Hey! Someone want to learn tiny bit of #electrical #engineering and build a #human #brain in #minecraft with #redstone ? Or learn how to read this to put it together in #javascript or any programming language? @106802107305467650156 - I *know* you're capable of it but learning to translate Electrical Engineering drawing to the same things in Javascript would probably be your biggest challenge) (Only 14 pages! + I didn't write it :P ) I know so little about Electrical Engineering, but I *have* been building a #model of human #memory since April 2013; trying to understand the processes of how it works. I've collected a lot of information from *many* different sources, but each one left me lacking. I've known for a while that one of the keys is a combination of NAND and NOR gates (series and parallel) and came across a thing comparing NAND and NOR Flash drives just this morning. A floating-gate #MOFSET was the key; me barely understanding crud (I sound smarter than I am, believe me)... and I went out for the day. Came home, did a quick search and *boom* - found it! a retired Professor from California State University Northbridge, John @116654111810224059879 Ph.D did *exactly* that. He even references IBMs work from 2010 which led to their recent *brain on a chip*. (he published this in 2011). Anyway, this system incorporates all of the conclusions I've come up with so far; from the idea that *attention* is more about *ignoring* too much information... incorporates the *associative nature* of memory... - for an example, he modeled a drunk guy fishing and getting confused by some random fish he saw and how he couldn't remember his way back until he ignored the useless new information - *perfect*. Anyway, i could go on and on... but I know this guy is on the right track - and for me, *nailed it* ; and by his references at the bottom, I suspect his line of thinking and IBMs line of thinking are probably the same; the difference being *this* is readable and short. I may try my hand at it; but I present the #challenge for anyone who wishes to build human memory using their favorite programming/modeling method utilizing these ideas. and - @104601877473395702230 @107340517029762940372 - any critiques of this? It's not that many pages of reading. I just converted it to TIFF from the PDF on http://arxiv.org/abs/1008.5161