a***y 发帖数: 19743 | 1 太牛了。
http://www.macrumors.com/2011/10/06/stephen-wolfram-on-25-years
Wolfram, who gained fame for his development of the computational software
Mathematica in the 1980s, was introduced to Jobs in 1987 when Jobs was at
NeXT and Wolfram was developing his software. The two held a number of
discussions, perhaps the most notable of which resulted in Jobs suggesting
that the software be called Mathematica. Wolfram describes Jobs' approach to
product naming:
I’d actually considered that name, but rejected it. I asked Steve why he
thought it was good, and he told me his theory for a name was to start from
the generic term for something, then romanticize it. His favorite example at
the time was Sony’s Trinitron. Well, it went back and forth for a while.
But in the end I agreed that, yes, Mathematica was a good name. And so it
has been now for nearly 24 years. | f****y 发帖数: 426 | 2 Macintosh really, really should have been named "iComputer". | a***e 发帖数: 27968 | 3 取名字的技术显然是一流的
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【在 a***y 的大作中提到】 : 太牛了。 : http://www.macrumors.com/2011/10/06/stephen-wolfram-on-25-years : Wolfram, who gained fame for his development of the computational software : Mathematica in the 1980s, was introduced to Jobs in 1987 when Jobs was at : NeXT and Wolfram was developing his software. The two held a number of : discussions, perhaps the most notable of which resulted in Jobs suggesting : that the software be called Mathematica. Wolfram describes Jobs' approach to : product naming: : I’d actually considered that name, but rejected it. I asked Steve why he : thought it was good, and he told me his theory for a name was to start from
| a***e 发帖数: 27968 | 4 取名字的技术显然是一流的
to
from
【在 a***y 的大作中提到】 : 太牛了。 : http://www.macrumors.com/2011/10/06/stephen-wolfram-on-25-years : Wolfram, who gained fame for his development of the computational software : Mathematica in the 1980s, was introduced to Jobs in 1987 when Jobs was at : NeXT and Wolfram was developing his software. The two held a number of : discussions, perhaps the most notable of which resulted in Jobs suggesting : that the software be called Mathematica. Wolfram describes Jobs' approach to : product naming: : I’d actually considered that name, but rejected it. I asked Steve why he : thought it was good, and he told me his theory for a name was to start from
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