“…Omissions-even of very important papers-in the subsequent paragraphs of this section are thus inevitable. Recently 'trending' topics in this discourse include (Acar, 2012): 'fuzzy' or non-deterministic computing with 'fuzzy' or non-deterministic machines (Li, 2008;Syropoulos, 2016Syropoulos, , 2006, 'infinite-' or 'continuous-time' computing by 'infinite-' or 'continuous-time Turing Machines' (Bournez & Campagnolo, 2008;Hamkins, 2002;Hamkins & Lewis, 2000), 'interactive' (Goldin & Wegner, 2008) or 'reactive' Turing machines (also including: infinite alphabets) (Baeten, Luttik, & Van Tilburg, 2013;Luttik & Yang, 2014 that can communicate or receive 'oracles' (Franchette, 2015;Resconi & Licata, 2012) while running, structurally self-modifying Turing machines (Ramezanian, 2014), 'quantum computing' in which many computations can be super-positioned into one, 'analogue computation' by means of various 'classical' (non-quantum and non-discrete) physical systems (Siegelmann & Sontag, 1994), 'relativistic' computing with the aim of somehow exploiting the space-time effects described by Einstein's theories (Andréka, Németi, & Németi, 2009), 'chemical' and/or 'biological' and/or 'bio-chemical' computing with the aim of using sufficiently complex molecules or living cells or entire organisms as computing devices (Maldonado, Cruz, & Nelson, 2015), as well as 'hybrid' approaches in which any of the previously mentioned ideas can be anyhow mixed and combined: see for example (Syropoulos, 2009). Entire journals and series of conference proceedings are nowadays dedicated to the theme of 'unconventional' computing (International Journal of Unconventional Computing, Unconventional Models of Computation: International Conference Proceedings: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Workshop Physics and Computation), whereby especially the possibility of 'hyper-computing' (da Costa & Doria, 2006;Hagar & Korolev, 2007;Loff & Costa, 2009;MacLennan, 2009;Teuscher & Sipper, 2002;Wegner & Goldin, 2003)-i.e., being able to decide the classically undecidable Halting Problem effectively and in general by new (whatever 'new' means) devices-has been (and is still being) much contested and debated (in some cases even by naming the opponents)…”