Blueroflmao

Blueroflmao t1_jedp0nu wrote

This cant directly be answered with fact, but this is my understanding of it:

There are two different kinds of "things" you know to do when the time comes.

The first kind is related to immediate needs: you feel hungry, your body knows it needs food. You feel the need to use the toilet? Your body knows it can expel waste to relieve the feeling. Note that these things are basically the same, as your body feels something that isnt the norm, it tries to figure out what is wrong and how to deal with it. Its really as simple as this: some individuals of a species expelled waste when they felt "a feeling", and therefore had a lower chance of dying from the eventual buildup of waste. Eventually, as evolution favours this connection (waste is full -> go poop) it is nearly ingrained in your species as a whole.

Second, there are "milestones" and "cycles" As one grows older and matures, the body changes at different times depending on the species. In the end, evolution (and by assocation, life itself) exists with the sole purpose of reproduction. Every single species of living organism today has undergone thousands to millions of years of optimization in terms of when and how to reproduce. For humans, it happens that around 13/15 years is enough for us to grow big enough and self-sufficient to begin proritizing reproduction. By this age, we are likely to survive on our own to the degree that we have enough "resources" left after taking care of our own needs to also successfully raise another individual. (Note that "resources" refers to all of everything you do: access to time, energy, food, safety, whatever the creature has or needs) Because of this, evolution has figured out "okay so we have 85% success rate of reaching 12 years of age, and rarely die from natural reasons at that point. Lets have the body start prioritizing reproduction" and kicks in puberty by reallocating some resources to maturing the reproductive system. Im massively simplifying of course, but its all about cause and effect in a long chain resulting in what we have today. Hormones are chemicals, and specific chemicals bond with other specific chemicals in specific ways. For most organisms the logic has come to something like this: Age x reached -> start reproductive development/puberty -> prioritize reproduction

So in a way: some things happen at specific times because evolution has at one point found it optimal. What you "know" to do is simply your body making logical conclusions from the information you have, encouraged by all of your ancestors doing the same for thousands of years. At some point, some individuals made a connection "i feel x, i should do y" and it was passed onto offspring. If the logical conclusion is sound, and it helps boost reproductive success, then the logic sticks around in coming generations.

TL; DR: Everything in parentheses is simplified ELI5 as well. Someone, somewhere noticed a "feeling" and they could get rid of the feeling by doing "response". (I need to poop, i should go poop. I feel horny, mating helps alleviate it) These connections between "feeling" and "response" stick around if they improve the likelyhood of reproduction and survival. This why we "know" what to do, but what about why we "feel" the things we act on? Because over thousands of thousands of years, the ideal age of any priority has come closer to an ideal point for survival. The young might prioritize playing to develop motor skills, and the brains are more receptive to all kinds of impressions to speed up the development of necessary skills. Focus shifts to "social" as you age, to learn how to and potentially find a suitable mate. This happens when one should be strong enough to survive on their own. "social" becomes "reproduction" when the reproductive system is ready. As you age and the reproductive system degrades, the priority might for example change to "care" where instead of making more babies, you ensure the survival of your genes by caring for children and grandchildren that hold your own genes (grandmother feeds grandchildren because theyre part of her)

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Blueroflmao t1_je8u99j wrote

For what its worth, AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) which is currently applied by default for nearly everything on the internet is the standard for a reason. A brute force attack (trying all combinations to find the right one) is... Impossible, with todays technology. The selection for AES was started in 2001 by the NSA, and in 2003, the Rjindael cipher was selected and it still remains the AES to this day.

As far as I know, several different attacks and methods have been found through cryptanalysis, the best of which was found in 2011. Named the "Biclique"-attack, it was further optimized in 2013.

Now heres the real kicker: there are generally three kinds of AES in use, all with slightly different designs depending on the size of the key used to encrypt (secret key/initial state, the key an attack is trying to find) These are AES-128, 192 and 256.

So using the most efficient attack that is publicly known, how long would it theoretically take to break one single instance of 128 (the simplest one)? Optimally, about 9007 Terabytes of storage is needed (down from the original version of the attack needing 38 TRILLION Terabytes) The time complexity remains the same, despite this improvement, at 2^126. (Simplified, theres some technicality involved here)

What this all means, TL; DR: The simplest form of AES in use (AES-128) would take billions of years to crack, taking ~ 2^126 operations to do so, requiring OVER 9000 terabytes of storage while executing.

As far as we can tell, AES is set to remain the standard until quantum computing comes far enough to actually be useful in Cryptanalysis (meaning we can actually extract the result of our computations, something we are unable to do today)

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Blueroflmao t1_j6n1z4g wrote

For me, the story and lore unveiled in the sequel makes it a bit better.

They could have used the goop better, but thats a risk when introducing several new mechanics and the goop is the last one

For first playthrough, i like portal 2 better. It also has coop.

For speedrunning and the inventiveness, Portal 1 is just better. Its been broken to such a degree that i myself finished it in under 20 minutes. Portal 2's storytelling and triggers, as well as some reworked exploits just don't allow for that.

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Blueroflmao t1_iueubdd wrote

Thats a stretch to say the least. Fire extingushers wont always put out a grease fire, and its horribly inconvenient. Most fire extinguishers DO put out the fire, but they make a gigantic fucking mess and damages furniture and appliances (thats the cost of not burning your house down)

A grease fire is so stupidly easy to deal with, that "use a fire extinguisher" might be the worst advice here.

Put the lid on, put a baking tray over, throw baking soda in. Dont bust out the fire extinguisher for a contained fire that you can stop in 7 other ways long before the extinguisher is necessary.

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