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7 hours later…
10:13 AM
Yesterday I was at TeamLAB and multiple exhibitions have plaques saying "The projected images are infinitely varied and will never repeat; they are created by a computer algorithm that takes into account people's actions". The person I was with said - "surely if it's an algorithm, it's impossible to get infinitely variable outputs"
I scoffed and said "Sure you can. If you're taking noise from the visitors to the exhibit". But now I question whether that really is infinite in a formal sense. I feel like this should be proven/disproven somewhere. Is there a theory behind this?
Going on my pleb-level physics basis, I know that if the universe is infinite, then there should be infinitely many exact copies of me. So, there would be infinitely many repetitions of the exhibits' projections?
Especially if we assume that the universe is finite, then the noise it could generate would be finite (even if it's super-ridiculously-vanishingly small to get a repetition)
 
I think the question is whether the state space of the exhibition display is infinite
And the likely answer is "no"
Not because "it's an algorithm" but because someone coded up that algorithm and the display has a number of pixels/voxels/whatever.
 
10:30 AM
I hadn't even thought about the constraints of the display equipment, thanks. So actually that would make the chance of repetitions only ridiculously-vanishingly small. I'm going to write a letter of complaint for the misinformation!
(actually, it's probably one of my favourite attractions. It's a shame they closed some of the others with different themes because I would have loved to see a different one than last year)
 
Display constraints are one thing, input constraints are another - even if the physical states from the visitors are infinite, ways they are represented for an algorithm will be finite
 
10:45 AM
@matszwecja Another thing I didn't think of :/ Of course there are a finite number of float values that a computer can work with. I should have taken more time before I made my response :(
 
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