• How much physical data makes up a person and teleportation
    198 replies, posted
[QUOTE=Deadollie;16014837]I saw on TV that with the fastest internet connection we currently have it would take over 150 Million years to transmit a person. It's quicker to fucking walk there.[/QUOTE] We could use multiple channels and fuck it, nevermind.
[QUOTE=JohnnyMo1;16008826]Even if quantum entanglement-based teleportation is finished within my lifetime I will certainly never consider using it myself and will be warn everyone I can against its use it on human beings. Quantum teleportation for humans is creepy. It would destroy the object originally being teleported, and reconstruct it on the other end. The copied person would feel as though they were the original and act just like them. They would, in fact, BE them. The problem is that the original person died the moment they were teleported. To friends and family, there would be no discernible difference. The copy would be the exact same person, but the person they knew also died in the process. I think this is what The Prestige tried to warn us about.[/QUOTE] I remember this theory, I hated it because the original person is gone in the process.
[QUOTE=ArcNova;15992111]We already knew it was possible because animals could do it. I've never seen anything teleport.[/QUOTE] But we know that 1 electron can be in 2 different places at the same time, so we could go from there :v:
Teleportation CAN NEVER SAVE THE SOUL!!!
Because there is no such thing as a soul.
I don't think teleportation is a important topic for human mankind until someone found out how to make atoms lose it's physical properties and regain after teleportation and how to travel in wormholes. I wish Einstein is still alive...
Human mankind? What?
I don't belive bandwidth and such will be a problem when we can actually teleport, we probably have technology that takes it out of the equation.
[QUOTE=ArcNova;15992111]We already knew it was possible because animals could do it. I've never seen anything teleport.[/QUOTE] This kid Agun argued that movement was teleportation... He said that you just teleported in very small increments or something and it made it look like fluid motion. Sad part was, he was completely serious.
[QUOTE=ArcNova;15992111]We already knew it was possible because animals could do it. I've never seen anything teleport.[/QUOTE] This.
GOD DAMNIT why wont people get this book when i say it [url]http://www.amazon.com/Physics-Impossible-Scientific-Exploration-Teleportation/dp/0385520697[/url]
it would involve the need for quantum computers.
If the internet had size it would have the weight of a feather.
[QUOTE=Xmeagol;16093235]If the internet had size it would have the weight of a feather.[/QUOTE] ..Huh? :crossarms:
If you were teleported you body would have to be dissembled and remade in another place correct? The original you would be no more all that would be left is a clone who probably would not have memories. My theory is that[I] [B]if[/B][/I] they learn to teleport people the first person who will be teleported will have no memories what so ever and will die of suffocation as them no being able to breathe. or the will have a leg for a face or something.
[QUOTE=fenwick;16092874]This.[/QUOTE] You're just as ignorant as the person you're quoting. No one before has [I]ever[/I] seen an animal or an object for that matter go to the moon from the Earth, under its own power. Guess what? All it took to get to the moon was the proper mindset. We built the rockets, the guidance systems, specialized computers, tested different potential fuel sources, and at one point we wrote brand spanking new equations, all to get to the moon. 100 years ago, going to the moon would have been considered [I]impossible.[/I] We did not have the technology, nor did anyone even have a clue on how to go about doing it. Hell, people thought the moon was made of cheese then.
Gotta keep an open mind, dawg. Gotta keep an open mind...
Yarr. Teleportation is such a difficult issue. As far as I see it you WILL die if you make a copy and destroy the original. Another problem is that atoms are not alligned on a grid, and you cannot get a specific value from them. They never will be in the same spot they started in. Take audio for example. Records, and other forms of analog audio show all the proper waves. Digital audio on the otherhand is not perfect waves, but a series of 1's and 0's making up a sound ( yes I'm simplifing this). To make a teleporter that destroys the original would be realitily easy with a quantum computer (has many states between 1 and 0). Making one that actually moves your object, would be difficult. Wormholes. That's how you solve it. They have already sucessfully teleported a laser beam.
[QUOTE=Doriol;16093247]..Huh? :crossarms:[/QUOTE] So if the internet is like thousands and thousands of exabytes, and if it had weight it would be a feather. Now picture how much data your body can carry.
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