Chapter 192 Top-of-the-line Computer
Chapter 192 Top-of-the-line Computer
Martin Trust Center, co-working space.
This is the place with the strongest entrepreneurial atmosphere at MIT.
One of the best areas is a dedicated office space that the school has specially allocated to "Spectra Works".
The moment Su Hao pushed open the frosted glass door, the cool air from the air conditioner, mixed with the electronic smell of the computer case, hit him.
Root looked up from the pile of blueprints and waved wildly as if he had seen a savior.
"Thank goodness, you're finally here! I've been waiting for you for so long!"
Entropy next to him looked more like a six-armed Nezha, with two computers running in front of him at the same time, and the code on the screens flashing wildly like a waterfall.
Hearing the noise, she didn't even turn her head, her eyes never leaving the monitor, and simply asked casually:
"Does your sister really like that beaver?"
"Yes." Su Hao pulled out a chair and sat down.
"I just casually modified the underlying interaction code and gave it to her, and now the little girl insists on carrying me to school every day, and gets upset if I don't let her take me."
"Looks like your efforts weren't in vain." Entropy typed even faster.
Su Hao opened his laptop, and as soon as the screen lit up, an extremely cool "Spectra Works" 3D logo immediately popped up on the server interface that the system automatically connected to.
Root pushed several printed documents, still smelling of ink, directly onto Su Hao's side along the smooth surface of his desk.
"The school's legal team has completed all compliance confirmations."
Your parents' signatures have also been notarized and are legally valid.
In other words, this equity agreement is now officially in effect.
Even the most demanding technology licensing office gave it the green light, indicating there were no problems.
Su Hao looked at the contract and nodded.
Since he is still a minor in terms of physical age, the procedures for such commercial contracts are extremely complicated, and the terms that require signatures alone can be overwhelming.
Fortunately, this kind of "underage genius entrepreneurship" scenario is commonplace at MIT and nothing unusual, so the school was able to proceed with all the procedures very smoothly.
"Let's begin now."
Su Hao flexed his wrists, his eyes instantly becoming incredibly focused.
Da, da.
The crisp tapping sound broke the silence in the room.
Su Hao's brain seemed to switch to a higher-dimensional mode in an instant.
"First, I need to completely overhaul the original core logic; the existing structure is too redundant."
As Su Hao tapped, he casually remarked as if chatting about everyday matters.
"Due to the sheer size of the scene, the number of nodes..."
Well, I did a quick estimate, and at least 18,000 would be barely enough.
If we were to include and precisely cover all the classrooms in the teaching building, the extremely complex underground laboratories, the labyrinthine library, the dormitory area, the large dining hall, the indoor gymnasium, and all the hidden corridor areas...
He paused, as if he had completed a massive matrix operation in his mind.
"Increasing the granularity of spatial unit division to the order of 40,000 is a reasonable threshold."
Da da da da—
The sound of keyboard clicks suddenly intensified like a torrential downpour, and code scrolled wildly across the screen.
"The traditional grid layout you used before was not suitable for the highly curved circulation paths on the MIT campus..."
This will not only cause a huge waste of computing resources, but also lead to catastrophic deadlocks in the pathfinding algorithm.
The corridors between buildings must be modeled using irregular polygonal meshes.
Su Hao delivered this barrage of technical jargon with a nonchalant expression.
"As for node settings, we must absolutely abandon physical centrism."
The core driving force must be the entry/exit teleportation points and the target event, and weighted edges must be assigned to each path. Eliminate all your ineffective pathfinding algorithms!
Entropy, who was frantically typing away at his code, froze in his tracks upon hearing this.
She seemed to have heard some heretical and illogical doctrine, and suddenly brought her face close to Su Hao's screen, her brows furrowed tightly.
"Wait! Simplify the grid first? Are you crazy? This goes against the common sense of underlying architecture!"
Wouldn't it be better to attach the agent first, and then trim the mesh based on the agent's feedback?!
Su Hao didn't even raise his head; his fingers continued to move across the keyboard like afterimages.
"No, I must first lay out an absolutely clear path for the agent's movement using my logic. It's actually quite simple."
He explained patiently,
"You can think of this as the underlying sewer system used to transmit our preset algorithms."
If the sewer is clogged, no matter how many intelligent beings you stuff in, they'll just turn into a pile of cyber excrement. Is that simple enough to understand?
call out--
Cyber Fox, standing to the side, was completely dumbfounded. He let out an exaggerated whistle of amazement and looked at Su Hao as if he were a monster.
As the team's top technical expert, he knew all too well how terrifying mathematical intuition and spatial imagination were required behind that seemingly effortless logical reconstruction.
"I originally thought you were just a monster in the extremely hardcore field of pure mathematics, but I never expected your programming skills to be this freakish?! How did your brain even grow?"
Just then.
Buzzing! Buzzing—!
Just as Su Hao was about to continue frantically typing out code, his laptop, which had been performing reasonably well, suddenly started emitting an extremely shrill roar!
The fan was spinning so hard it looked like it was about to take off, and the CPU temperature was approaching the warning line.
Clearly, the machine's configuration has been completely overwhelmed by this terrifying amount of computation.
Upon seeing this, Root's eye twitched violently, and he immediately gave Cyber Fox a wink.
"It won't work, this computer simply can't handle his computational load."
We need to quickly assemble a top-of-the-line computer for our mathematicians!
"Huh?" Su Hao's hand, which was typing on the keyboard, was suspended in mid-air, looking completely bewildered.
Before Su Hao could even react, Cyber Fox had already cleared a large assembly space on the spacious desk like a raging bulldozer.
Then, Cyber Fox simply pulled open the door to the storage room next door, which had been locked all along.
Su Hao was shocked after just one glance.
The boxes of top-of-the-line computer components inside were piled up like mountains!
The highest frequency memory sticks, flagship motherboard, huge water cooling radiator, a bunch of case fans, kilowatt-level platinum power supply, and even professional thermal pads were scattered all over the floor in an extremely luxurious manner.
"To run your insanely demanding algorithm, to ensure absolutely no lag, everything needs to be on the highest configuration!"
Cyber Fox frantically searched while shouting.
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