You guys aren't following the rules though, light speed at it's real speed is 186,000 mps, if you slow it down you are not going at light speed because there will still be light that travels at 186,000mps! If you look at it this way, you could slow anything down and travel at any speed, if this was the case we would be able to time travel right now and the theory of relativity may as well be junk!
1. In light of stuff like string theory [
http://superstringtheory.com/] your comments on time-travel (where time is a state rather than an tangible property like say speed or mass) is somewhat diminished
2. The speed of light in a vaccuum is accepted as 299 792 458 m/s. If you want to get technical (as we should to be somewhat accurate), lets use the proper terminology
3. Given photon P[1] with V[1]=Vc[vacuum] it is accepted that photon P[1] is travelling at 299792458m/s
4. Given photon P[2] with V[2]=Vc[water] it is accepted that photon P[2] is travelling at 224900569 m/s
5. Given that P[1] and P[2] (and streams of such) are elements of this "light", light has two known speeds, notably V[1] and V[2]. In simple terms -- just because the 6800GT is default clocked at 350MHz doesnt mean it runs at 350MHz day-in-day-out-24x7 ... it we consider that possibility and extend it ... then momentum would pose a problem (not to mention air resistance).
6. If you are really insistant on light being Vc[vaccuum] then you should consider that you've not personally (i dont think so at least, correct me if im wrong), light travelling at its "proper" (and ill get to that momentarily) speed. This is because the light that you are interacting with travels at, for the most part, Vc[air] = 299702547 m/s. The point of this? Not all light is equal -- and any light that you and I might encounter with respect to tubing or whatnot -- believe it or not, it wont be travelling at this so-called "proper" speed
7. Given the two photon streams P[1] and P[2] as described above, I sincerely hope you dont suggest that P[2] isnt a photon stream because it doesnt travel at the speed of P[1]. For all intents and purposes, light is a "photon stream" so the speed of the photon stream is the speed of light.
8. Speed is the time derivative of position. Period. Just because we calculate the time derivative to something other than Vc[vaccuum] doesnt mean that "this calculated/observed speed of light is wrong" THe only conclusion you can draw from that is that "the observed/calculated speed is less than the accepted maximum speed". Now if you want to attempt a corrollary of that, "that the time derivative of any photon stream should/can be equal to Vc[vaccuum]" then you'll find yourself up for a lot of dissapointment. A realworld analogy would be that we should all write to nVidia saying that they got the speed of the 6800 wrong because the ASUS V9999GE is clocked faster.
Slowing something down and then comparing it with our maximum speeds is hardly going the speed of light
So I guess we should all complain to nVidia because they obviously dont know the speed of the 6800
The speed of light will always be 186,000mps
Then Im sorry to break it to you, you've not encountered this wonderful bliss. You've only encountered Vc[air] ... hey -- just like the rest of us
you can alter it with science but that doesn't change the fact that light travels at 186,000mps!
Ok lemme get this straight:
1. This supposed "only" speed of light is 299 792 458 m/s and photon streams will always and only travel at this speed.
2. We can change this speed of light.
You do realize this is a contradiction right?
Your example of how a 6800GT clocked at 300MHz will still be a 6800GT is true but if you are running a 6800GT at 300MHz when it is capable of 350MHz that doesn't mean that a card that is only capable of 320MHz Beats the card that is capable of 350MHz!
I was kinda hoping you'd take me up on this
1. At no point in time did I suggest the card was not capable of 320MHz or 350MHz (or even more as many have pleasently found)
2. Coming back to reality (away from this theoretical mumbo jumbo for just a sec), people look for end-results (stocks, politics, day to day expenses, report cards etc) ... the simple fact that we say have 6800GT @ 300MHz and a 6800GT @ 350MHz ... whether or not the card is capable of 350MHz is quite inconsequential to the end-user... they just want results
3. Going right back to pseudo-semi-theory land, suppose I do indulge you .... we take an XFX 6800 and compare it to an ASUS V9999GE .... by your logic, the XFX6800 is not a 6800 even though it features a 6800GPU and runs at 300/350 and as such we should be dissapointed since the V9999GE features a 6800 running at 350/500.
It's true that this thread is just a bunch of theories and unrelated garbage but you can't just alter things to make something faster than the other. It's similar to cheating, light doesn't classify as light speed if you reduce the speed of light! If a GeForce 6800GT is clocked @ 350Mhz and you reduce the speed to 300MHz you can't clock a 6600GT to 300MHz and say you are running the 6600GT at 6800GT speeds!!!
1. You bring up a very good word: cheating. Yes. Perhaps it is "cheating" (both in the light and video card cases) but the bottom line is that it doesnt matter HOW you get whatever speed you get it. What matters is that it IS that way. Analogy 1: Suppose we were all wrong this time and Vc[vaccuum]=299 892 458 m/s, does this mean that the proof that this is the new speed of light in a vaccuum is wrong? No. Analogy 2: We have the ASUS V9999GE running at 350/500 ... does this mean that the card is obviously a fraud? No.
Heehee on with the debate
