World Domination

From RepRap
Revision as of 21:21, 3 April 2010 by DavidCary (talk | contribs) (doubling time; everyone on Earth)
Jump to: navigation, search

Please Note: World Domination not part of official RepRap or RepRap Library Policy.

"Take over the world and make it better" has been retired as a term of Library jargon, and needs to be replaced with something that means the same thing, but seems more innocuous.

Scaling

See also Scaling. How many RepRaps are out there, anyway?

doubling time

The "doubling time" of a particular self-replicating system is the amount of time it takes to "duplicate itself". (The "fast production" tag has a few comments on how to speed this up).

Which takes less time:

  • each machine prints the parts for a single child, then spits them out for assembly, and then prints the parts for the next child, or
  • each machine produces a "litter" by printing out all the parts for 2 or more children simultaneously

?

The "Moving towards production" post implies that a Mendel can print out all its own parts, at roughly 9 hours (?) per tray of parts x 4 trays of parts = 36 hours (?).

The Development:Mendel Apollo (see [1]) is a larger variant of a Mendel that can print all its own parts in a single tray of parts. Still 36 hours (?), but now we can let it run over the weekend rather than having to manually unload the parts every 9 hours.

The Mini-Mendel page claims the Mini-Mendel can "reproduce three times faster". It links to a Erik de Bruijn blog post that estimates about 15 hours to print out all the parts.

However, this is all *printing* time. It doesn't really count as the next generation until it has been assembled, calibrated, loaded with raw materials, and started printing out the next generation.

Assuming a sufficiently large number of humans are putting these machines together and using them to fab the next generation, it appears that a "slow" generation time of 1 week is possible with the current Mendel design, and a "fast" generation time of 1 day seems possible with only minor improvements to the Mini-Mendel design. (Some bacteria can double every 6 hours[2]).

As of 2010, the human population of the world is estimated to be almost 7,000,000,000. The world's largest city has less than 20 million inhabitants. The RepRap project began in the City of Bath England which has a population of about 84,000 including the University of Bath which has about 13,000 students.

Using the above very rough estimates, and assuming a sufficiently large number of humans who want a RepRap and can somehow organize themselves and obtain adequate quantities of raw materials, energy, and "vitamins" (computers, motors, etc.), we get:

 "slow"   "fast"     generations     population
 0        0          0               1 machine: initial RepStrap starts printing next-generation RepRap
 1 week   1 day      1 generation    2 machines
 2 weeks  2 days     2 generations   4 machines
 3 weeks  3 days     3 generations   8 machines
 ...
 13 weeks 13 days   13 generations   8 kibimachines
 14 weeks 14 days   14 generations  16 kibimachines: more than enough for every student at the University of Bath
 15 weeks 15 days   15 generations  32 kibimachines
 16 weeks 16 days   16 generations  64 kibimachines
 17 weeks 17 days   17 generations 128 kibimachines: more than enough for the entire population of Bath
 ...
 25 weeks 25 days   25 generations  32 Mebimachines: more than enough for the entire population of the largest city on Earth
 ...
 33 weeks 33 days   33 generations   8 Gibimachines: more than enough for the entire population of Earth.

This does *not* require any one person to work for 33 weeks on nothing but RepRaps. Perhaps every person receives a box containing 1 slightly-used RepRap and enough parts to build another RepRap, and works only a single week assembling those parts to build a second RepRap, using both RepRaps to print 3 more sets of parts, and then boxes up the results (2 repraps, 2 sets of parts) into 2 boxes and sends 2 other people a box identical to the box that person originally received.

So why doesn't everyone on Earth who wants one have one already?

Library Humor Policy

It is definitely part of Library Humor. Library Humor needs be very carefully labeled and documented as such so that it does not interfere with or pretend to be Library Policy.