Tom 4

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19 years, 348 days

My title is Chief Evangelist for Maplesoft. I interpret that as “the guy who’s been around forever”. I started my professional Maplesoft career in 1989 as a contractor trying to earn money to feed my grad student habits, like eating and visiting my parents. Before that I was introduced to what was then referred to as the Maple programming language and to my surprise, Maple immediately helped me figure things out in my courses and more importantly it made me look smarter in front of potential grad supervisors. That’s how the love affair began.

Since then I’ve held various senior positions including Vice President of Marketing and Market Development. I’ve witnessed the transformation of this company from a start-up doing something strange called “computer algebra” to a well-recognized, leading solutions company with a growing and ever diversifying user community. I’m even more thrilled at the fact that so much of our new achievements are in the world of engineering modeling and simulation which was my specialization in University.

I did my degrees at the University of Waterloo. My Bachelor and Master’s degrees were in Systems Design Engineering and my PhD in Mechanical Engineering with a specialization in surface modeling for CAD systems. Along the way, I dabbled in control systems, physical systems modeling, and computer-assisted education. I still stay connected to the academic world through my position as Adjunct Professor in Systems Design Engineering, University of Waterloo, and as a member of the Board of Governors, Renison College affiliated with the University of Waterloo.

I was born in Seoul South Korea but raised in Toronto, Canada. I moved to Waterloo, Canada to attend university and never left. I tell the Maplesoft people that it’s because of the company but it’s because I met my wonderful wife Dr. Sharon here :-)

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These are replies submitted by Tom 4

Within the these pages is the Mathematical backgrounds of The Simpsons' writers. Many of us struggle to motivate young people to consider scientific fields of study. I'm sure we've all seen "look what you can do with a math degree!" type of thing ... usually it talks of astronauts, disease curing researchers, and super-rich financial analysts. Becoming a writer for one of the savviest creations ever ... in any medium ... seems like wonderful way to motivate today's media driven youth. Why didn't anyone tell me about this option when I was a student ... I had to learn from the street, that people with engineering PhD's should go into marketing :-) T4.
Within the WebEx system, we've experimented with various options that doesn't involve phone. Eventually, we came back to good old Bell due to number of participants and bandwidth reasons. Options other than WebEx is also not easy as WebEx offers a whole range of features that are important for our business. I suspect that over time this will change but for now, there is no clear solution that does everything that we need. T4.
Don't give up so fast Joe. According to their FAQ, it is available. Go to this WebEx page. On the left, go to Assistance --> Support then find the FAQ and one of the questions is about accessing from a Linux machine and it does seem like it supports it. Hopefully it works. If it doesn't, find yourself a nice internet cafe and when I see you again I'll buy you a coffee :-) Tom 4.
FYI, the audio portion for the session will be delivered by a global conference call service. So you'll need a phone near by. For many parts of the world, it will be a free call for you as we have local access numbers. The visual part of the session will be delivered by the WebEx system and you'll need to download a small client software piece for it. T4.
See my blog post. T4.
A section or subsections collapse and expand by the press of a little [+] button beside the section heading. To do this, go to "Insert" menu and choose "section". You'll get a blank section heading for you to type a title. Pressing return then gets you inside the section and you can put whatever you want. Beside the title is the [+] to collapse. Alternatively, you can place existing content into a section by "demoting" the content using the button in the toolbar "enclose the selection in a section". Highlight your content, press the button and it will automatically place the content in a collapsible section. This magic button is sort of in the middle of the tool bar to the right of the [[>] insert prompt button. Hope this helps. T4.
A section or subsections collapse and expand by the press of a little [+] button beside the section heading. To do this, go to "Insert" menu and choose "section". You'll get a blank section heading for you to type a title. Pressing return then gets you inside the section and you can put whatever you want. Beside the title is the [+] to collapse. Alternatively, you can place existing content into a section by "demoting" the content using the button in the toolbar "enclose the selection in a section". Highlight your content, press the button and it will automatically place the content in a collapsible section. This magic button is sort of in the middle of the tool bar to the right of the [[>] insert prompt button. Hope this helps. T4.
Just to let you know, the math folks at Maplesoft have advised that there is a bug underlying all of the noted unexpected behavior. It is currently scheduled to be resolved with the next full release of Maple (not patches). Thanks for bringing this to their attention. T4.
It's interesting ... being of an engineering background, most of your list do not resonate with me (exeption would be Hamilton as his name is plastered on many different techniques that I encountered in dynamic system modeling). Although I've heard of or have some loose sense of the contributiosn of most, I have never really "experienced" their work. Those of us from the applied sciences would likely mention Fourier, Laplace, Bernoulli(s), Maxwell, Einstein, Dirac, etc. T4.
It's interesting ... being of an engineering background, most of your list do not resonate with me (exeption would be Hamilton as his name is plastered on many different techniques that I encountered in dynamic system modeling). Although I've heard of or have some loose sense of the contributiosn of most, I have never really "experienced" their work. Those of us from the applied sciences would likely mention Fourier, Laplace, Bernoulli(s), Maxwell, Einstein, Dirac, etc. T4.
Originally, I wanted to offer some acknowledgement of Jacques' contribution so I forced everyone to go through his post. T4.
Maple 10 does exactly what you suggest and the magic key is [ctl][space] and you get a little pop up menu with the choices. This only works in the standard interface and not in Classic interface. T4.
The function is part of an add-on product called the Global Optimization Toolbox. To purchase or evaluate, you need to contact Maplesoft directly. T4.
The function is part of an add-on product called the Global Optimization Toolbox. To purchase or evaluate, you need to contact Maplesoft directly. T4.
I'm somewhat disappointed about this omission in their city list ... :-) T4.
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