Branch of discrete mathematics
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Episode: 3308 Why do we play board games? Today, board games as models of the world.
Alfred Menezes is a Professor at the University of Waterloo in Ontario. In 2001, he won the Hall Medal from the Institute of Combinatorics and its Applications. Alfred is the lead author of the Handbook of Applied Cryptography, and which has been cited over 25,000 times. He has published many high impact papers, especially in areas of public key encryption and elliptic curve cryptography, and was the co-inventor of the ECDSA signature method. His website for online courses is https://cryptography101.ca. The "Cryptography101: Building Blocks" and "Cryptography 101: Deployments" courses are lectures from the undergraduate "Applied Cryptography" that he has taught at Waterloo since 2000. The former includes a five-lecture introduction to elliptic curve cryptography. He also has a course on "Kyber and Dilithium", and soon an intro to "Lattice-based cryptography". Video recording: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5GWFAewQ80
It's September 25, 2024. Glow is back with news for kids about the Asian-American Experience (and Beyond). You are what you Eat on a National Family Health & Fitness Day Month! BLIZZARD WIZARD NEWS! Singaporean-American on Math Marvelshttps://www.cmu.edu/mcs/news-events/2024/0725_loh-international-math.htmlHUNGRY KITCHEN NEWS! Robot Chefs Revolutionize Korean-American Cuisine https://www.news8000.com/lifestyle/food-and-recipes/robot-chefs-are-cooking-food-at-a-korean-restaurant-in-new-jersey/article_ebbada2e-7119-5978-a50c-ab0789538c25.htmlMAGICAL THEATRICAL NEWS! A Whole New World: Indian-American Stars Shine on Broadwayhttps://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/broadway-aladdin-indian-american-stars-rcna164520AI TECH NEWS! ChatGPT: Asian-American Parents' New Family Translatorhttps://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/immigrant-parents-replacing-kids-chatgpt-rcna167618DIGITAL WORLD NEWS! Vietnamese-American on Decluttering your Devices https://www.today.com/video/declutter-your-digital-devices-to-increase-safety-and-performance-201674309645
Episode: 2885 Very Large Numbers. Today, let's talk about very large numbers.
JMM Storytelling Event: minoritymath.org/storytellingNational Diversity in STEM Conference (SACNAS): sacnas.orgNSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP): https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2023/nsf23605/nsf23605.htm Connect with Mathematically Uncensored:Email: mu@minoritymath.orgTwitter: @MathUncensoredWebsite: minoritymath.org/mathematically-uncensored
Join Sofia Baca and Nerd Forensics co-host Jacob Urban as they discuss all things counting!Counting is the first arithmetic concept we learn, and we typically learn to do so during early childhood. Counting is the basis of arithmetic. Before people could manipulate numbers, numbers had to exist. Counting was first done on the body, before it was done on apparatuses outside the body such as clay tablets and hard drives. However, counting has become an invaluable tool in mathematics itself, as became apparent when counting started to be examined analytically. How did counting begin? What is the study of combinatorics? And what can be counted? All of this and more, on this episode of Breaking Math.This episode is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (full text: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)[Featuring: Sofia Baca; Jacob Urban]This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5545277/advertisement
Connect with Mathematically Uncensored:Email: mu@minoritymath.orgTwitter: @MathUncensoredWebsite: minoritymath.org/mathematically-uncensored
Rethinking Number Theory (RNT4) Workshop: https://sites.google.com/view/rethinkingnumbertheory/homeMathematically Gifted and Black Dr. Sylvia T. Bozeman Predoctoral Fellowship: https://mathematicallygiftedandblack.com/funding/ Connect with Mathematically Uncensored:Email: mu@minoritymath.orgTwitter: @MathUncensoredWebsite: minoritymath.org/mathematically-uncensored
Professional Development for Emerging Education Researchers (PEER) Institute: https://peerinstitute.org/schools/Project NExT: https://www.maa.org/programs-and-communities/professional-development/project-nextRethinking Number Theory: https://sites.google.com/view/rethinkingnumbertheory/home Connect with Mathematically Uncensored:Email: mu@minoritymath.orgTwitter: @MathUncensoredWebsite: minoritymath.org/mathematically-uncensored
Lathisms Scholarship: https://www.lathisms.org/scholarshipsMathematically Gifted and Black Dr. Sylvia T. Bozeman Predoctoral Fellowship: https://mathematicallygiftedandblack.com/funding/ Connect with Mathematically Uncensored:Email: mu@minoritymath.orgTwitter: @MathUncensoredWebsite: minoritymath.org/mathematically-uncensored
Ricardo Fukasawa is a Professor at the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization at the University of Waterloo. He did his undergraduate and Masters in Electrical Engineering at PUC-Rio in Brazil. He worked at GAPSO Inc from 2000-2003. He then did a PhD in the Algorithms, Combinatorics and Optimization program at GeorgiaTech. He was a recipient of the IBM Herman Goldstine Postdoctoral fellowship from 2008-2009, and moved to Waterloo afterwards. He received the Early Researcher Award from the Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation. He is an Associate editor of Operations Research, OR Letters, RAIRO-OR and INFOR: Information Systems and Operational Research, and a Technical Editor for Mathematical Programming Computation. He has publications in several prestigious international journals like Mathematical Programming, Math of OR, INFORMS Journal on Computing, Mathematical Programming Computation and Transportation Science. His research interests are in developing theory and computational tools for the exact solution of hard discrete optimization problems, as well as their applications in practical problems. He has contributions in several areas, including Integer Programming, Vehicle Routing, Stochastic Programming, Bilevel Programming, as well as several applications.
Five years after the first episode of Better Known, Ivan Wise talks again to previous guests Richard Elwes, Wasfi Kani and Kerry Shale. They discuss previous choices that they agree (and disagree with) and new choices which they think should be better known. Richard Elwes is a Senior Teaching Fellow at the University of Leeds, where he has taught courses on Geometry, Number Theory, Algebraic Topology, Combinatorics, Logic, History of Maths and Computational Mathematics. Find out more at www.richardelwes.co.uk. Wasfi Kani is the founder of Grange Park Opera. Wasfi Kani is an Honorary Fellow of the RIBA and St Hilda's College, Oxford. She received a CBE in the 2020 New Year's Honours list for services to music. She received an OBE in the New Year's Honours List 2002 for her work in bringing her second opera company, Pimlico Opera, into prisons. Find out more at www.grangeparkopera.co.uk. Kerry Shale's theatre appearances include Frost/Nixon, His Girl Friday, The Normal Heart and six self-written solo shows. Television work includes The Sandman, Dr. Who and The Trip. Films include Batgirl and Angel Has Fallen. For BBC radio, he has won three Sony Awards for acting and writing. His latest play, an adaptation of Yentl The Yeshiva Boy, will be broadcast early in 2023. He co-presents the podcast Is It Rolling, Bob? Talking Dylan: https://podcasts.apple.com/no/podcast/is-it-rolling-bob-talking-dylan/id1437321669. Find out more at www.kerryshale.com. Mark Sykes and the exhumed coffin http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/humber/7617968.stm The Minoan civilisation https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2009/08/13/knossos-fakes-facts-and-mystery/ Steven Appleby https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Appleby This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm
Glad to announce that this Sun Sep 4, 11AM ET, we, Prof. Noga Alon of Princeton University with over 600 papers, recipient of prestigious awards such as ACM Paris Kanellakis Award (2019), Dijkstra Prize (2016), Gödel Prize (2005), Shaw Prize in Mathematical Sciences (2022) (see his wiki page at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NogaAlon for more details) and Prof. Mohammad Hajiaghayi of UMD plan to have a YouTube Live @hajiaghayi, and simultaneously Live events on Instagram @mhajiaghayi, LinkedIn @Mohammad Hajiaghayi, Twitter @MTHajiaghayi, and Facebook @Mohammad Hajiaghayi of life, research, open problems on Combinatorics and Computation: how algorithms in particular streaming or distributed meets math concepts such as algebraic geometry, topology, and model theory, among other topics. Please join us on our simultaneous Lives at YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, Twitter, or Facebook and ask questions you may have.#ComputerScience #Combinatorics #CS #Streaming #Distributed #AlgebraicGeometry #Topology #PhDAdvising #Princeton #Microsoft #Godel #Kanellakis #Dijkstra #Shaw #OpenProblems
This program is recorded in my Discord group "NihonGO Japanese Language School", we offer group lessons for free, almost every day! Feel free to join the server and our lesson anytime ;) "NihonGO Japanese Language School" https://discord.gg/WEMKCAGhxA === #nihongopodcast #japanese #日本語 #giapponese #日文 #日语 #일본어 #ญี่ปุ่น #japonais #japonés #japonês #nihongo #hiragana #katakana #studyjapanese #learnjapanese #japanesephrases #japantrip #japantravel #jlpt #日本語能力試験 #kanji #japaneselanguage #japanesepodcast #にほんご #ひらがな #カタカナ #japan
Dr. Julian Sahasrabudhe is a University Lecturer (Assistant Professor in the American/Canadian system) in the Department of Pure Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics at the University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Dr. Sahasrabudhe is the recipient of the 2021 European Prize in Combinatorics. In a conversation with students from Simon Fraser University, Amritha Raj Kizhakkeputhukulathil Ramanan, Brian Krammer, and Anmol Anmol Singh, Dr. Sahasrabudhe talks about how it was to be a late bloomer in mathematics, some of the places that he visited and the people that he met on his academic journey, and about his current research interests.
Leonid Gurvits; Los Alamos National Laboratory 16 February 2007 – 11:30 to 12:30
Dr. Fan Chung Graham is the Paul Erdös Professor in Combinatorics at the University of California, San Diego, California. Dr. Chung Graham's research interests include spectral graph theory, extremal graph theory, graph labeling, graph decompositions, random graphs, graph algorithms, parallel structures, and various applications of graph theory in Internet computing, communication networks, software reliability, chemistry, and engineering. In a conversation with students from Simon Fraser University, Amritha Raj Kizhakkeputhukulathil Ramanan, Anmol Anmol Singh, and Brian Krammer, Dr. Chung Graham talks about how she as a graduate student worked on improving the lower bound of R(3,3,3,3), tells about the benefits that art brings to her life, and shares some of her memories about her husband Ron Graham.
Episode: 2885 Very Large Numbers. Today, let's talk about very large numbers.
Dr. Amanda Montejano is a Professor (Titular "A" ) at the Multidisciplinary Unit of Teaching and Research of the Science Faculty (Facultad de Ciencias ) of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Juriquilla located in the city of Querétaro. She is also Research Fellow at the Mathematical Innovation Center (CINNMA A.C.). Dr. Montejano's main areas of research are Combinatorics and Graph Theory, although she is also interested in some aspects of Combinatorial Number Theory. In a conversation with students from Simon Fraser University, Wassim Khelifi, Connor Marriam, and Manan Sood, Dr. Montejano talks about how she became a mathematician, her research in Ramsey theory, and how it is to be a woman mathematician.
In this new episode of Defence Deconstructed, David Perry speaks to Eric Miller, Nina Bindel, Allison Schwartz, and Randolph Mank about quantum technology. This episode was made possible thanks to the support of the Amazon Web Services Institute. Defence Deconstructed is brought to you by Irving Shipbuilding. A strategic partner of the federal government's National Shipbuilding Strategy, providing skilled, well-paying jobs that support Canada's economic recovery. Defence Deconstructed is also brought to you by Boeing Participant's Bio: Eric Miller is a Fellow at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute and President of Rideau Potomac Strategy Group, a cross-border consultancy that advises clients on government affairs, economics, cybersecurity and geopolitical developments. https://www.cgai.ca/eric_miller Allison Schwartz is the Global Government Relations and Public Affairs Leader at D-Wave. https://dwavefederal.com/leadership/ Nina Bindel is a post-doctoral researcher at the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization at the University of Waterloo. https://ninabindel.de/ Randolph Mank is a Fellow at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute, a global business executive, and a three-time former Canadian ambassador, with over thirty years of experience in both the public and private sectors around the world. https://www.cgai.ca/randolph_mank Host Bio: Dave Perry (host): Senior Analyst and Vice President with the Canadian Global Affairs Institute (www.cgai.ca/david_perry) Recording Date: 24 June 2021 Follow the Canadian Global Affairs Institute on Facebook, Twitter (@CAGlobalAffairs), or on LinkedIn. Head over to our website at www.cgai.ca for more commentary. Produced by Charlotte Duval-Lantoine. Music credits to Drew Phillips
Other podcast summaries in Apple Podcasts: http://bit.ly/5-min-summariesIn other podcast apps, search 'podcast summaries'.Original episode: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lex-fridman-podcast/id1434243584?i=1000521770972Written summary: https://www.owltail.com/summaries/EQD6f-183-Po-Shen-Loh-Mathematics-Math-Olympiad
5 minute podcast summaries of: Tim Ferriss, Hidden Brain, Sam Harris, Lex Fridman, Jordan Peterson
Other podcast summaries in Apple Podcasts: http://bit.ly/5-min-summariesIn other podcast apps, search 'podcast summaries'.Original episode: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lex-fridman-podcast/id1434243584?i=1000521770972Written summary: https://www.owltail.com/summaries/EQD6f-183-Po-Shen-Loh-Mathematics-Math-Olympiad
Po-Shen Loh is a mathematician at CMU and coach of the USA International Math Olympiad team. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: – The Jordan Harbinger Show: https://jordanharbinger.com/lex/ – Onnit: https://lexfridman.com/onnit – BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off – Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex and use code LEX to get special savings – LMNT: https://drinkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack EPISODE LINKS: Po’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/poshenloh Po’s Website: https://www.poshenloh.com/ Daily Challenges: https://daily.poshenloh.com/ NOVID: https://www.novid.org/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: – Check out the
Professor Chris Bauch and his team in Applied Mathematics create computer models that outline likely effects of government decisions, public-health measures, and our own behaviour during the pandemic. The extension of the current provincial shutdown and stay-at-home order affects in-person teaching, on-campus research, and other operations. We mourn the loss of professor Tom Coleman, from the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization, a former dean of the Faculty of Mathematics. Human Rights, Equity and Inclusion announces spring workshops. And a Return to Campus Town Hall will take place May 11. Links in this episode: Shutdown and campus research: https://uwaterloo.ca/coronavirus/news/implications-provincial-shutdown-measures-research-1 Spring term, undergraduate: https://uwaterloo.ca/coronavirus/academic-information/undergraduate-student-information#spring-2021 Spring term, graduate: https://uwaterloo.ca/coronavirus/academic-information/graduate-student-information#spring-2021 Border request letter, undergraduate: https://uwaterloo.ca/forms/undergraduate-studies/letter-cross-ontario-border-request Border request letter, graduate: https://uwaterloo.ca/forms/graduate-studies/letter-cross-ontario-border-request-graduate-students Travel for international students: https://uwaterloo.ca/international-student-guide/resources/feature/covid-19 Concept’s new interim director: https://concept.uwaterloo.ca/39043/ HREI workshops: https://uwaterloo.ca/human-rights-equity-inclusion/events/tag/117 Alumni happy hour: https://uwaterloo.ca/alumni/events-and-awards/alumni-weekend#happyhourbox Return to Campus Town Hall: https://www.ticketfi.com/event/4176/return-to-campus-town-hall
Have you ever wondered how to calculate the probability of die rolls? Today's episode has you covered with a crash course in the math behind dice!Episode Segements: Intro (0:00) Explanation of the block die (2:07) Explanation of the d6 die (6:03) Combinatorics (9:29) Probability (14:13) Expected Value (22:18) Conclusion (25:42) You can watch all of the action in the Mid-atlantic Mauling League at: https://www.twitch.tv/evaunito2You can follow EvaUnit02 on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/EvaUnit02
Josh Holland CPT, CMS, is a Holistic Trainer, Cellular Exercise Therapist, Biohacker and host of Simply Walk the Talk podcast, working with top celebrities and influencers around the world. https://joshuajholland.com https://instagram.com/joshuajholland https://bit.ly/SimplyWalktheTalk SHOW NOTES
Show Notes(2:12) Luis shared how he got excited about learning mathematics and specialized in combinatorics.(4:26) Luis discussed his experience studying Math for his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees at the University of Waterloo - where he took many courses in combinatorics and engaged in undergraduate research.(5:59) Luis pursued his Ph.D. in Mathematics at the University of Michigan - where he worked on Schubert Calculus that intersects combinatorics and geometry (check out his Ph.D. dissertation).(8:45) Luis distinguished the differences between doing research in mathematics and machine learning.(11:33) Luis went over his time as a Postdoc Fellow and Lecturer at the University of Quebec at Montreal - where he was a member of the LaCIM lab (whose areas of research originating in Combinatorics and its relationships to Algebra and Computer Science) and taught classes in French.(13:47) Luis explained why he left academia and got his job as a Machine Learning Engineer at Google in 2014.(16:33) Luis discussed the engineering and analytical challenges he encountered as part of the video recommendations team at YouTube.(19:58) Luis shared lessons he learned to transition from academia to industry.(22:25) Luis went over his move to become the Head of Content for AI and Data Science at Udacity, alongside his online education passion.(26:08) Luis explained Udacity's educational approach to course content design in various nano degree programs, including Machine Learning, Deep Learning, and Data Science.(28:46) Luis unpacked his end-to-end process of making YouTube, where he teaches concepts in Machine Learning and Math in layman terms.(31:01) Luis unpacked his statement, "Humans are bad at abstraction, but great at math," from his video “You Are Much Better At Math Than You Think.”(34:46) Luis shared his 3 favorite Machine Learning videos: Restricted Boltzmann Machines, A Friendly Introduction to Machine Learning, and My Story with the Thue-Morse Sequence.(37:18) Luis discussed the data science culture at Apple, where he spent one-year teaching machine learning to the employees and doing internal consulting in AI-related projects.(39:06) Luis revealed his interest in quantum computing. He works as a Quantum AI Research Scientist at Zapata Computing, a quantum software company that offers computing solutions for industrial and commercial use.(43:19) Luis mentioned the challenges of writing “Grokking Machine Learning” - a technical book with Manning planned to be published next year - like a mystery novel.(46:12) Luis shared the differences between working in Silicon Valley and Canada.(47:50) Closing segment.His Contact InfoWebsiteTwitterLinkedInYouTubeGitHubGoogle ScholarMediumHis Recommended ResourcesSebastian ThrunAndrew NgRana el Kaliouby"How Not To Be Wrong: The Power of Mathematical Thinking" by Jordan Ellenberg"Weapons of Math Destruction" by Cathy O'NeilHere are the codes for free eBook copies of Luis' book "Grokking Machine Learning": gmldcr-D659, gmldcr-2512, gmldcr-0752, gmldcr-30A2, gmldcr-01E8. Additionally, use the code poddcast19 to receive a 40% discount of all Manning products!
Show Notes(2:12) Luis shared how he got excited about learning mathematics and specialized in combinatorics.(4:26) Luis discussed his experience studying Math for his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees at the University of Waterloo - where he took many courses in combinatorics and engaged in undergraduate research.(5:59) Luis pursued his Ph.D. in Mathematics at the University of Michigan - where he worked on Schubert Calculus that intersects combinatorics and geometry (check out his Ph.D. dissertation).(8:45) Luis distinguished the differences between doing research in mathematics and machine learning.(11:33) Luis went over his time as a Postdoc Fellow and Lecturer at the University of Quebec at Montreal - where he was a member of the LaCIM lab (whose areas of research originating in Combinatorics and its relationships to Algebra and Computer Science) and taught classes in French.(13:47) Luis explained why he left academia and got his job as a Machine Learning Engineer at Google in 2014.(16:33) Luis discussed the engineering and analytical challenges he encountered as part of the video recommendations team at YouTube.(19:58) Luis shared lessons he learned to transition from academia to industry.(22:25) Luis went over his move to become the Head of Content for AI and Data Science at Udacity, alongside his online education passion.(26:08) Luis explained Udacity's educational approach to course content design in various nano degree programs, including Machine Learning, Deep Learning, and Data Science.(28:46) Luis unpacked his end-to-end process of making YouTube, where he teaches concepts in Machine Learning and Math in layman terms.(31:01) Luis unpacked his statement, "Humans are bad at abstraction, but great at math," from his video “You Are Much Better At Math Than You Think.”(34:46) Luis shared his 3 favorite Machine Learning videos: Restricted Boltzmann Machines, A Friendly Introduction to Machine Learning, and My Story with the Thue-Morse Sequence.(37:18) Luis discussed the data science culture at Apple, where he spent one-year teaching machine learning to the employees and doing internal consulting in AI-related projects.(39:06) Luis revealed his interest in quantum computing. He works as a Quantum AI Research Scientist at Zapata Computing, a quantum software company that offers computing solutions for industrial and commercial use.(43:19) Luis mentioned the challenges of writing “Grokking Machine Learning” - a technical book with Manning planned to be published next year - like a mystery novel.(46:12) Luis shared the differences between working in Silicon Valley and Canada.(47:50) Closing segment.His Contact InfoWebsiteTwitterLinkedInYouTubeGitHubGoogle ScholarMediumHis Recommended ResourcesSebastian ThrunAndrew NgRana el Kaliouby"How Not To Be Wrong: The Power of Mathematical Thinking" by Jordan Ellenberg"Weapons of Math Destruction" by Cathy O'NeilHere are the codes for free eBook copies of Luis' book "Grokking Machine Learning": gmldcr-D659, gmldcr-2512, gmldcr-0752, gmldcr-30A2, gmldcr-01E8. Additionally, use the code poddcast19 to receive a 40% discount of all Manning products!
This week on the Weak-Side Podcast, Conor and Jenny discuss Dak Prescott's devastating injury and the evils of the franchise tag, the waning margin for error in the NFL's plans to play 256 games in a 17-week season and this week's Bird team in the news, the Falcons. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
TLS 1.3 has been widely praised as a major upgrade to the Transport Layer Security protocol responsible for securing the majority of Web traffic. But one area in which TLS 1.3 seems to be lacking is its potential for resistance to attacks that utilize quantum computing – computers that, theoretically, could factor the products of large primes and solve the discrete logarithm problem in relatively short periods of time, significantly affecting the security of TLS 1.3. Today however, we’re discussing an interesting new paper, to be published at this year’s ACM CCS, which introduces KEMTLS: a modified version of TLS 1.3 that uses Key Encapsulation Mechanisms, or KEMs, instead of signatures for server authentication, thereby providing a sort of “post-quantum TLS”. But what even are KEMs? Are quantum computers even a thing that we should be worried about? On the first ever episode of Cryptography FM, we’ll be hosting Dr. Douglas Stebila and PhD Candidate Thom Wiggers to discuss these questions and more. Dr. Douglas Stebila is an Associate Professor of cryptography in the Department of Combinatorics & Optimization at the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. His research focuses on improving the security of key exchange protocols and Internet cryptography protocols such as TLS and SSH, including the development of quantum-resistant solutions. His previous work on the integration of elliptic curve cryptography in TLS has been deployed on hundreds of millions of web browsers and servers worldwide. Thom Wiggers is a PhD Candidate at the Institute of Computing and Information Sciences at Radboud University in The Netherlands. He is working on the interactions of post-quantum cryptography with protocols, under the supervision of Dr. Peter Schwabe, who is also a co-author of the research work that we’re going to discuss today. Links to discussed papers: * Post-quantum TLS without handshake signatures (https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/534) * Big Other: Surveillance Capitalism and the Prospects of an Information Civilization (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2594754) * Supersingular isogeny key exchange for beginners (https://eprint.iacr.org/2019/1321) * Clone Detection in Secure Messaging: Improving Post-Compromise Security in Practice (https://cispa.saarland/group/cremers/downloads/papers/CFKN2020-messaging_cloning.pdf) Music composed by Toby Fox and performed by Sean Schafianski (https://seanschafianski.bandcamp.com/). Special Guests: Douglas Stebila and Thom Wiggers.
Pascal's triangle is a triangular pattern of binomial coefficients. If that makes no sense, in real life, you can use Pascal's triangle to figure out combinations of things, like pizza! The incredible story of Blaise Pascal is all in the podcast! If you want to read more about Pascal's triangle as well as the history of math and science, please visit me at www.MathScienceHistory.com. And while you're there, feel free to buy me a cup of coffee to support the podcast and the blog! Until next time, carpe diem! Gabrielle
Hey, Counties!This is a *special circumstance episode.* Shira & Arielle didn't have an internet connection for most of the week due to tropical storm Isaias and therefore put together a different kind of episode. Enjoy!Each episode of Counter Programming will focus on a "counter" of some sort. Today, we review the film "You Can Count on Me" and listen in on an interview between Shira and her brother, Ari, who studied combinatorics in college.Thank you to Ashlee for lending your voice for this section of the episode! You can do the same. Record a voice note saying, "Hi, i'm (your name), and you're listening to Counter Programming with Shira & Arielle." Then send it to us: counterprogrammingshiraarielle@gmail.com. Insta: @counterprogrammingpod.Leave us a review on Apple or a comment on Castbox.Tweet at us. Here's Shira. Here's Arielle.This week's episode was sponsored by:- Made To Order Podcast: give the gift of a personalized podcast episode- Podcast Movement: attend the world's largest gathering of podcasters for 20% off with code COUNTER.- Relationship Hero: use code "counter" for $50 off of your first relationship coaching session!Buzzsprout, y'all, the best podcast host in the game. Thank you to Daniel Tureck, our engineer.Thank you to Caio Slikta, our logo designer.Our music is called Tennessee Hayride and it's by Jason Shaw.
What can we do to build confidence and community in Science and Math? What is the mathematical field, combinatorics? Dr. Pamela E. Harris, assistant professor of mathematics at Williams College, answers these questions in our season premiere of Season 6. Dr. Harris was a keynote speaker at the National SACNAS Convention in Honolulu, Hawaii and we discussed personal journeys and the joys of watching undergraduate students tackle complex problems without fear. To find out more about Dr. Pamela E. Harris check out http://lathisms.org/ & https://www.pamelaeharris.com/
Tommy discusses the mathematical principle of Combinatorics.
Die Fakultät ist ein wichtiger Begriff der Kombinatorik, da mit ihr die Anzahl aller Anordnungen einer endlichen Menge bestimmt werden kann. In diesem Video erkläre ich dir die Fakultät, seine Definition und einige Beispiele. Dieses Video steht unter CC-BY-SA 4.0.
Die Fakultät kann auch rekursiv definiert werden, womit man eine mathematisch exaktere Definition erhält. Dieses Video erklärt dir, wie diese rekursive Definition funktioniert. Das Video steht unter CC-BY-SA 4.0.
Tien Chih is an Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Montana State University-Billings. He received his Ph.D. at the University of Montana, Missoula in 2014 under the supervision of George McRae. Tien does research in different fields including Algebraic Combinatorics, Categorical Combinatorics, and Graph Theory. More recently, he has been working on developing homotopy theory in the category of graphs.You can find Tien's website at:https://www.msubillings.edu/mathfaculty/tchih/ https://edfinity.com/products and in particular openintro https://edfinity.co/openintrostats.www.sensemakesmath.comPODCAST: http://sensemakesmath.buzzsprout.com/TWITTER: @SenseMakesMathPATREON: https://www.patreon.com/sensemakesmathFACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/SenseMakesMathSTORE: https://sensemakesmath.storenvy.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/sensemakesmath)
Jay Cummings is an Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Sacramento State University. He received his Ph.D. in 2016 from the University of California, San Diego under the supervision of Ron Graham. Jay’s research is in many different flavors of combinatorics: enumerative, extremal, probabilistic, spectral and algebraic. He has an Erdos Number of 2 and is the Author of “Real Analysis: a Long-Form Mathematics Textbook”. His website is www.longformmath.com where you can find his Blog and information about his textbook and future books to come.Jay's personal website can be found here:http://webpages.csus.edu/Jay.Cummings/We would like to thank Jay for being on our show "Meet a Mathematician" and for sharing his stories and perspective with us!www.sensemakesmath.comPODCAST: http://sensemakesmath.buzzsprout.com/TWITTER: @SenseMakesMathPATREON: https://www.patreon.com/sensemakesmathFACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/SenseMakesMathSTORE: https://sensemakesmath.storenvy.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/sensemakesmath)
Alexander Diaz-Lopez is an Assistant Professor at Villanova University in Pennsylvania. He is the Co-Founder of both Lathisms and the DREAMS Program, the Associate Editor of Notices of the American Mathematical Society, the co-editor of the AMS PhD+Epsilon Blog, and the co-organizer of the Mid-Atlantic Algebra, Geometry, and Combinatorics workshop.Alex received his Ph.D. in 2013 from the University of Notre Dame under the supervision of Matthew Dyer. His research interests are in algebra and combinatorics; more specifically his research focuses on Coxeter groups, Representations of Hecke Algebras, and root systems of reflection systems.You can find his website here:https://sites.google.com/site/diazlopezalexander/We'd like to thank Alexander for being on our show "Meet a Mathematician" and for sharing his stories and perspective with us!www.sensemakesmath.comPODCAST: http://sensemakesmath.buzzsprout.com/TWITTER: @SenseMakesMathPATREON: https://www.patreon.com/sensemakesmathFACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/SenseMakesMathSTORE: https://sensemakesmath.storenvy.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/sensemakesmath)
The gang dissects the Stadia reveal, talks about Nindies, and takes influencers to task. [Recorded March 23, 2019]
The gang dissects the Stadia reveal, talks about Nindies, and takes influencers to task. [Recorded March 23, 2019]
Last week we did A Beautiful Mind and now Good Will Hunting. We are really hitting all the well-known maths films at the moment aren't we?More importantly joining us this week we have the wonderfulDr James GrimePhilanthropist, playboy, billionaire... he is none of this things, but he may have identified the real Will Hunting!This week we touch on such subjects as:Is University a scam?Good Will Hunting needs a prequel!Will James and Liz ever write a paper about the maths of Dirty Dancing? If you're interested in watching Good Will Hunting you can follow the Amazon link below. Further reading links:What is the Hadwiger-Nelson problem and who is Aubrey de Grey?We also mention the fields of Combinatorics, Graph theory and Fourier theory. Subscribe via iTunes.Follow us on twitter @PodcastMathsAt, as well as @ThomasEWoolley and @benmparker.
The boys attempt to Christmas. Will they solve anything? Maybe! Odds and Evenings Show Notes hexagons r bae Credits Hosted By Alaric - http://alaricstephen.com Alex - http://twitter.com/speakmouthwords Edited by Alex Actual usable content by Alaric
A parking lot has 16 spaces in a row. Twelve cars arrive, each of which requires one parking space, and their drivers choose their spaces at random from among the available spaces. Santa Claus then arrives in his oversized and very full sleigh, which requires two adjacent spaces. What is the probability that there’s a place for him? // Spiciness: **** out of ****
What’s the largest 2-digit prime factor of “200 choose 100”? // Spiciness: *** out of ****
How many three-digit numbers satisfy the property that the middle digit is the average of the first and the last digits? // Spiciness: ** out of ****
You have four stuffed animals. You line up three of them at a time, always single file. How many distinct lineups are possible? // Bonus points if you also tell me the number of distinct ways you can arrange them in a circle instead of a line. // Spiciness: * out of ****
It was early in the morning of New Years Day and Kelly had just bought a purse-load of psychedelic mushrooms from Laramie Wyoming's local "druggist." Kelly handed them out to the assembled company and took some himself. He felt a bit apathetic about the world. But when he went outside to look at the stars, he realized what he wanted more than anything else in the world...a book on combinatorics.
More Great Poker Content!Learn about our partners, Solve For Why!Sign up for Solve for Why TV and get 5% off anything in the store with coupon code Justhands2019! Location: Hollywood Casino, Toledo Ohio Stakes: $2/5 9-handed table Villain 1 UTG (1000) raises to 20, which was standard for the table. This player is a 'hyper LAG'. He's experienced and aggressive but Hero doubts he's ever read a poker book/watched a training video/been active in poker forums. Villain 2 UTG+1 (600) calls. 1-2 reg, late 40s. Hero has played with him but never at 2-5 before. He's limpy-cally preflop and fit or fold but sticky post. Villain 3 OTB (220) calls. He has bought in for the max of $500 twice now but only has $220 remaining after losing a stack, buying back in for 100bb and bleeding off a bunch of chips calling pre and folding to cbets and value owning himself. This player is a retired lawyer around 65. He's an experienced player that plays like an old-school TAG, but is capable of semi-bluffing and bluffing when he senses weakness. Hero in the BB (380) calls the remaining 15 with JsJd. Flop (80) QhJh10d Hero checks, UTG bets 50, UTG+1 folds, Button calls, Hero calls. Turn (230) 8d Hero checks, UTG checks, Button ships for remaining $150, Hero calls, UTG folds. Button has AK and the river bricks.
More Great Poker Content!Learn about our partners, Solve For Why!Sign up for Solve for Why TV and get 5% off anything in the store with coupon code Justhands2019! Location: Maryland Live!, Hanover Maryland Stakes: 2/5 10-handed table All villains have hero covered. Villain 1 UTG limps: mid-30s recreational player, has limped a lot preflop before and has been observed donk betting with draws twice. Hero (600) is UTG+1 with AKo (no spade) and makes it 20. Villain 2 OTB flats: tight older player. Villain 3 calls in the SB, wearing scarf. Villain 1 calls. Flop (85) As2h5s Villain 1 leads for 25, Hero makes it 75, Villain 2 OTB makes it 175. Villain 1 calls, Hero calls. Turn (610) 7c Check Check Check River (610) 8h Check Check, Villain 2 bets 140. Villain 1 folds, Hero calls.
This is the second in a series of lectures in the seminar “Combinatorics and Theoretical Computer Science: The Design Lemma” at the University of Chicago, given by László Babai, the George and Elizabeth Yovovich Professor in the Departments of Computer Science and Mathematics at the University of Chicago. The lecture took place on November 24, 2015.
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. This is the second in a series of lectures in the seminar “Combinatorics and Theoretical Computer Science: The Design Lemma” at the University of Chicago, given by László Babai, the George and Elizabeth Yovovich Professor in the Departments of Computer Science and Mathematics at the University of Chicago. The lecture took place on November 24, 2015.
This is the first in a series of lectures in the seminar “Combinatorics and Theoretical Computer Science: The Local Certificates Algorithm” at the University of Chicago, given by László Babai, the George and Elizabeth Yovovich Professor in the Departments of Computer Science and Mathematics at the University of Chicago. The lecture took place on November 10, 2015.
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. This is the first in a series of lectures in the seminar “Combinatorics and Theoretical Computer Science: The Local Certificates Algorithm” at the University of Chicago, given by László Babai, the George and Elizabeth Yovovich Professor in the Departments of Computer Science and Mathematics at the University of Chicago. The lecture took place on November 10, 2015.
Chad talks with Ian Logan, an Engineering Manager at Airbnb, on the challenges, ideology, implementation, and future of their payments system. Airbnb Combinatorics Open Air: Payments on a Global Scale 13 Secret Rock Stars of Silicon Valley Airbnb Disaster Response trebuchet Ian on Twitter
Professor Rosemary A. Bailey takes the audience through the hsitory of the latin square :http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/some-history-of-latin-squares-in-experiments Professor Rosemary A. Bailey takes the audience through the hsitory of the latin square and how it can be used in experiments. A fascinating and powerful tool of Combinatorics, the Latin Square has fascinated Mathematicians as great as Euler and Fisher, this lecture will explore more uses and methods involved.The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College Website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/some-history-of-latin-squares-in-experimentsGresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 1,500 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.ukTwitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollegeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollege
Robin Wilson is an Emeritus Professor of Pure Mathematics at the Open University, Emeritus Professor of Geometry at Gresham College, London, and a former Fellow of Keble College, Oxford. He is currently President of the British Society for the History of Mathematics. He has written and edited many books on graph theory, including Introduction to Graph Theory and Four Colours Suffice, and on the history of mathematics, including Lewis Carroll in Numberland. He is involved with the popularization and communication of mathematics and its history, and has been awarded prizes by the Mathematical Association of America for ‘outstanding expository writing’.
Pardi, F (CNRS) Friday 24 June 2011, 10:40-11:00
Faris, W (Arizona) Friday 11 April 2008, 16:15-17:00 Combinatorial Identities and their Applications in Statistical Mechanics
Bernardi, O (CNRS, Paris Sud) Tuesday 08 April 2008, 15:30-16:15 Combinatorial Identities and their Applications in Statistical Mechanics
Severini, S (Waterloo) Tuesday 18 March 2008, 14:00-15:00
Wagner, D (Waterloo) Wednesday 12 March 2008, 15:15-16:00
Dress, A (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Tuesday 18 December 2007, 09:00-10:00 PLGw03 - Future Directions in Phylogenetic Methods and Models
Dress, A (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Thursday 06 December 2007, 16:30-17:30 Spitalfields Day - Yggdrasil: Reconstructing the Tree of Life