90 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
90 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
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From Chris_Boyd@edinburgh.ac.uk Wed Apr 25 16:10:41 1990
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From: Chris_Boyd@edinburgh.ac.uk
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Subject: The Turing Shroud
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THE TURING SHROUD -- AMAZING ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERY!
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A recent sensational discovery may shed some light on a mystery
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which has baffled computer scientists (or 'hackers' as they prefer
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to be called) for decades. Although held as an article of faith
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by most hackers, the existence of the fabled 'Universal Turing
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Machine' has never been proved, and many ordinary people find the
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whole idea difficult to swallow. The only comparable machine in
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antiquity, the Analytical Engine of Charles Babbage, was only
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partially constructed and never lived up to its specification; in
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which respect, hackers say, it resembles modern machines such as
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the IBM 3086. Heretofore, the only evidence for the Turing
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Machine's existence has been in the form of documents written by
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the Venerable Alan Turing himself, when he was involved in the
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development of computing science theory between the wars.
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In these papers, St. Turing described (in great detail) the
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Universal Machine and how it was programmed. Implicit in his
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arguments was that the Machine itself was built and used, but the
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complete lack of supporting evidence, despite exhaustive searches
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after his Ascension into Heaven, has tended to confirm the
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sceptics' view that it never existed as a physical entity. They
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point to the fact that, after the war, St. Turing worked for some
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years at the National Physical Laboratory trying to build a
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Universal Machine, suggesting that no earlier version ever
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existed. Zealots have countered by saying that the pre-war
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machine _was_ built, but was confiscated (in total secrecy) by the
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Allies to aid in the war effort, and was never returned to its
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inventor. They argue that the machine was destroyed in an air
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raid. St. Turing therefore had to start from scratch after the
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war and attempt to reconstruct a Machine using the then
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new-fangled valve technology. As we know, this attempt was
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abandoned in the face of competition from the USA, and he was
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forced to work, in Manchester, on an economy model computer, often
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referred to contemptuously by hackers as the Provincial Turing
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Machine.
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The recent furore stems from archaeological work carried out
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by dedicated hackers at a site near Cambridge. It is well known
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that St. Turing bought two silver bars in the Thirties as a hedge
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against inflation. Not trusting the banks, he buried both bars
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and drew maps with cryptic instructions indicating their
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whereabouts. Unfortunately, after the war, when he came to
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retrieve the bars, he only managed to find one. The two intrepid
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hackers subjected the map and instructions to a sophisticated
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computer analysis. After several fruitless months they gave up,
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and by scribbling a few calculations on the back of an old
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envelope (known in the business as the ICL approach), managed to
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locate the site of the missing bar in a matter of minutes. Late
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last Tuesday evening, they dug down to a depth of six feet before
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encountering a metal box. Excitedly, they smashed the lock with
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their spades and opened the lid. Inside, as they had hoped, they
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found a silver bar wrapped in a dirty piece of cloth.
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It was only when they brought the find home, however, that
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they realized the full significance of the piece of cloth, or
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'Turing Shroud' as it has already been dubbed. When stretched
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out, the Shroud clearly bears the imprint, in oil, of a machine of
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great complexity. Isotopic measurements of the oil and cloth
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definitively show both to date from before the war. Followers of
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St. Turing are convinced that the Shroud is no more or less than
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the original wrapping of the Universal Turing Machine, and that
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its historical value far exceeds that of the silver bar it
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enfolded. Already, hackers are working day and night, using
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photographs of the Shroud as blueprints, to build a replica of the
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Machine.
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The entrepreneur and electronics innovator Sir Clive
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Sinclair, 59, who was quickly on the scene, has expressed great
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interest, and is giving his full financial support. "If it works,
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it will make even my wonderful electric car look like nothing more
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than an expensive toy", he commented.
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LATE NEWS: The Xerox corporation has announced that it is
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issuing a pre-emptive priority lawsuit against the Shroud's
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discoverers in case the machine should ever be completed.
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL your jokes (jokes ONLY) to funny@looking.ON.CA
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Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. A Daemon will auto-reply.
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Jokes posted instead of mailed often don't have a valid reply address.
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