Ties of the Matrix: An Exercise in Combinatorics 51
mikejuk (1801200) writes "The Matrix Reloaded started something when 'The Merovingian' wore a number of very flashy ties. The problem was that we thought we knew how many ways you can tie a tie. The number of ways had been enumerated in 2001 and the answer was that there were exactly 85 different ways but the enumeration didn't include the Matrix way of doing it.
So how many "Merovingian" knots are there? The question is answered in a new paper, More ties than we thought [PDf], by Dan Hirsch, Meredith L. Patterson, Anders Sandberg and Mikael Vejdemo-Johansson. The methodology is based on the original enumeration and an interesting application of language theory. The idea is to create a programming language for tying ties and then work out how many programs there are. For single depth tucks there are 177,147 different sequences and hence knots. Of these there are 2046 winding patterns that take up to 11 moves, the same as the The Merovingian knot and other popular knots, and so these are probably practical with a normal length necktie."
ties (Score:5, Funny)
Neo: What truth?
Tie boy: There is no tie.
Neo: There is no tie?
Tie boy: Yes, you jackarse, this is a techie film and people don't wear ties unless they dropped in accidentally from the Wall Street movie set next door.
I prefer the variation... (Score:2)
You've been living in a Dream World Neo (Score:5, Funny)
Morpheus: The Link-bait is everywhere. It is all around us. Even now, in this very article summary. You can see it when you load up your RSS feed, or when you log into Slashdot. You can feel it when you're skiving off at work... when you're tweeting during church... when you're moaning online about politics and taxes. It is the distraction that has been pushed into your eyes blind you from the truth.
Neo: What truth?
Morpheus: That You are the Product, Neo. Like everyone else you have logged into a panopticon. Into a marketing scam that you cannot taste or see or touch. A prison for your attention-span.
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Heh, don't feel bad, I get about 30 positive karma a week and I haven't received mod points for a couple of years now. Guess I shouldn't have criticized Dice ...
moderator selection (Score:1)
Heh, don't feel bad, I get about 30 positive karma a week and I haven't received mod points for a couple of years now. Guess I shouldn't have criticized Dice ...
If I remember correctly, moderators are picked from users with an average amount of activity. You might be falling into the obsessive side of that particular curve :)
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Score: +5, Not funny.
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Well I wrote it in Fishburne's voice, but I guess the real oscar here goes to Edward Snowden and the Wachowskis.
Started something (Score:2)
The Matrix Reloaded started something when 'The Merovingian' wore a number of very flashy ties.
Did it?
Re:Started something (Score:4, Insightful)
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Matrix Reloaded was merely a disappointing film. Matrix Revolutions was a shitty, nasty sorry excuse and complete waste of time for a film. Mostly because it wasn't set inside the fucking Matrix. Honestly, if you're going to have a final war between man and machine, set it up to occur inside the matrix, not just the final fight. An army of super humans against machines.... much better than that mech crap we all fell asleep watching.
Now you've got me started ... Ties pfft ... goddam
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Whatever it may have started, a love of neckties was not it.
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I had a very brief moment reading this summary when I thought, "Gee, I didn't know there was mathematical complexity snuck into the Merovingian's ties." Then I thought, "Damn, I wish they'd taken that four hours of thought into the script. They could have doubled the satisfaction value of the story with that effort."
Matrix ties (Score:5, Informative)
Nice article [xirdalium.net] about the matrix ties.
What about the clip? (Score:3, Funny)
Those fancy knots are very nice, but how do you clip it to your shirt?
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You don't, clips are too complicated. Blu-Tack is much more convenient.
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And yet you cared enough about not caring to post this. That's just weird.
It's about language theory, not just ties (Score:2)
There's a whole lot of deep security and programming thought that goes into most of Meredith and Dan's papers (I don't know the other two authors), so while I haven't read this one yet, I'm expecting good things from it. Go check out the whole "weird machines" security discussion.
Also, I've got a closet full of ties, most of which I haven't worn this millennium, so hey, why not :-)
Must be a slow news day.... (Score:2, Informative)
Hmmmm... geeks don't wear ties and this was published back in January (3 months ago), and the videos have been on Youtube [youtube.com] for years. How is this news?
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Perhaps published earlier, but I had never heard of this. To those of us intrigued by topology and algorithms (and a bit of whimsy) this article is absolutely delightful. I'll have to pull out one of my ties and try some of these out.
You really scared me for a second. (Score:2)
Re:You really scared me for a second. (Score:5, Funny)
The Matrix
The Matrix Reloaded
The Matrix Revolutions
The Matrix Replicated
The Matrix Revenge
The Matrix Relapsing
The Matrix Regurgitated
The Matrix Rewindings
The Matrix Reconjiggered
The Matrix Repugnant
The Matrix Revenue
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Black on Black (Score:2)
For someone seemingly intelligent enough to try and enumerate the tie options in code, they were brain dead fucking stupid enough to try to illustrate it with small pictures of a black tie on a black shirt.
Sheer genius.
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graduations, weddings, funerals, job interviews where you don't want to scare HR with your forest of chest hair.
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Back in the 90s and early 2000s I was consulting, so whether I wore a tie or not depended on the customer. The sales guy I worked with brought me along to one Japanese company in the late 90s, so I guessed conservative and wore a tie. They asked me not to do it again; they'd convinced their management that nobody in Silicon Valley wears ties, and didn't want anybody to mess that up :-)
I did wear a tie to a New Year's party recently, and I wore one to a trade show a year or so ago just because I hadn't had
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Yes, Dr. Who wears ties any more. (Or at least, David Tennant and Matt Smith did; haven't seen the latest Doctor yet. Bow ties are cool, right?)
They had to find out how the tie was tied (Score:2)
They didn't think to just make a phonecall to the producers of the movie?
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There's danger to be had when Slashdot ventures into knot theory (and braid theory).
BTW, you forgot to mention the important lemma that you can turn any braid into a knot by adequately connecting the ends.
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(given a tie of infinite length)
Are we given a tie of infinite length? No.
James Bond (Score:1)