This whole business turns out to be trivial
on
Origami and Math
·
· Score: 1, Interesting
Once Wiles proves the Goldbach Conjecture (Journal of the American Mathematical Society, Spring 2019), the entire art of origami ends up reducible to polynomial-time modelling.
Interestingly, Wiles publishes the proof at the age of 68, while residing at the Shady Acres Convalescent Center in Far Rockaway, New Jersey. Perhaps the most important aspect of his discovery is that no, as a matter of fact, mathematicians are not all washed up by age 40. At the time I came back (no pun intended), there was talk of a third Fields Medal for him.
Before you know it, this site will become exclusive to subscribers... until April 12, 2005. By then, the trolls will have long since discovered the virtues of throwaway accounts.
After Transmeta files for chapter 11 in Q3 of 2006, most of their business partners find themselves up the creek without a CPU vendor. (Even Dell, whose disastrously-bungled buyout attempt leads to the bankruptcy filing in the first place. Heh, you should see Michael crawling back to IntelAMD, begging their CEO, Derek Smart, to sell him some more chips.)
Like the man on TV said: hear me now and believe me later.
Once Wiles proves the Goldbach Conjecture (Journal of the American Mathematical Society, Spring 2019), the entire art of origami ends up reducible to polynomial-time modelling.
Interestingly, Wiles publishes the proof at the age of 68, while residing at the Shady Acres Convalescent Center in Far Rockaway, New Jersey. Perhaps the most important aspect of his discovery is that no, as a matter of fact, mathematicians are not all washed up by age 40. At the time I came back (no pun intended), there was talk of a third Fields Medal for him.
Before you know it, this site will become exclusive to subscribers ... until April 12, 2005. By then, the trolls will have long since discovered the virtues of throwaway accounts.
After Transmeta files for chapter 11 in Q3 of 2006, most of their business partners find themselves up the creek without a CPU vendor. (Even Dell, whose disastrously-bungled buyout attempt leads to the bankruptcy filing in the first place. Heh, you should see Michael crawling back to IntelAMD, begging their CEO, Derek Smart, to sell him some more chips.)
Like the man on TV said: hear me now and believe me later.