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Looking for a source.

Diakaryu

New Blood
Joined
Jun 17, 2006
Messages
20
A friend of mine said this to me a long time ago and it just stuck with me.

I don't recall if he said he made it up or if he was quoting somebody else so I figured this would be a good place to stop and ask.

"As the level of complexity reaches infinity, the time between breakdowns reach's zero"

Sounds fancy enough to have been uttered by a great mind if so any clue who?

B.
 
A friend of mine said this to me a long time ago and it just stuck with me.

I don't recall if he said he made it up or if he was quoting somebody else so I figured this would be a good place to stop and ask.

"As the level of complexity reaches infinity, the time between breakdowns reach's zero"

Sounds fancy enough to have been uttered by a great mind if so any clue who?

B.

Found this -

A system tends to grow in terms of complexity rather than of simplification, until the resulting unreliability becomes intolerable.

Here -

http://roso.epfl.ch/dm/murphy.html#laws

Not the same quote, but same idea. Anyway, that's all I have :)
 
A friend of mine said this to me a long time ago and it just stuck with me.

I don't recall if he said he made it up or if he was quoting somebody else so I figured this would be a good place to stop and ask.

"As the level of complexity reaches infinity, the time between breakdowns reach's zero"

Sounds fancy enough to have been uttered by a great mind if so any clue who?

B.
Fits reality.

If you accept that any one component part will have a finite mean-time-to-failure, then make an infinite number of those all interdependent, the MTTF should approach nil.

Infant mortality and the "bathtub curve" would seem to gaurantee it.

Just my take on it.:D

Cheers,
Dave
 

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