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Stephen Wolfram Livestreams

BERJAYA

UPCOMING: January 31, 2024 @ 2:00PM ET

Live CEOing 767: Language Design in Wolfram Language »

Recent Livestreams

Future of Science & Technology Q&A:
Live CEOing #766:
Business, Innovation & Managing Life Q&A:
Do you think a PhD is worth it when you are later in your career? Or should you just self-learn if you can? As far as managing life, what has been your biggest takeaway in your career/personal life that you would like to pass on to the younger generation? How do you approach risk-taking in business, and what advice would you give to aspiring entrepreneurs about managing risk? Do you have any New Year's resolutions/big plans for 2024? I am a software engineer, and the field of quant + data science is very appealing to me. What advice do you have? I teach my first class tomorrow—what advice do you have? Do you have any advice on pricing software licences? I build bespoke design software and I'm kind of winging the licences. What do you think of subscription vs. one-time purchase for software? Imagine Mathematica with inline YouTube ads! What is the coolest thing your company has ever done? How much computational thinking and modeling do you do on the business itself, both for decision making and planning? Do you consider yourself a celebrity? What has been your coolest encounter/weirdest encounter? What do you think about ​organic education matters? Basically, can you use AI to figure out a fixed point for education (what you want to understand) vs. testing for knowledge? Can you ski? Can you picture AI creating an alternative legal system? I'm wondering how you imagine your symbolic language might interface with AI. I'm not sure about the implementation, but on a surface level, Wolfram Language feels closer to interfacing with an AI than text-based languages. Your mother was a major anthropologist and philosopher. Has she had any impact on you? ​It would be cool to live in that future where you talk to your AI in your house and it does things for you. When talking to ChatGPT, I ask politely and say thank you—way more than I should, too. Uncanny valley and all that! (Plus being Canadian, maybe.) Do you think there is harm in always learning? I think humans aren't built to be putting so much demand for energy on our brains. But darn, it feels good to learn! Would you want yourself to be automated, so that you would no longer need to exist? How far would you want yourself automated? View Less »
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Science & Technology Q&A for Kids & Others:
History of Science & Technology Q&A:
How often do separate ideas emerge (like convergent evolution) and merge to either compliment each other or "make whole" ideas that didn't have all the answers themselves? What surprises you most about the history of science and technology? What is there to learn? What's the history of timekeeping? How did civilizations create the calendar and clocks? What science supports this? How would you keep track of time/sync up your devices? Today it's easy with electronic devices. I'm imagining my microwave and stove clock always being a minute or two out of sync from manually setting it. How did you get to know so much, and in such depth, about such vastly disparate historical topics? Seems this could be fascinating to hear about in and of itself. Makes me think that maybe blockchains are the evolution of agreed-upon ledgers in one single agreed-upon time. Do you think the Fourier transform is fundamental to nature? Historically, it appears in quantum field theory, quantum computing, signal processing, etc. When did time become an important variable in science?​ Why do you suppose no one tried to continue with Nikola Tesla's incomplete inventions?​ As a software engineer, I discover elegant academic programming languages all the time, but they never seem to gain much traction in industry. On the other hand, we have languages like JavaScript, which was pretty much developed as a prototype but is now ubiquitous in web development. I'd be curious to hear your thoughts on this history of "organic" development of programming languages. Are there any pros to using "historical" technology, or is newer always better? View Less »
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Live CEOing #765:
Future of Science & Technology Q&A:
What scientific breakthroughs would you like to see in 2024? Whatever happened to graphene? Is it still a viable product of future technologies? Could we build "bio-vehicles," e.g. instead of batteries, use synthetic adipose tissue, which is ~50–100 times more mass efficient per kWh? (Is there a future in bio-batteries?) Based on the level of computational advances this last decade, with the trend only showing even more of the same, do you think that traditional engineering disciplines will be relegated to OpenLLM? Do you think we'll see mass-producible, room-temperature superconductors in the next decade? ​It has been suggested that AI will displace coders/programmers. Do you think AI might also replace many physical and chemical experiments? Any thoughts on "zero-knowledge proofs," i.e. the ability to make proofs without revealing details? Given that some of our greatest accomplishments as a species have happened when we mimic nature, how important do you think biomimetics will be going forward? Can you see a time when the discovery of new mathematical theorems and axioms will be generated from AIs? When Betelgeuse explodes, will humans be okay? Do you think smart textiles/computing fabrics will take off or be viable? Would you wear, say, a sweater to hear instead of a hearing aid? But things like math, geometry and especially tessellation have patterns that are universally implicit and can be interpreted as interesting by their own existence, and not just by the view of humanity. Is there a way we can use Brownian motion at a molecular scale as a type of fingerprint for nano-sensors to create things that are piracy-proof? Why are the axioms of mathematics necessarily the ones that are effective at describing things we see as well? What do things like dreams and "higher states of consciousness" spoken about in Eastern philosophies tell us about ourselves as observers? Would it be easy to have an AI remaster old movies, both real ones and cartoons, so we can watch all the old gems in high-end graphics? "Interesting" is defined by a "coolness" threshold. Since the scientific paradigm was a major cause for the Enlightenment, can we expect the (multi-)computational paradigm to kick off a socio-philosophical paradigm of comparable importance? If someone invented calculus in the Stone Age, it would probably have not been used for anything... Do you think there are some ideas that may be "rediscovered" because they have a better use? View Less »
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Business, Innovation & Managing Life Q&A:
What have been some of the most fascinating questions you have answered? Are there still topics to explore? What do you see as the biggest opportunities and challenges facing businesses in your industry in the next five years? What is the best approach to develop sound computational thinking? Are there really good books or courses? Are there fields you know have depth but don't interest you at all? I'm a person who gets easily distracted—a jack of all trades, but master of none. I envy people who dedicate their focus on a specific field to become an expert, but I fail to do so myself. As I'm getting older, I still dabble and try to find "my thing." Do you reckon there's an approach that could help me to get more focused on a single field without that initial spark? How do you keep track of what you want to learn? How do you manage your time effectively so you dedicate ample time to each of the things you want to learn? Do you have some activity to calm your brain (perhaps after a long day of concentrating), i.e. to wind down, before you go to sleep? Learn to surf, then wait for the right wave: what was the wave you would say you caught that kicked off your career? How has publishing as a singular author on innovative ideas changed your life trajectory? Do you feel like institutional authority was important for you to be heard, or was it truly the merit of your work? Have you ever thought about leaving the software world and producing hardware? ​Is it feasible for an individual to start a software company from scratch today the way you developed SMP into a viable, complete product? Are there other types of technology or software you would like to experiment with for future endeavors? I am a very big user of the Wolfram Cloud on mobile when I am out and about. I would love for the iOS version to be given more love. ​​Would you say that the accessibility of education on the internet is making universities obsolete? I work in logistics and we're FAR away from using AI. We actually took a step backward recently with an internal software solution that does not work for specific customers at all. I do have ideas, but I have to open tickets that are never resolved. I know for sure my ideas can be built into the system. I'm about to give up or write a better system (kidding). How would you approach a huge business about this? How do we encourage more people to study the difficult mathematics behind machine learning and robot process automation, especially when they're younger and more neuroplastic, so that many of the most groundbreaking developments are accessible to a greater contingent of global society? View Less »
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Science & Technology Q&A for Kids & Others:
History of Science & Technology Q&A:
Future of Science & Technology Q&A:
​​What will "prompt engineering" be like if LLMs are super-intelligent? ​​Maybe language is stopping us to get some ideas because we cannot formulate the idea in our known languages? ​​Elon yesterday on X was saying how most of our memory is digital now and same will happen with concepts, just stored on some device. Seems like, for creatures like cuttlefish or octopus where they have the ability to change the shape texture and color of their skin, they must have something "different" going on in their brains, where they are not just capable of perceiving shape color and texture of the outside world, but also the ability to physically "mimicking" it.... Just a thought. In the future the Earth would probably be a big brain. If every connected computer on the internet was running neuron-computations... What if we need to deal with concepts that need more neural mass that we possess? ​What do you think of the plans to shoot feature films in space? What impact will the Internet of Things (IoT) and 5G technology have on our daily lives, from smart cities to autonomous vehicles? ​​Someone should start a tourist livestream channel. Do you think in the future humans could interact with AIs via a visualization of latent space to create new concepts? Missing the ability to try the food, a major reason to actually go somewhere. Do you think there'd be a way to "taste" via computation? Thank you for these livestreams. Dr Wolfram mentioned on the stream Wednesday his work on developing a course on computation thinking. I wonder if he could comment on how that is going? When is AI going to travel the galaxy on its own and create its own habitat on a different planet? Have you ever had figgy pudding? If so, how would you describe it? View Less »
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Live CEOing #764: