The elephant in the room is that sometimes you ask for a 1 and you get a 0.
Maybe it happens one time in a trillion or a quadrillion, actually different computers of the same make and model have bit error rates that vary by factors of a thousand or a million.
Mainstream hardware has never embraced error correction, instead when their computer crashes people attribute it to perversity on the part of Microsoft. Being aggressive with clock rates and frequency is just like Russian Roulette, but with a quick-firing gun that has 10^15 chambers, one of which is loaded.
Maybe it happens one time in a trillion or a quadrillion, actually different computers of the same make and model have bit error rates that vary by factors of a thousand or a million.
Mainstream hardware has never embraced error correction, instead when their computer crashes people attribute it to perversity on the part of Microsoft. Being aggressive with clock rates and frequency is just like Russian Roulette, but with a quick-firing gun that has 10^15 chambers, one of which is loaded.