Toward a better list iterator for the kernel
Toward a better list iterator for the kernel
Posted Mar 12, 2022 19:28 UTC (Sat) by Wol (subscriber, #4433)In reply to: Toward a better list iterator for the kernel by moorray
Parent article: Toward a better list iterator for the kernel
Alexander Graham Bell is credited with the invention of the telephone, but he just happened to beat his competitor to the patent office. I think the same is true of the Wright Brothers (the first successful aircraft was built in 1896 in England - it just didn't actually fly til about 10 years later ... :-)
These things are probably obvious to any competent mind that decides it wants to tackle the problem.
Cheers,
Wol
Posted Mar 13, 2022 20:13 UTC (Sun)
by marcH (subscriber, #57642)
[Link] (8 responses)
If you're French you know that the "first" flight was performed by either Clément Ader or Louis Blériot, if you're Brazilian then you know that it was Alberto Santos-Dumont, if you're German then maybe it's Gustav Weißkopf / Whitehead? Etc.
Everyone is correct as long as you tweak the definition of "first flight".
> These things are probably obvious to any competent mind that decides it wants to tackle the problem.
I wouldn't say "obvious" but Isaac Newton (one of the very few who was _really_ way ahead of his time) put it best: "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants." This sentence was apparently inspired by older, similar sentences in an interesting, "recursive" twist.
Humanity is a very social species who can't achieve anything alone yet we love celebrating heroes. Inventors' contribution to progress is nothing compared to the Excel spreadsheets of the Department of Education but heroes make much better stories and movies and are a little bit more... inspirational! Heroes are especially important in American culture where the gaps are the widest; dispensing hope is so much cheaper. Panem, circenses and... "spes"?
> but he just happened to beat his competitor to the patent office.
Exactly: whatever you do, make sure you get some lawyers and businessmen on your side. History shows you can't make a difference without their help.
Posted Mar 13, 2022 20:32 UTC (Sun)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (6 responses)
Was he? I think he was probably one of the founding members of the Royal Society, and many of them were equally "ahead of their time" - or was it we just have no real record of their predecessors? (Because before the Royal Society there *were* no records? Just like Shakespeare is "the greatest English playwright", not because he was necessarily any good, but also because he was the *first* major English playwright, writing at the time "modern English" was born.)
And while Newton wrote "In Principia Mathematica", I think it was primarily written to beat his contemporaries into the history books. Certainly it's disputed whether he was the "inventor" of Calculus, and the same is probably true of most of his other advances.
From what I can make out, the rivalry was intense, and Newton just won the publicity war.
Cheers,
Posted Mar 13, 2022 22:16 UTC (Sun)
by NYKevin (subscriber, #129325)
[Link] (1 responses)
Interestingly, they also had very different ideas of what calculus was good for. Newton wanted to use it to model the physical world, while Leibniz seemed to think it had more metaphysical/philosophical significance. Arguably, they were both right, because the notion of Taylor series and analytic continuation have greatly improved our intuition and understanding of What Functions Are... and that has in turn been used to bring complex analysis into the world of physics and engineering (e.g. in the form of modern Fourier analysis). It's all connected in the end.
Posted Mar 14, 2022 15:53 UTC (Mon)
by ballombe (subscriber, #9523)
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While Hilbert gave his theorems numbers (90, 92 are the most well known)
Posted Mar 13, 2022 22:33 UTC (Sun)
by roc (subscriber, #30627)
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Posted Mar 14, 2022 0:13 UTC (Mon)
by marcH (subscriber, #57642)
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> Certainly it's disputed whether he was the "inventor" of Calculus, and the same is probably true of most of his other advances.
OK, but:
> > heroes make much better stories and movies
So here it is: https://youtu.be/gMlf1ELvRzc "Then Newton came along and changed the game"
;-)
There is a genuine mathematician in awe of Newton in this video, so I think he was pretty far ahead. I have no idea whether he was ahead _alone_.
> or was it we just have no real record of their predecessors? (Because before the Royal Society there *were* no records?)
I'm not an expert but I'm pretty sure we have plenty of scientific records much, much older than Newton. Newton lived more than 200 years after Gutenberg so I really doubt that was still a problem at a time.
Posted Mar 17, 2022 8:56 UTC (Thu)
by mathstuf (subscriber, #69389)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Mar 17, 2022 13:05 UTC (Thu)
by excors (subscriber, #95769)
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Posted Mar 20, 2022 10:24 UTC (Sun)
by ghane (guest, #1805)
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The way I understand it, it was a dig at his arch-rival (in the 1670s), Hooke, who was short (and may have had a twisted back).
Posted Mar 13, 2022 20:23 UTC (Sun)
by marcH (subscriber, #57642)
[Link]
> Well, so this is kind of cliché in technology, the whole Tesla versus Edison, where Tesla is seen as the visionary scientist and crazy idea man. And people love Tesla. I mean, there are people who name their companies after him.
> The other person there is Edison, who is actually often vilified for being kind of pedestrian and is -- I mean, his most famous quote is, "Genius is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration." And I'm in the Edison camp, even if people don't always like him. Because if you actually compare the two, Tesla has kind of this mind grab these days, but who actually changed the world? Edison may not have been a nice person, he did a lot of things -- he was maybe not so intellectual, not so visionary. But I think I'm more of an Edison than a Tesla.
PS: funny enough Elon Musk was there early but not at the very beginning of Tesla. There's a great interview of the Tesla founders where they (among others) acknowledge everything that came before Tesla.
Posted Mar 19, 2022 20:54 UTC (Sat)
by giraffedata (guest, #1954)
[Link]
Being the first to fly, first to file and the first to publicize count for a lot. I think it's vanishingly rare for someone to be so smart he comes up with an idea that no one else has; turning such an idea into an invention is more worthy of credit than having the idea.
I've read that many things were invented in China before they were invented in Europe (in days before the two were in communication), but it's because of the European inventor that I have them today, so I tend to celebrate the European inventor.
Inventors and heroes
Inventors and heroes
Wol
Inventors and heroes
Inventors and heroes
Really, ideas only exist when they are shared, and for that you need to be at least two.
Poincarré gave them the names of people whose work inspired him.
Inventors and heroes
Inventors and heroes
Inventors and heroes
Inventors and heroes
Inventors and heroes
Toward a better list iterator for the kernel
Independent invention
Alexander Graham Bell is credited with the invention of the telephone, but he just happened to beat his competitor to the patent office. I think the same is true of the Wright Brothers (the first successful aircraft was built in 1896 in England - it just didn't actually fly til about 10 years later ... :-)