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Posted By: MrHen | Date: 10/25/06 5:18 a.m. | |
In Response To: Re: They also have a forced locality (Document) : Exponential growth doesn't automatically equal doubling, though. It could be
Using a 1% exponential growth increase instead of a 100% growth increase would make it take longer, sure. Doing the math: Day one: 0.0001% of resources
Week one: 0.000107213535%
Year one: 0.00377834343%
So just under four years (about 3.91, actually) Durandal would need all of the resources of the Marathon. This is assuming his starting point and growth rate is .0001 and .01, respectively. While four years may seem like a while, remember that Durandal has been rampant for years. : Days would also be a weird timeframe for an AI to use, but the point is that
The shape of the growth curve can give us a reasonable estimate. Durandal has been "stuck" in rampancy due Strauss' control over him. He has been growing for a very long time. If Traxus and Leela can subdue entire networks, it does not seem unreasonable that Durandal could subdue the Marathon. Given the numbers we used above as examples, the growth curve does show us that the initial growth is nearly insignificant and suddenly shoots up out of nowhere. Before year three, less than 1% was used. The year three marker shows an increase by five percent. Year four shows a hypothetical Durandal to have grown far beyond the confines of the Marathon. All in all, the mathematics do not give us a locked down timeframe, but it does show that once it hits a certain point, it blows up. As a last example, a friend of mine would love to crash PCs by writing a simple recursive C++ function that would allocate a small amount of memory and then call itself. It did not take long for the system to crash. Exponential growth will always grow fast, the only question is how long it takes until "fast" kicks in.
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