| ▲ | himata4113 2 hours ago | |||||||
bringing CTF solutions into the real world is a really good idea! I didn't even think of this until you mentioned it. we have very powerful simulation tools so something like "project a pattern at these angles" wouldn't really work as you could simulate that. I guess something cool is that we can make simulating the solution very expensive, but in real world it would be free since it's analog... As long as simulations take longer than it takes for a human to find a solution it would be a pretty good way to deal with it. I am sure people smarter than me can come up with something. Maybe I was too early to dismiss human creativity. | ||||||||
| ▲ | dguest an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Maybe CTF is dead, but there are plenty of fun problems in the real world -- ask any scientist, engineer, or medical researcher. There are a million places where a computer can interact with a non-digital system in a loop. - Tune an FPGA, or a whole data-center, or just a physical computer. - Make a drone fly somewhere. - Design a selective toxin (or anti-toxin). Or, you know, get more people to click on adds. All totally possible to automate. | ||||||||
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