George Danner at Wolfram's summer school

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George Danner at Wolfram's summer school

Stephen Guerin
George Danner sent in an interesting write up of how he spent his summer at
Wolfram's CA Camp:
<http://www.redfish.com/research/DannerAtWolfram.pdf>

About the Author
George E. Danner is Principal and Founder of Industrial Science, LLC, a
consultancy specializing
in applying quantitative methods and simulation modeling to highly complex
business problems.
His particular specialty lies in agent-based simulation modeling, Monte
Carlo simulation, System
Dynamics, Game Theory, and Real Options. George has twenty years of
experience in corporate
strategy, including both operational and financial analysis, across a wide
variety of industries,
including manufacturing, energy, telecommunications, transportation, and
financial services.
Prior to founding Industrial Science, George was a leader in the US National
Strategy Practice of
Arthur Andersen Business Consulting, based in Houston, Texas, USA.
George has a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from Texas A&M
University and a
Master of Science in Management from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

-Steve

____________________________________________________
http://www.redfish.com    [hidden email]
624 Agua Fria Street      office: (505)995-0206
Santa Fe, NM 87501        mobile: (505)577-5828


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George Danner at Wolfram's summer school

Roger Critchlow-2


Stephen Guerin wrote:

>George Danner sent in an interesting write up of how he spent his summer at
>Wolfram's CA Camp:
><http://www.redfish.com/research/DannerAtWolfram.pdf>
>
I didn't notice that George had much to say.

However, if you wonder where Wolfram got his ideas, wonder no more, consult
the online listing of his permanent library at:

    http://www.wolframscience.com/reference/books/

Though you'll have to wait for the relevant sections to be identified and
indexed to the appropriate sections of NKS, resources permitting.

It's quite a list, there is lots of great stuff.  But there are also many
odd combinations: the collected works of Peter Guthrie Tait are there, but
nothing by William Rowan Hamilton;  there are many books on wavelets
including a conference proceedings edited by Yves Meyer, but Meyer's
Wavelets and Operators doesn't appear in the orignal French or in English
translation; A Beautiful Mind is there, but nothing by John F. Nash, Jr..
Altogether too much scientific biography for my taste.

Maybe we should start a FRIAM online annotated bibliography and see if we
could cover our coffee budget with kickbacks from amazon.com?   Stephen
does want to find every book or paper that might explain complexity, so
we might as well keep score.

-- rec --