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- Play John Conway’s Game of Life
Play the Game of Life online, a single player game invented in 1970 by Cambridge mathematician John Conway
- Infinite growth - John Conway’s Game of Life
The Game of Life is not your typical computer game It is a cellular automaton, and was invented by Cambridge mathematician John Conway This game became widely known when it was mentioned in an article published by Scientific American in 1970 It consists of a grid of cells which, based on a few mathematical rules, can live, die or multiply
- Gosper glider gun - John Conway’s Game of Life
The first known gun, and indeed the first known finite pattern displaying infinite growth, found by Bill Gosper in November 1970 This period 30 gun remains the smallest known gun in terms of its bounding box, though some variants of the p120 Simkin glider gun have a lower population Gosper later constructed several other guns, such as new gun and the p144 gun shown under factory See also
- Glider - John Conway’s Game of Life
The Game of Life is not your typical computer game It is a cellular automaton, and was invented by Cambridge mathematician John Conway This game became widely known when it was mentioned in an article published by Scientific American in 1970 It consists of a grid of cells which, based on a few mathematical rules, can live, die or multiply
- Glider synthesis - John Conway’s Game of Life
The Game of Life is not your typical computer game It is a cellular automaton, and was invented by Cambridge mathematician John Conway This game became widely known when it was mentioned in an article published by Scientific American in 1970 It consists of a grid of cells which, based on a few mathematical rules, can live, die or multiply
- 119P4H1V0 - John Conway’s Game of Life
The Game of Life is not your typical computer game It is a cellular automaton, and was invented by Cambridge mathematician John Conway This game became widely known when it was mentioned in an article published by Scientific American in 1970 It consists of a grid of cells which, based on a few mathematical rules, can live, die or multiply
- HWSS - John Conway’s Game of Life
The Game of Life is not your typical computer game It is a cellular automaton, and was invented by Cambridge mathematician John Conway This game became widely known when it was mentioned in an article published by Scientific American in 1970 It consists of a grid of cells which, based on a few mathematical rules, can live, die or multiply
- 2c 3 wire - John Conway’s Game of Life
A wire discovered by Dean Hickerson in March 1997, using his dr search program It supports signals that travel through the wire diagonally at two thirds of the speed of light Each 2c 3 signal is made up of two half-signals that can be separated from each other by an arbitrary number of ticks Considerable effort has been spent on finding a way to turn a 2c 3 signal 90 or 180 degrees, since
- Bi-block puffer - John Conway’s Game of Life
Any puffer whose output is bi-blocks The term is particularly used for p8 c 2 puffers, in which case a bi-block fuse is created A bi-block puffer is easily made using two backrakes whose gliders impact symmetrically Jason Summers welded two backrakes to form a more compact puffer, as shown below By periodically burning the bi-block fuse using perturbations by a following backrake and
- 135-degree MWSS-to-G - John Conway’s Game of Life
The following converter, discovered by Matthias Merzenich in July 2013 It accepts an MWSS as input, and produces an output glider travelling at a 135-degree angle relative to the input direction
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