Artificial life | Cellular automaton rules
Codd's cellular automaton is a cellular automaton (CA) devised by the British computer scientist Edgar F. Codd in 1968. It was designed to recreate the computation- and construction-universality of von Neumann's CA but with fewer states: 8 instead of 29. Codd showed that it was possible to make a self-reproducing machine in his CA, in a similar way to von Neumann's universal constructor, but never gave a complete implementation. (Wikipedia).
Coding "Conway's Game of Life" Cellular Automaton in C++/ SFML
Coways Game of life is a very famous cellula automaton, created by John Conway. In this video, I implement it in C++ and SFML. ========= DOWNLOAD: https://github.com/Hopson97/CellularAutomaton/releases/tag/v1.1 SOURCE CODE: https://github.com/Hopson97/CellularAutomaton ========= RESOUR
From playlist Creating Cellular Automaton
Frank Buss' Hexagonal Cellular Automaton
Frank Buss' Hex Cellular Automaton, initialized with a glider gun and a rake. http://www.frank-buss.de/automaton/hexautomaton.html Generated with Ready: http://code.google.com/p/reaction-diffusion/
From playlist Ready
7.1: Cellular Automata - The Nature of Code
This video introduces the concepts and algorithms behind Cellular Automata. (If I reference a link or project and it's not included in this description, please let me know!) Read along: http://natureofcode.com/book/chapter-7-cellular-automata/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellular_autom
From playlist The Nature of Code: Simulating Natural Systems
Cellular Automata are a fantastic demonstration of how a simple set of rules can elicit a complex emergent behaviour. In this video I show John Conway's Game Of Life implemented in quick and simple C++ at the command line. Github: https://github.com/OneLoneCoder/Javidx9/blob/master/Consol
From playlist Interesting Programming
The logic gates NOT, AND and OR in the Game of Life. The Game of Life is a cellular automaton invented by John Conway in the late 1960s. I write about it in my book Alex Through the Looking-Glass: How Life Reflects Numbers and Numbers Reflect Life: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1408817772
From playlist The Game of Life
The Genetics of Cellular Automata
When John von Neumann proposed cellular automata to investigate artificial life, he modeled the part that defines their behavior as a subsystem. This subsystem is embodied in the cellular automata rules. Researchers have investigated these rules throughout the decades to model not only art
From playlist Wolfram Technology Conference 2021
Cell structure and Function || Animal cell and Plant cell || Biology|| 3D video
Cell Structure and Function The cell membrane performs many important functions within the cell such as osmosis, diffusion, transport of nutrients into the cell, processes of ingestion and secretion. The cell membrane is strong enough to provide the cell with mechanical support and flexibl
From playlist Biology
What We've Learned from NKS Chapter 11: The Notion of Computation
In this episode of "What We've Learned from NKS", Stephen Wolfram is counting down to the 20th anniversary of A New Kind of Science with [another] chapter retrospective. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this YouTube channel or th
From playlist Science and Research Livestreams
What We've Learned from NKS Chapter 6: Starting from Randomness
In this episode of "What We've Learned from NKS", Stephen Wolfram is counting down to the 20th anniversary of A New Kind of Science with [another] chapter retrospective. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this YouTube channel or th
From playlist Science and Research Livestreams
The Curtis-Hedlund-Lyndon Theorem | Nathan Dalaklis | math academic talks
This is the second seminar talk that I have given as a math phd student. It is an expository academic talk that I gave as a Math PhD student during my second semester of my second year in my PhD program. The talk concerns the Factors of Symbolic Dynamical Systems and is focused on the Curt
From playlist Academic Talks
The eater is a pattern in the Game of Life. See it devour some spaceships. The Game of Life is a cellular automaton invented by John Conway in the late 1960s. I write about it in my book Alex Through the Looking-Glass: How Life Reflects Numbers and Numbers Reflect Life: http://www.amazon
From playlist The Game of Life
What We've Learned from NKS Chapter 3: The World of Simple Programs
In this episode of "What We've Learned from NKS", Stephen Wolfram is counting down to the 20th anniversary of A New Kind of Science with [another] chapter retrospective. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this YouTube channel or th
From playlist Science and Research Livestreams
What We've Learned from NKS Chapter 2: The Crucial Experiment
In this episode of "What We've Learned from NKS", Stephen Wolfram is counting down to the 20th anniversary of A New Kind of Science with [another] chapter retrospective. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this YouTube channel or th
From playlist Science and Research Livestreams
Ville Salo: Nilpotent endomorphisms of expansive group actions
We say a pointed dynamical system is asymptotically nilpotent if every point tends to zero. We study group actions whose endomorphism actions are nilrigid, meaning that for all asymptotically nilpotent endomorphisms the convergence to zero is uniform. We show that this happens for a large
From playlist Dynamical Systems and Ordinary Differential Equations
Searching for a 3D Cellular Automaton - Live from the Wolfram Summer School
Stephen goes on a hunt in the computational universe for interesting cellular automata live at the Wolfram Summer School. For upcoming live streams by Stephen Wolfram, please visit: http://www.stephenwolfram.com/livestreams/
From playlist Stephen Wolfram Livestreams
What We've Learned from NKS Chapter 10: Processes of Perception and Analysis
In this episode of "What We've Learned from NKS", Stephen Wolfram is counting down to the 20th anniversary of A New Kind of Science with [another] chapter retrospective. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this YouTube channel or th
From playlist Science and Research Livestreams
Hey, thanks for popping by! Check out the crazy behaviour of the R-pentomino, a pattern in the Game of Life. The Game of Life is a cellular automaton invented by John Conway in the late 1960s. I write about it in my book Alex Through the Looking-Glass: How Life Reflects Numbers and Numb
From playlist The Game of Life