Cellular automaton patterns

Still life (cellular automaton)

In Conway's Game of Life and other cellular automata, a still life is a pattern that does not change from one generation to the next. The term comes from the art world where a still life painting or photograph depicts an inanimate scene. In cellular automata, a still life can be thought of as an oscillator with unit period. (Wikipedia).

Still life (cellular automaton)
Video thumbnail

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

Video thumbnail

The Life Of Mammals Ep6 Opportunists

Thanks for watching!

From playlist life of mammals

Video thumbnail

Game of Life: Logic gates

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

Video thumbnail

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

Video thumbnail

The Life Of Mammals Ep3 Plant Predators

Thanks for watching!

From playlist life of mammals

Video thumbnail

What are Cellular Automata?

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

Video thumbnail

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

Video thumbnail

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

Video thumbnail

Prokaryotic Cells: The Simplest Kind of Life

We've established that the basic unit of life is the cell, and that the simplest forms of life are just one cell. The earliest unicellular organisms were prokaryotic, and there are many prokaryotic organisms still around today, including all bacteria. So let's go over the features of the p

From playlist Biology/Genetics

Video thumbnail

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

Video thumbnail

Laurent Bartholdi: Amenable groups - Lecture 2

Abstract: I shall discuss old and new results on amenability of groups, and more generally G-sets. This notion traces back to von Neumann in his study of the Hausdorff-Banach-Tarski paradox, and grew into one of the fundamental properties a group may / may not have -- each time with import

From playlist Mathematical Aspects of Computer Science

Video thumbnail

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

Video thumbnail

Live CEOing Ep 309: RLE Format in Wolfram Language

Watch Stephen Wolfram and teams of developers in a live, working, language design meeting. This episode is about RLE Format in the Wolfram Language.

From playlist Behind the Scenes in Real-Life Software Design

Video thumbnail

Adam P. Goucher - Evolving Lifeforms on Lattices - G4G13 April 2018

In October 1970, Martin Gardner famously introduced the world to Conway's 'Game of Life', a simple set of rules exhibiting breathtaking emergent complexity. We explore a wide range of lattice-based rules which are more conducive to supporting rich interactions and biological processes such

From playlist G4G13 Videos

Video thumbnail

OLT#8 Imaging Autotrophs

Year 11 Biology Organisation of Living Things Imaging Autotrophs

From playlist Y11 Bio Mod 2 Organisation of Living Things

Video thumbnail

Stephen Wolfram's Picks of Cellular Automata from the Computational Universe

Join our inaugural liveminting event, where you'll see the live creation of unique NFTs for Stephen Wolfram's picks of cellular automata from the computational universe. Mint your own NFT in the Wolfram Language using the Wolfram Function Repository function MintNFT: https://resources.wol

From playlist Stephen Wolfram Livestreams

Video thumbnail

Behind the Scenes Commentary for LiveCoding Challenge

Jesse provides live behind-the-scenes commentary of the LiveCoding competition from the Wolfram Summer School.

From playlist Stephen Wolfram Livestreams

Video thumbnail

What Happens Inside Your Body? - VR 360°

Take a journey through the human body in Virtual Reality with Life Noggin! Support the great work being done by Lifespan, the team powering Life Noggin: https://www.lifespan.io/life-noggin/ HOW TO WATCH: Watch it with maximum quality with the updated youtube app on your mobile device or

From playlist Popular Uploads | Life Noggin

Video thumbnail

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

Related pages

Oscillator (cellular automaton) | Conway's Game of Life | On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences | Cellular automaton | Constraint programming | Glider (Conway's Life) | Reflector (cellular automaton) | Skew-symmetric graph | Spaceship (cellular automaton)