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Philip Emeagwali's video: A Brief Note on the Philip Emeagwali Internet Father of the Internet History of the Internet

@A Brief Note on the Philip Emeagwali Internet | Father of the Internet | History of the Internet
I'm @Philip Emeagwali. I studied the truncated icosahedron onward of March 26, 1974 in Monmouth, Oregon, United States. The truncated icosahedron and the cube in the sixteenth dimension were the geometrical shapes that inspired my new internets and that I framed my new internets around. I used the truncated icosahedron as my inspiration for my new Cosmic Supercomputer and for inventing my new internet and inventing it with a one-to-one correspondence between its processors, or computers, and the as many vertices of the truncated icosahedron. I invented that new Cosmic Supercomputer that was de facto the first internet that is a global network of thousands of equidistant processors. That Philip Emeagwali theorized internet was inspired by sixteen years of studying how and why bees honeycombs are hexagonally-structured. I used the cube in the sixteenth dimension as my inspiration for inventing the first internet and inventing it with a one-to-one correspondence between its two-raised-to-power sixteen processors, or its 64 binary thousand computers, and the sixty-five thousand five hundred and thirty-six [65,536] vertices of the cube in the sixteenth dimension. The Philip Emeagwali Internet Also, I used the geometrical object, called the truncated icosahedron, as my design inspiration for inventing a never-before-seen global network of processors that is a new internet. I constructively reduced that new internet to practice and to a new supercomputer that has a one-to-one correspondence between its email wires and the as many bi-directional edges of that truncated icosahedron. I named that new internet that gave rise to a never-before-seen supercomputer a Cosmic Supercomputer. The technology is also called the Philip Emeagwali internet and the Philip Emeagwali Supercomputer. The HyperBall Supercomputer To invent a second internet, I used the cube in the sixteenth dimension, called the hypercube, as my design inspiration. I used the hypercube to invent a new internet that is a never-before-understood global network of processors. That new internet outlined and defined a HyperBall Supercomputer that has a one-to-one correspondence between its sixteen times two-raised-to-power sixteen bi-directional email wires, or its one binary million email wires, and the 1,048,576 bi-directional edges of the cube in the sixteenth dimension. My geometrical clarity that emanated from both the truncated icosahedron and the hypercube made the two new internets that I invented both visible and concrete. My geometrical clarity allowed my contributions to the development of the most massively parallel processing supercomputer that is the fastest computer of today, or the modern supercomputer, to stand out on their own. New inventions yield new words and newer languages. The word “supercomputer” was first used in 1967. The word “internet” was not in the Daily Times of Nigeria, that was the newspaper that I read while growing up in the early 1970s in Onitsha, East Central State, Nigeria. New inventions yield new illustrations. Therefore, the new Philip Emeagwali internet, or the Philip Emeagwali Cosmic Supercomputer, must yield a never-before-seen illustration of that new internet and that new supercomputer. The illustrations of my HyperBall global network of processors were beautiful. There were widely copied without giving credit to Philip Emeagwali. You’ve seen illustrations that were inspired by the Philip Emeagwali internet and seen them on magazines or television or in schoolrooms. But you didn’t realize that Philip Emeagwali first illustrated them for his new internet. The earliest illustrations of my small copy of the internet that was camouflaged by 64 binary thousand processors became like a wild horse that belongs to any horse rider that finds it. But like a wild horse, the new supercomputer that I illustrated was difficult to ride. TOPICS philip emeagwali father of the internet, philip emeagwali and the internet, Philip Emeagwali Father of the Internet, Philip Emeagwali Biography, Who invented the Internet?, history of the Internet, When was the Internet invented?, Who invented the Internet first?, Who created the Internet and why?, A Father of the Internet For information about Philip Emeagwali, http://emeagwali.com https://facebook.com/emeagwali https://twitter.com/emeagwali https://instagram.com/philipemeagwali https://flickr.com/philipemeagwali https://linkedin.com/in/emeagwali https://soundcloud.com/emeagwali https://youtube.com/emeagwali Philip Emeagwali 180127 1 2 of 3

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This video was published on 2020-02-21 02:29:47 GMT by @Philip-Emeagwali on Youtube. Philip Emeagwali has total 5.4K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 609 video.This video has received 4 Likes which are lower than the average likes that Philip Emeagwali gets . @Philip-Emeagwali receives an average views of 379.6 per video on Youtube.This video has received 0 comments which are lower than the average comments that Philip Emeagwali gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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