I found an old memoir by someone who had worked with Richard Feynman way back in the 80's.
Those days seem to presage a lot of things that have become commercial hot topics these days -- highly parallel computers and neural nets.
One day in the spring of 1983, when I was having lunch with Richard Feynman, I mentioned to him that I was planning to start a company to build a parallel computer with a million processors. (I was at the time a graduate student at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab). His reaction was unequivocal: "That is positively the dopiest idea I ever heard." For Richard a crazy idea was an opportunity to prove it wrong—or prove it right. Either way, he was interested. By the end of lunch he had agreed to spend the summer working at the company.
In his last years, Feynman helped build an innovative computer. He had great fun with computers. Half the fun was explaining things to anyone who would listen.
I was alive those days; might I be as old as aristarchus?
-- hendrik
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 17 2018, @05:28PM (1 child)
There is a 'clobber by statistical churning' method of science that is popular. Whatever gets the funding so you don't have to look for an off-campus job, I suppose.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 17 2018, @05:32PM
Nah, he didn't mean data piling/simulation research, but getting sucked into computers/programming instead of focusing on their own fields.