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190 points baruchel | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.199s | source
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zerof1l ◴[] No.44421424[source]
Here's the gist:

For nearly 50 years theorists believed that if solving a problem takes t steps, it should also need roughly t bits of memory: 100 steps - 100bits. To be exact t/log(t).

Ryan Williams found that any problem solvable in time t needs only about sqrt(t) bits of memory: a 100-step computation could be compressed and solved with something on the order of 10 bits.

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1. m3kw9 ◴[] No.44423750[source]
Doesn’t make practical sense why they would even assign a number to problems which could have unknown dependencies. Unless you are talking about bounded math issues