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Comics that ask "what if?"

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    So, I have a feature on my website where every week
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    people submit hypothetical questions
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    for me to answer,
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    and I try to answer them using math, science
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    and comics.
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    So for example, one person asked,
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    what would happen if you tried to hit a baseball
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    pitched at 90 percent of the speed of light?
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    So I did some calculations.
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    Now, normally, when an object flies through the air,
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    the air will flow around the object,
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    but in this case, the ball would be going so fast
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    that the air molecules wouldn't have time
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    to move out of the way.
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    The ball would smash right into and through them,
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    and the collisions with these air molecules
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    would knock away the nitrogen,
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    carbon and hydrogen from the ball,
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    fragmenting it off into tiny particles,
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    and also triggering waves of thermonuclear fusion
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    in the air around it.
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    This would result in a flood of x-rays
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    that would spread out in a bubble
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    along with exotic particles,
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    plasma inside, centered on the pitcher's mound,
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    and that would move away from the pitcher's mound
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    slightly faster than the ball.
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    Now at this point, about 30 nanoseconds in,
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    the home plate is far enough away
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    that light hasn't had time to reach it,
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    which means the batter
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    still sees the pitcher about to throw
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    and has no idea that anything is wrong.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, after 70 nanoseconds,
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    the ball will reach home plate,
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    or at least the cloud of expanding plasma
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    that used to be the ball,
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    and it will engulf the bat and the batter
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    and the plate and the catcher and the umpire
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    and start disintegrating them all
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    as it also starts to carry them backward
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    through the backstop, which
    also starts to disintegrate.
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    So if you were watching this whole thing
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    from a hill,
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    ideally, far away,
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    what you'd see is a bright flash of light
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    that would fade over a few seconds,
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    followed by a blast wave spreading out,
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    shredding trees and houses
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    as it moves away from the stadium,
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    and then eventually a mushroom cloud
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    rising up over the ruined city. (Laughter)
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    So the Major League Baseball rules
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    are a little bit hazy,
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    but — (Laughter) — under rule 6.02 and 5.09,
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    I think that in this situation,
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    the batter would be considered hit by pitch
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    and would be eligible to take first base,
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    if it still existed.
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    So this is the kind of question I answer,
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    and I get people writing in with
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    a lot of other strange questions.
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    I've had someone write and say,
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    scientifically speaking, what is the best
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    and fastest way to hide a body?
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    Can you do this one soon?
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    And I had someone write in,
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    I've had people write in about,
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    can you prove whether or not you can find love again
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    after your heart's broken?
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    And I've had people send in
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    what are clearly homework questions
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    they're trying to get me to do for them.
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    But one week, a couple months ago,
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    I got a question that was actually about Google.
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    If all digital data in the world
    were stored on punch cards,
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    how big would Google's data warehouse be?
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    Now, Google's pretty secretive
    about their operations,
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    so no one really knows how much data Google has,
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    and in fact, no one really knows
    how many data centers Google has,
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    except people at Google itself.
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    And I've tried, I've met them a few times,
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    tried asking them, and they
    aren't revealing anything.
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    So I decided to try to figure this out myself.
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    There are a few things that I looked at here.
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    I started with money.
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    Google has to reveal how much they spend,
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    in general, and that lets you put some caps
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    on how many data centers could they be building,
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    because a big data center costs
    a certain amount of money.
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    And you can also then put a cap on
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    how much of the world hard
    drive market are they taking up,
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    which turns out, it's pretty sizable.
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    I read a calculation at one point,
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    I think Google has a drive failure
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    about every minute or two,
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    and they just throw out the hard drive
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    and swap in a new one.
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    So they go through a huge number of them.
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    And so by looking at money,
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    you can get an idea of how
    many of these centers they have.
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    You can also look at power.
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    You can look at how much electricity they need,
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    because you need a certain amount
    of electricity to run the servers,
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    and Google is more efficient than most,
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    but they still have some basic requirements,
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    and that lets you put a limit
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    on the number of servers that they have.
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    You can also look at square footage and see
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    of the data centers that you know,
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    how big are they?
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    How much room is that?
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    How many server racks could you fit in there?
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    And for some data centers,
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    you might get two of these pieces of information.
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    You know how much they spent,
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    and they also, say, because they had to contract
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    with the local government
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    to get the power provided,
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    you might know what they made a deal to buy,
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    so you know how much power it takes.
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    Then you can look at the ratios of those numbers,
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    and figure out for a data center
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    where you don't have that information,
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    you can figure out,
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    but maybe you only have one of those,
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    you know the square footage,
    then you could figure out
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    well, maybe the power is proportional.
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    And you can do this same thing
    with a lot of different quantities,
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    you know, with guesses about
    the total amount of storage,
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    the number of servers, the
    number of drives per server,
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    and in each case using what you know
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    to come up with a model that narrows down
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    your guesses for the things that you don't know.
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    It's sort of circling around the
    number you're trying to get.
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    And this is a lot of fun.
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    The math is not all that advanced,
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    and really it's like nothing more than
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    solving a sudoku puzzle.
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    So what I did, I went through all of this information,
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    spent a day or two researching.
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    And there are some things I didn't look at.
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    You could always look at the Google
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    recruitment messages that they post.
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    That gives you an idea of where they have people.
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    Sometimes, when people visit a data center,
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    they'll take a cell-cam photo and post it,
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    and they aren't supposed to,
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    but you can learn things about
    their hardware that way.
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    And in fact, you can just
    look at pizza delivery drivers.
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    Turns out, they know where all
    the Google data centers are,
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    at least the ones that have people in them.
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    But I came up with my estimate,
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    which I felt pretty good about,
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    that was about 10 exabytes of data
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    across all of Google's operations,
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    and then another maybe five exabytes or so
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    of offline storage in tape drives,
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    which it turns out Google is
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    about the world's largest consumer of.
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    So I came up with this estimate, and this is
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    a staggering amount of data.
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    It's quite a bit more than any other organization
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    in the world has, as far as we know.
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    There's a couple of other contenders,
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    especially everyone always thinks of the NSA.
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    But using some of these same methods,
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    we can look at the NSA's data centers,
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    and figure out, you know, we
    don't know what's going on there,
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    but it's pretty clear that their operation
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    is not the size of Google's.
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    Adding all of this up, I came up with
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    the other thing that we can answer, which is,
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    how many punch cards would this take?
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    And so a punch card can hold
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    about 80 characters,
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    and you can fit about 2,000 or so cards into a box,
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    and you put them in, say,
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    my home region of New England,
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    it would cover the entire region
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    up to a depth of a little less than five kilometers,
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    which is about three times deeper
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    than the glaciers during the last ice age
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    about 20,000 years ago.
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    So this is impractical, but I think
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    that's about the best answer I could come up with.
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    And I posted it on my website. I wrote it up.
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    And I didn't expect to get an answer from Google,
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    because of course they've been so secretive,
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    they didn't answer of my questions,
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    and so I just put it up and said,
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    well, I guess we'll never know.
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    But then a little while later
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    I got a message, a couple weeks later, from Google,
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    saying, hey, someone here has an envelope for you.
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    So I go and get it, open it up,
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    and it's punch cards. (Laughter)
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    Google-branded punch cards.
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    And on these punch cards,
    there are a bunch of holes,
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    and I said, thank you, thank you,
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    okay, so what's on here?
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    So I get some software and start reading it,
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    and scan them, and it turns out
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    it's a puzzle.
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    There's a bunch of code,
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    and I get some friends to help,
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    and we crack the code, and then
    inside that is another code,
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    and then there are some equations,
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    and then we solve those equations,
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    and then finally out pops a message from Google
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    which is their official answer to my article,
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    and it said, "No comment."
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    And I love calculating these kinds of things,
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    and it's not that I love doing the math.
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    I do a lot of math,
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    but I don't really like math for its own sake.
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    What I love is that it lets you take
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    some things that you know,
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    and just by moving symbols
    around on a piece of paper,
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    find out something that you didn't know
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    that's very surprising.
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    And I have a lot of stupid questions,
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    and I love that math gives the power
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    to answer them sometimes.
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    And sometimes not.
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    This is a question I got from a reader,
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    an anonymous reader,
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    and the subject line just said, "Urgent,"
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    and this was the entire email:
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    "If people had wheels and could fly,
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    how would we differentiate them from airplanes?"
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    Urgent. (Laughter)
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    And I think there are some questions
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    that math just cannot answer.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Comics that ask "what if?"
Speaker:
Randall Munroe
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:29
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for Comics that ask "what if?"
Morton Bast edited English subtitles for Comics that ask "what if?"
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