[geeks] Re: [rescue] RE: Absolutely nothing to do with 'Small schools.& elections'

Joshua D. Boyd geeks at sunhelp.org
Wed Jun 20 14:57:42 CDT 2001


So, would the display be part of the tape, or is each display state a
machine state?  Would these just be a machine state for each pixel in the
display?

--
Joshua Boyd

On Wed, 20 Jun 2001, Ken Hansen wrote:

> Display? We couldn't even imagine a computer being able to display anything, we just "knew" what was going on in the game... Geez, anyone can play if you can just see the game in front of you... ;^)
> 
> Ken
> (Seriously though, I know of no reason why a turing machine couldn't have a display - it has a state, and it needs to communicate it to the user, so I would imagine in the strictest sense it would have to have a display, but the display may not be of a form familiar to today's "pampered" users, maybe a series of blue LEDs, or a scrolling LED array, like those found in grocery stores... ;^)
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Joshua D. Boyd [mailto:jdboyd at cs.millersville.edu]
> Sent: Wednesday, June 20, 2001 3:18 PM
> To: 'geeks at sunhelp.org'
> Subject: RE: [geeks] Re: [rescue] RE: Absolutely nothing to do with
> 'Small schools.& elections'
> 
> 
> Is it really a turing machine if it can drive a display?
> 
> --
> Joshua Boyd
> 
> On Wed, 20 Jun 2001, Ken Hansen wrote:
> 
> > Ever tried to play Doom on a Turing machine? That was rough... (but it did run Linux!)
> 
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