15 Sorting Algorithms in 6 Minutes

De la description sur youtube:
"Visualization and "audibilization" of 15 Sorting Algorithms in 6 Minutes.
Sorts random shuffles of integers, with both speed and the number of items adapted to each algorithm’s complexity.
The algorithms are: selection sort, insertion sort, quick sort, merge sort, heap sort, radix sort (LSD), radix sort (MSD), std::sort (intro sort), std::stable_sort (adaptive merge sort), shell sort, bubble sort, cocktail shaker sort, gnome sort, bitonic sort and bogo sort (30 seconds of it)."

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NERD ALERT

Get your nerd on!

This is awesome! Fun to watch even if you don’t know wtf is going on.

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158,962,555,217,826,360,000 (Enigma Machine) – Numberphile

Une decouverte que j’ai fait dans les derniers jours: Numberphile, une serie de videos tres interessante sur youtube qui parle de mathematiques.

Voici un episode vraiment interessant sur le fonctionnement de la Machie Enigma. Il y a deux videos disponibles a la fin de celui-ci sous forme de liens qui contiennent des extras: Enigma’s flaw et Enigma Extra Footage.

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Defendant Ordered to Decrypt Laptop May Have Forgotten Password

wired.com: Defendant Ordered to Decrypt Laptop May Have Forgotten Password

Via: slashdot.org: Defendant Ordered To Decrypt Laptop Claims She Had Forgotten Password

If she does not decrypt the drive by month’s end, as ordered, she could be held in contempt and jailed until she complies. If the case gets to that point, Judge Blackburn would have to make a judgement call and determine whether the woman had forgotten the code or was refusing to comply.

Exoplanet news part 3: There may be hundreds of *billions* of planets in our galaxy!

Bad Astronomy: Exoplanet news part 3: There may be hundreds of *billions* of planets in our galaxy!

The new result comes from what’s called microlensing.

This kind of event takes an extraordinarily precise alignment, so they’re extremely rare. To compensate, you need to look at a lot of stars. So astronomers did: a survey using two telescopes covered several million stars every night, looking for the tell-tale bump(s). Over the course of six years, they found three — yes, only three — planets orbiting other stars acting like wee distant lenses. But that number is actually pretty good: when combined with previous surveys, and also taking into account how many lenses they didn’t see (which is important, statistically), they can extrapolate with some confidence about the numbers and types of exoplanets out there.

Filesharing Now an Official Religion In Sweden

Filesharing Now an Official Religion In Sweden

Via: dvorak.org: Kopimism – The Swedish File Sharing Religion

For the Church of Kopimism, information is holy and copying is a sacrament.

Hopefully, this is one step towards the day when we can live out our faith without fear of persecution, says Isak Gerson, spiritual leader of the Church of Kopimism.

LOL!!! Tout aussi ridicule que les autres religions 😉

Mathematician claims breakthrough in Sudoku puzzle

nature.com: Via: Mathematician claims breakthrough in Sudoku puzzle. Puzzles must have at least 17 clues to have a valid solution.

slashdot.org: Lower Limit Found For Sudoku Puzzle Clues

An Irish mathematician has used a complex algorithm and millions of hours of supercomputing time to solve an important open problem in the mathematics of Sudoku, the game popularized in Japan that involves filling in a 9X9 grid of squares with the numbers 1–9 according to certain rules.

Gary McGuire of University College Dublin shows in a proof posted online on 1 January1 that the minimum number of clues — or starting digits — needed to complete a puzzle is 17; puzzles with 16 or fewer clues do not have a unique solution. Most newspaper puzzles have around 25 clues, with the difficulty of the puzzle decreasing as more clues are given.

“The approach is reasonable and it’s plausible. I’d say the attitude is one of cautious optimism,” says Jason Rosenhouse, a mathematician at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia, and the co-author of a newly released book on the maths of Sudoku.

Having spent two years testing the algorithm, McGuire and his team used about 700 million CPU hours at the Irish Centre for High-End Computing in Dublin, searching through possible grids with the hitting-set algorithm. “The only realistic way to do it was the brute force approach,” says Gordon Royle, a mathematician at the University of Western Australian in Perth who had been working on the problem of counting 17 clue puzzles using different algorithms.

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