to locate the key within the debris. How big is this key anyway?
It's not THE key, it's a key. (Score:1)
How does this make my laptop ACPI work better. (Score:1)
Maximum vs. Maximal (Score:1)
Did you try asking? (Score:2)
Fruit Fly: "Water Cooling yo"