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Date:      Thu, 1 Nov 2001 02:37:07 +0000
From:      Josef Karthauser <joe@tao.org.uk>
To:        Lamont Granquist <lamont@scriptkiddie.org>
Cc:        Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@math.missouri.edu>, "Nicpon, John" <John.Nicpon@SouthTrust.com>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Unix Philosophers Please!
Message-ID:  <20011101023707.E900@tao.org.uk>
In-Reply-To: <20011031170629.C865-100000@coredump.scriptkiddie.org>; from lamont@scriptkiddie.org on Wed, Oct 31, 2001 at 05:20:33PM -0800
References:  <3BE08283.EC81A8ED@math.missouri.edu> <20011031170629.C865-100000@coredump.scriptkiddie.org>

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On Wed, Oct 31, 2001 at 05:20:33PM -0800, Lamont Granquist wrote:
>=20
>=20
> On Wed, 31 Oct 2001, Stephen Montgomery-Smith wrote:
> > > "Nicpon, John" wrote:
> > >
> > > Please specifically define where data goes that is sent to /dev/null
> >
> > Answer 1.  Data is not like energy.  There is no "conservation of data"
> > law.  So the data simply "disappears".
>=20
> Doesn't thermodynamics second law actually imply that data has to
> disappear and that with the heat death of the universe data will be at a
> minimum?  For meaningful data to exist there needs to be order, while the
> 2nd law requires that systems evolve to less ordered states.

Maybe, but the second law of thermodynamics is incorrect so who knows?

Joe

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