Stephen Wolfram – the physicist who created Mathematica – reflects on how this computational tool has changed in 30 years, and on the practical and conceptual role that computational thinking plays in ...
This article originally appeared on TechRepublic. When it came to figuring out which computer scientist should help linguists decipher inscrutable alien texts, it was Stephen Wolfram who got the call.
Soon after it was released a few short years ago, I began to delve into Steven Wolfram's new book, "A Fundamental Theory of Physics." I have followed his work since the early '90s when I first used ...
As described by its creator, Stephen Wolfram, who was born in London in 1959 and received a Ph.D. in physics at Cal Tech in 1979, NKS is "the study of the computational universe," more specifically, ...
Stephen Wolfram, inventor of the Wolfram computational language and the Mathematica software, announced that he may have found a path to the holy grail of physics: A fundamental theory of everything.
Stephen Wolfram has been working on computing language paradigms for nearly thirty years. His products are well known in scientific and engineering circles. The company’s Mathematica was first ...
Stephen Wolfram has had the sort of career that The Big Bang Theory's Sheldon Cooper might identify with: PhD in particle physics at 20, youngest-ever MacArthur Fellow at 21. At 26, Wikipedia tells us ...
Hardware Ex-Intel and AMD graphics chief Raja Koduri promises a RISC-V based IP that 'rearchitects the GPU from first principles' but with few details in the startup word-salad AI Elon Musk claims to ...
Stephen Wolfram, the famed physicist and computer scientist known for his company Wolfram Research, believes he's close to figuring out the fundamental theory of physics. What is that, exactly?
An Associate Professor in Physics at the University of Portsmouth in the UK believes that gravity could be explained by information-reducing processes inside a computational or simulated universe. Dr ...