Mathematician Claims Proof of Riemann Hypothesis
TheSync points to this press release about a Purdue University mathematician, Louis de Branges de Bourcia, who claims to have "proven the Riemann hypothesis, considered to be the greatest unsolved problem in mathematics. It states that all non-trivial zeros of the zeta function lie on the line 1/2 + it as t ranges over the real numbers. You can read his proof here. The Clay Mathematics Institute offers a $1 million prize to the first prover."
You're probably right. But society does recognize a one million dollar prize. This one may actually get TV time. Funny how that works.
IAALS.
A long time ago, in the distant past, there were Finders. Dedicated individuals that wandered around outside the camps and found stuff. Over time, it became more difficult to find stuff, and the Finders became the Searchers. Many times the Searchers would return empty handed. As technologies improve and new insights are gained, the same fruitless searches of the past were repeated. Sometimes with a new results, sometimes as fruitless as before. Regardless, it was this not giving up on an idea just because it failed once that led the change in title from Searcher to Researcher.
Most reseachers I know produce one magnificent failure after another on the quest for a new piece of knowledge. Everything that is easy to find has probably already been discovered, and mathematics is no different. So the guy made a few failed attempts at solving the puzzle, this doesn't make each sucessor to the first attempt a garaunteed failure.
There's the occasional post that deserves to be modded to "+10 -- Best Damn Thing I've Read On Slashdot This Year".
Thanks!
You are not a beautiful or unique snowflake -- but you could be if you got off your ass.