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  2. Conway's Game of Life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway's_Game_of_Life

    The earliest interesting patterns in the Game of Life were discovered without the use of computers. The simplest still lifes and oscillators were discovered while tracking the fates of various small starting configurations using graph paper, blackboards, and physical game boards, such as those used in Go.

  3. Glider (Conway's Game of Life) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glider_(Conway's_Game_of_Life)

    Some patterns require a very large number (sometimes hundreds) of glider collisions; some oscillators, exotic spaceships, puffer trains, guns, etc. Whether the construction of an exotic pattern from gliders can possibly mean it can occur naturally, is still conjecture. Gliders can also be collided with other patterns with interesting results.

  4. Garden of Eden (cellular automaton) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_of_Eden_(cellular...

    Subsequently, Hardouin-Duparc used his formal language approach to find the narrowest possible Gardens of Eden in Conway's Game of Life, with the bounding box for their live cells being only six cells wide. [10] The smallest known orphan pattern in Conway's Game of Life (by area of its bounding box) was found by Steven Eker in April 2016.

  5. Here’s what happened when neural networks took on the Game of ...

    www.aol.com/happened-neural-networks-took-game...

    Artificial neural networks vs the Game of Life. There are a few reasons the Game of Life is an interesting experiment for neural networks. “We already know a solution,” Jacob Springer, a ...

  6. Breeder (cellular automaton) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breeder_(cellular_automaton)

    Evolution of an MSM breeder – a puffer that produces Gosper guns, which in turn emit gliders.. In cellular automata such as Conway's Game of Life, a breeder is a pattern that exhibits quadratic growth, by generating multiple copies of a secondary pattern, each of which then generates multiple copies of a tertiary pattern.

  7. LifeWiki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LifeWiki

    LifeWiki's homepage. LifeWiki is a wiki dedicated to Conway's Game of Life. [1] [2] It hosts over 2000 articles on the subject [3] and a large collection of Life patterns stored in a format based on run-length encoding [4] that it uses to interoperate with other Life software such as Golly.

  8. Still life (cellular automaton) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Still_life_(cellular...

    There are many naturally occurring still lifes in Conway's Game of Life. A random initial pattern will leave behind a great deal of debris, containing small oscillators and a large variety of still lifes. The most common still life (i.e. that most likely to be generated from a random initial state) is the block. [3]

  9. Oscillator (cellular automaton) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscillator_(cellular...

    In Conway's Game of Life, oscillators had been identified and named as early as 1971. [1] Since then it has been shown that finite oscillators exist for all periods. [2] [3] [4] Additionally, until July 2022, the only known examples for period 34 were considered trivial because they consisted of essentially separate components that oscillate at smaller periods.