Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 21:06:24 -0400 (EDT) From: Thomas David Rivers <rivers@dignus.com> To: advocacy@freebsd.org, rivers@dignus.com Cc: jesus.monroy@usa.net Subject: Re: [Re: BUDS Coming to you soon.] Message-ID: <199905140106.VAA45328@lakes.dignus.com> In-Reply-To: <373B7585.21FC7A73@softweyr.com>
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> > > > 2 to the 313th power is a *very* *big* number... (hmm.... I wonder > > how much paper would be required to print it out; do we have that > > many trees in the world? If we consider all the trees ever grown > > on the planet, is that enough? What if we made the font *really* > > small :-) ) > > No. Someone once commented that the 2^128 possible IPv6 address space > is enough to give every atom in the universe an IP address, so you'd > have to be able to print your number on subatomic particles to even > be able to print 2^313, let alone do something with it. > > > Perhaps you should simply try and determine, say, the top > > 20 hardware configuarations and test the kernel configuarations > > that match those. You might be able to expand that number to, > > say, the top 100, etc... > > Some study of the relevant books and articles on software testing > methodology would be a good starting point. > I have another suggestion. If we neglect interstellar travel time: there are <1000 billion stars in the milky way, assume each has one inhabited planet with an average of 8M people, each with 4 computers, so that means that (2**43 planets)(2**33 people/planet)(2*2 computers per person) means each person still has to do 2**235 compiles per "night" maybe we could ship them a new CD every night? :-) :-) :-) (I'm sorry, but me and a couple of friends have gone off the deep end tonight... :-) ) - Dave Rivers - To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-advocacy" in the body of the message
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