Assuming our simulation is not designed to auto-scale (and our Admins don’t know how to download more RAM), what kind of side effects could we see in the world if the underlying system hosting our simulation began running out of resources?

  • Altima NEO
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    99 months ago

    Allthat shit you forgot? All that “forgotten” history? There you go.

  • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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    169 months ago

    If our entire universe is a simulation so are our laws of physics, in the parent universe running our simulation the universe might be powered by pure imagination and the concept of memory or CPU cycles or even electricity might not even exist

  • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬
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    279 months ago

    An automatic purge process will start to prevent this. It happened several times in the past. Last time between 2019-2022. It removed circa 7 million processes. With regular purges like this it is made sure that the resources are not maxed out before the admins can add more capacity.

    • Semperverus
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      469 months ago

      This simplification horribly misunderstands what time-dilation is, and I love it.

      • Random Dent
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        29 months ago

        I have a running theory that that’s also what’s going on with quantum physics, because I understand it so poorly that it just seems like nonsense to me. So in my head, I see it as us getting into some sort of source code we’re not supposed to see, and on the other side some programmers are going “fuck I don’t know, just make it be both things at once!” and making it up on the fly.

    • @AnomalousBit@programming.dev
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      9 months ago

      I believe you are thinking in terms of a Turing-machine-like computer. I don’t think it’s possible today to “suspend” the bits in a quantum computer. I also don’t think it’s possible to know if the simulation could be paused (or even “added to” without losing its initial state).

  • @degen@midwest.social
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    269 months ago

    Data in memory will be offloaded to swap space. I doubt we’d notice any fluctuations since we’re part of the simulation, but externally it could slow to a crawl and basically be useless. They might shut it down, hopefully just to refactor. But again we probably wouldn’t notice any downtime, even if it’s permanent.

  • HeartyBeast
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    89 months ago

    Render distance would be reduced requiring us to come up with plausible theories to account for the fact that there is a limit to the size of the so-called ‘observable universe’

  • mozz
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    89 months ago

    I did not expect the responses to this question to be as interesting to read as they are 😃

  • Pons_Aelius
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    709 months ago

    Simply put.

    We wouldn’t notice anything.

    Our perception of the world would be based only on the compute cycles and not on any external time-frame.

    The machine could run at a Million Billion hertz or at one clock-cycle per century and your perception of time inside the machine would be the same.

    Same with low ram, we would have no indication if we were constantly being paged out to a hard drive and written back to ram as required.

    Greg Egan gave a great explanation of this in the opening chapter of his Novel Permutation City

    • @Feyr@lemmy.world
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      89 months ago

      Clearly wrong .

      Running out of ram happen all the time. We see something, store it, and that something also gets stored in ram. But if that second storage gets reaped by the oom, the universe reprocess it.

      Since it’s already in our copy, it cause weird issues. We call it Déjà Vu!

  • @kerrigan778@lemmy.world
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    89 months ago

    Have you ever noticed when you look into a telescope that it takes a little bit to position yourself right to see what you’re looking at? And it seems like you used to be able to do it a lot faster? That’s not age, that’s actually lag time added to cover decompressing the data.

  • SolidGrue
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    89 months ago

    That’s why history repeats itself. It’s doing that more frequently these days because there’s more people remembering more things.

  • @ProfessorProteus@lemmy.world
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    119 months ago

    These answers are all really fun but I didn’t see anyone point out one thing: why should we assume that our creators’ “computer” architecture is anything remotely similar to our technology? I’m thinking of something like SETI—We can’t just assume that all other life is carbon-based (though evidently it’s a pretty good criterion). The simulation could be running on some kind of dark matter machine or some other exotic material that we don’t even know about.

    Personally I don’t subscribe to the simulation theory. But if it were true, why would the system have any kind of limitation? I feel like if it can simulate everything from galactic superclusters down to strings vibrating in Planck Time, there are effectively no limits.

    Then again, infinity is quite a monster, so what do I know?

    • @lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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      28 months ago

      all other life is carbon-based (though evidently it’s a pretty good criterion)

      The short version is that the only other element that allows 4 covalent bonds is silicon, but nobody has been able to find a solvent that allows complex silicon-based molecules to form without instantly dissolving any structures they form.

      • @ProfessorProteus@lemmy.world
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        18 months ago

        I remember reading about how silicon is theoretically possible, but I had (erroneously) assumed there were more potential candidates. Thanks for the additional info. This stuff is so fascinating!