User:OneThousandTwentyFour

About
Jake Morrison in Section 41 of AC103(Patricia Fancher)

1024
In binary notation, 1024 is represented as 10000000000, making it a simple round number occurring frequently in computer applications.

1024 is the maximum number of computer memory addresses that can be referenced with ten binary switches.

Sandbox
User:OneThousandTwentyFour/sandbox

Article Sandbox
User:OneThousandTwentyFour/Sparse_Distributed_Memory_sandbox

Current Projects

 * Computer engineering


 * Tunnel Blanket


 * Sparse_Distributed_Memory

Interesting Projects

 * WikiProject_Engineering


 * WikiProject_Free_Software

Research

 * http://www.murrayc.com/learning/AI/sparsedistributedmemory.shtml


 * http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.2.8403&rep=rep1&type=pdf


 * Kanerva, Pentti. Sparse Distributed Memory. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 1988. Print.


 * http://csjarchive.cogsci.rpi.edu/proceedings/2006/docs/p1992.pdf


 * ftp://reports.stanford.edu/pub/cstr/reports/csl/tr/89/400/CSL-TR-89-400.pdf

People

 * User:TFC93


 * User:tigerfan15

Helpful Links
United States Education Program/Courses/Accelerated Composition (Patricia Fancher)

Online Ambassador: User:Nikkimaria