Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Google Chemistry

Wow!  Just Wow!

Wow when the lights go on!

Yeah, but what do you see when the lights go on?

I don't know but it is something really big.  That is all I know.

This link turned on a light: Click on it to read it.

Google Search Engine Software goes 'Chemistry'

I never understood chemistry.  The harder it was to understand the more I rejected the understanding of it.  Just like other things that I did not understand because I did not see the underlying structure of what a thing does.  Sad to say, I have to understand the structure before I understand the function of the structure.  Maybe the first day of chemistry the teacher explained structure.  After that it was all functional reactions. At least it seemed like that to me in hindsight.  I did not know whey I was not getting it then.

 Maybe the problem was that structure was defined by function so study the function to learn the structure??  Hell, I still do not know.

 Somehow the link between Google and Chemistry seems to open a door.  It talks about the essence of object relationships in information.

There seems to be a strong link somehow between information structured by page rank presentation and chemical information.  The "Wow" magnitude of that thought is derived from jumping to the wild idea that the same relationship might apply to money and the way I have come to view the relationship of what money is to what money does.

 I could spend the rest of the day thinking about this..............

Ion.  What is an ion anyhow and what does it have to do with chemistry?  It is the Google algorithm

This is what Wikipedia says about an Ion. 

This is how Google PageRank work.

 PageRank was worth something.  Check this except from the PageRank link:

The name "PageRank" is a trademark of Google, and the PageRank process has been patented (U.S. Patent 6,285,999). However, the patent is assigned to Stanford University and not to Google. Google has exclusive license rights on the patent from Stanford University. The university received 1.8 million shares of Google in exchange for use of the patent; the shares were sold in 2005 for $336 million.

 

 

1 comment:

timmer said...

As computer science moves ever so slowly towards the advanced era of quantum computing, some Spain-based researchers are trying to understand how Google could work in such an environment.

In Spain, scientists are applying quantum physics principles to Google’s PageRank. That's the proprietary algorithm that lets Google rank pages in search results. In doing so, they believe they could revolutionise the use of the world-famous search engine. In a scientific paper published online last month, they also say they are anticipating the quantum future that hopefully lies just around the corner.

Report: Guy Hedgecoe, Madrid