by Boldra » Thu Mar 17, 2005 9:51 am
Thanks for the link Boern. I particularly liked this quote:
At the right of the figure is another 32-bit number, this one about four billion, intended to give the approximate human population (back in 1974 --- it’s 6+ billion now). Aliens who correctly interpret this will know how large an army to send.
Personally, I had a lot of difficulty getting past the numbers. Although I'm quite used to thinking in binary, giving numbers 1..10 seems to indicate
binary encoded decimal numbers are coming. I didn't recognise those numbers as traditional binary because of the "placer" bit. It's also confusing how the first numbers stack three bits then start a new column, but the later number stack an arbitrary number. Even after reading the explanation I think writing numbers across two different axes is very confusing.
Anyway, although the chances are very small that the message will be received, I find such messages a good exercise. And while it's pretty OT, it reminds me of
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... pikes.html, where the EPA in the US had to come up with a warning about the dangers of buried nuclear waste that would be understandable by a possibly very different culture in 10,000 years.
Boldra
Thanks for the link Boern. I particularly liked this quote:
[quote]At the right of the figure is another 32-bit number, this one about four billion, intended to give the approximate human population (back in 1974 --- it’s 6+ billion now). Aliens who correctly interpret this will know how large an army to send. [/quote]
Personally, I had a lot of difficulty getting past the numbers. Although I'm quite used to thinking in binary, giving numbers 1..10 seems to indicate [i]binary encoded decimal[/i] numbers are coming. I didn't recognise those numbers as traditional binary because of the "placer" bit. It's also confusing how the first numbers stack three bits then start a new column, but the later number stack an arbitrary number. Even after reading the explanation I think writing numbers across two different axes is very confusing.
Anyway, although the chances are very small that the message will be received, I find such messages a good exercise. And while it's pretty OT, it reminds me of [url]http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/07/0711_020711_yuccaspikes.html[/url], where the EPA in the US had to come up with a warning about the dangers of buried nuclear waste that would be understandable by a possibly very different culture in 10,000 years.
Boldra