(12-16-2015, 06:05 AM)CatMan Wrote: [ -> ] (12-16-2015, 02:57 AM)Shannon Wrote: [ -> ]It's being fitted. I'm about 75% sure I'll end up being able to add it. What is it?
C.A.S.T.: Continuous Automatic Self Training. Done at a subconscious, and possibly conscious level, to achieve the goal faster, better and more permanently. I know it works for 6G format; and I'm pretty sure it will work in 5G as well.
Let's hope. So far so good.
Speaking of 6G, Shannon.
I remember you saying a preliminary WPS 6G figure is 416.67. Also, that it may only be able to be used 3 hours a day.
I ran some numbers, and since I use 5G for a massive amount of hours per day, I wanted to see the difference in WPS between the two, but I was surprised with what I discovered. Now, let's say I listen for 19 hours a day, which is slightly conservative...
Okay, numbers time:
6G: 1,500,012 words per hour = 4,500,036 words per day.
5G: 288,000 words per hour = 5,472,000 words per day.
See that? So oddly, if the 6G numbers hold, then I'd be getting LESS words per day. Surprising, but I realise I'm an outlier as most don't listen anywhere near the hours I do. Also, I remember you have improved 6G and you've said the 416.67 WPS figure is outdated now. Also, 6G techs will likely do a lot of uniquely powerful things in 6G format, but still, the WPS figure surprises me.
My long-winded question is, can you provide a new, accurate WPS figure so I can calm my fears? Haha! Even a new hour estimate if that has changed at all, I don't know how much testing has been done by yourself or by models, just spitballing.
Thank you in advance, Shannon. Can't wait for OF 5G, man!
With 6G, words per second is not the primary indicator of power. The primary power indicator is a number of things of much more challenging explanation.
However, I just recompressed the script for the prototype, which was becoming challenging to build again. It is now around 82,500 words compressed.
After calculating the compression ratio, I have concluded that you just would not believe me if I told you the WPS of the current compression rate. I apparently have managed to successfully achieve an almost limitless compression ratio, and I did not realize that because last time I calculated it I left out one of the variables.
The question isn't "What is the words per minute?". The question is, "How many words per minute do I want you to get?" And the answer is, "How many words per minute works best?"
There is a technology in 6G scripting that allows for me to compress the script in a way that allows for this nearly infinite compression while the brain and subconscious still can comprehend and execute it. It's like impulse drive (5G) vs. warp (6G). There's no comparison. The only real limit is, "What works best?" and so far I haven't optimized for that, but for me to say that you're effectively getting the amount of words per second that the current 6G script generates would not be realistically something I could expect you to believe if I told you.
How did I forget this when I calculated it last? Easy. When every new technology added is blowing you away, and there are a seemingly endless number of them coming one after the other, it's easy to forget about #13 when you're working on #76.
Giving you the number of WPS for the 6G prototype won't give you the number that matters because the prototype isn't a program you're using. Other programs will have different values. But when I say that a few hours a day with 6G beats 21 hours a day with 5G, it's because of this incredible compression ratio. You could listen to a 5G program like AM6 24/7 and I can handily beat the words per second without effort in a few hours a day if I so choose, and literally to whatever degree I choose, because of the way 6G works and the compression methodologies in use.
Fear not my friend. It's not pie in the sky. But don't take anything as set in stone yet, because I'm not done developing it, and I'm not done determining optimal usage configuration. It may be less than three hours a day and it may be more. I'm hoping to make it 1 hour a day, with options for "as much as you want". What actually comes out in the end, however, is going to be what actually works best, not what I want.