@@sevenpenceLOLZ It comes in through my ears as a calm, sultry voice.. then my inner monologue translates the existential nightmare into panicked screaming
its good to walk, the spine doesnt have circulation all the way to the core so depends on the pumping action when we walk to give it circulation. Be kind to your back and walk.
There are so many captivating things happening in this video. An amazing intellectual, great revelation of historic figures, amazing scenery, hiking, mathematical equations, excellent information, and a most soothing vocal cadence. Thanks for your content, T!❤
I paused the video at 4:11, proved the expression in 30 seconds, thought I was a genius, unpaused the video, and realised I wasn't so smart after all. I envy Ada Lovelace so much, as I'm always yearning for the deepest secrets that maths, logic, and physics have to offer, but still can't understand elementary stuff like Gram-Schmidt orthogonalisation or integration by parts.
What a wonderful "article" about Ada Lovelace. She was definitely a woman ahead of her time. And also, how wonderful that all these learned and historically significant male mathematicians took her and her work seriously. Thanks for a great trip down history's lane.
I really enjoy this video format! It reminds me of how I like to take an afternoon off from software development to go hiking and reflect. It's a wonderful way to recharge.
As a software developer since the late 80's, Lovelace has always been close to my heart. To perceive a problem, and find a solution to it, and then develop upon it, it's an approach that speaks to me. No, I don't make websites, I'm more involved in low-level stuff on the processor level, and translating runtime things to bridge programming languages. The mathematics with its roots in Turing (and Ada, at least in terms of implementation) is something that makes my blood flow. Anyway, I named one of my cats after Ada Lovelace, Ada. My other cat is named Curie after Marie Curie, but that's only because Cecilia (Payne Gaposchkin) didn't really translate well in cat-ish, sounding very hissy and hostile. There's so many great women historically, and I find them utterly uncelebrated.
Why? As a software developer? She never had any part in software, just translation work and did propose using loom design cards as a means of entering data - that's it. Everything else is made up in the name of female empowerment, like so many things since the 90s.
Wow! This is what you call content. I recently found your channel and I'm in love with your content and your personality. Also, explaining this while trekking is the coolest idea ever! Your voice is so soothing and the video editing is awesome!
A new genre of videos is born... Great hiking and thoughtful science! Plus that relaxing asmr-ish voice (on purpose?) And of course, pretty on the eyes (but this is last in the list, a bonus)
Amazing amount of ground covered and so quickly?! Your simplification of things as to partial fraction decomposition, possible numbers/imaginative numbers, accelerating force/motion, impossible numbers and uncertainty is quite methodological. Ada Lovelace as a "computer programming pioneer" is quite inspirational as is Jacob Bernoulli's derivation of the "sum's of integer powers (1' + 2'.....+n' = 1/2n2 + 1/2n)".
Ada's Bernoulli Numbers program was the first published piece of software. Babbage had obviously already written a few programs (though not as complex) while designing the Analytical Engine and we can now see his notebooks, but it is fair to say Ada started the Open Source movement.
I took a course on complex number theory in college as an undergrad. It was definitely an interesting course and has some interesting use cases in science and engineering.
ada’s rush to get to the good stuff is something i am going through as well as a middle schooler. so to solve this problem of mine i downloaded khan academy, and swore that i would complete all the math courses in order. (like first early maths-kindergarten-1st grade…) so by the time i DO get to the good stuff, i’d be prepared. there is something in math that i love so much about it. and i wanna explore more of it. i just *feel* that there is more to know. i hope to achieve my milestone one day.
Serendipitous for me in the extreme! I'm just starting Walter Isaacson's best seller, The Innovators. Chapter 1 is on Ada and Babbage! Thank you. I'm very excited to read this book. I just finished his Code Breaker about Jennifer Doudna and gene splicing. He must have a great editor because every sentence was worth reading.
Ada Lovelace was an incredible mind! Thank you for sharing her story with us. It would take me forever to finish hiking the trail you were on. I'd have to stop continuously to gaze in wonder of that incredible landscape! Thank you for sharing your beautiful country with us.
Love to see her learning path. We usualy only see the end resuls. But its much more interesting to learn how someone struggled to learn and see its not always a straight path. Just like walking. 😅
What Majestic views. thanks for the story of Ada Lovelace. I am going to reward you with a special women and a quote from her. "Life is an unfoldment, and the further we travel the more truth we can comprehend. To understand the things that are at our door is the best preparation for understanding those that lie beyond" (Hypatia of Alexandria. Mathematician, Astronomy, Philosophy) there is a cool movie made about Hypatia it's called Agora played by Rachel Weisz.
I wish you had some off-topic videos just talking about different stuff, cause your voice is very relaxing and ASMRish to me, but math/science stuff stresses me out lol
Ada mentioned the idea that computers might be used to make music - it would be quite something for someone over 100 hundred years ago such as her to time travel to now and observe (and hear!) audio synthesis, recordings, and generative AI to make music!
It's really no mystery how Ada developed her interest in maths. Her mother Anne Isabella Noel Byron had an life long interest in the subject--Lord Byron disparaged her as "the Princess of the Parallelogram") Indeed during the Regency period maths was consider a suitable subject for young ladies. It was thought to order the mind
Yes tebee benouly is makinting the numbers count over the 5 of the answer 25 and u keep placing the numbers as 1half by 1 Half added to the number too the answer of the sum
Linda Lovelace was mentioned in an episode of QI with Stephen Fry, where they talked about the first computer program, written on “punchcards” for looms. Apparently the new technology was too much for French textile weavers, and fearing loss of livelihood, they threw their wooden shoes into the looms to damage/destroy them. The shoes are called sabots… and this is where the word “sabotage” originated. The more you know.
Zen proverb, do one thing at one time. While you hike enjoy hiking and when you study then enjoy studying. By the way, this is not rule and depends on individual.
> What, no bumping into *XENA on Argo* along the hiking trail in New Zealand? - Just as well. She would probably make you take *Gabrielle's* place as her sidekick.
"Everything is connected," that is this Analog Universe, but the realisation that this connection is Absolute Zero-infinity reference-framing containment/positioning, tells us not to assume we know anything solid in a hyperfluid in/of probabilistic projection-drawing vertices in vortices. Not surprising the Babbage Calculator was a strange difference "Engine". I agree Calculus is there up front, but without Mathologer's presentations, the nothingness I know is without the vector-values of time-timing sync-duration Calculus. Euler's Unit Circle derivivation indicates how life is the continuous rediscovery of absolutely nothing, the default POV in the functional Totality of pure-math relative-timing condensation modulation, made-of-making Analog Quantum-fields. Brilliant stuff.
As a CS student who likes exploring outdoor, I love the concept of this video
Same and I thought I was the only one who likes the outside as well
BREAKING: CS major reveals they WILLINGLY go OUTSIDE
Impossible.
Blazing a literal trail while talking about a trailblazer is genius
not really, since "trailblazing" is mapping uncharted lands. I mean I know, but still
I don't know if it's by design by her but some of her videos are replete with double entendres.
@@yousarrname3051
Could be laying out a trail as well but nothing else in english could have worked for the pun
not to be blunt here, but how was she blazing?
I don't have time now to watch the video, but no relation of that other trailblazer, Linda right?
Integration while trekking- that is quite me!
Also, Marie Curie and Ada Lovelace are my inspiration.
If i ever get a terminal disease, please let it be Tibees to break the news to me. I don't think I'd get upset with that sweet voice
tibees manages to describe existential crises in a very sweet and calm voice.
Honestly, there is such a thing as having too soft a voice. I find I have to crank the volume excessively high just to make out what she is saying.
@@sevenpenceLOLZ
It comes in through my ears as a calm, sultry voice.. then my inner monologue translates the existential nightmare into panicked screaming
Amazing view over that valley, NZ's landscapes are freaking magical.
Of course it's magical with all the dwarves, elves and hobbits. 😃
And deadly hoho
its good to walk, the spine doesnt have circulation all the way to the core so depends on the pumping action when we walk to give it circulation. Be kind to your back and walk.
There are so many captivating things happening in this video. An amazing intellectual, great revelation of historic figures, amazing scenery, hiking, mathematical equations, excellent information, and a most soothing vocal cadence.
Thanks for your content, T!❤
I paused the video at 4:11, proved the expression in 30 seconds, thought I was a genius, unpaused the video, and realised I wasn't so smart after all. I envy Ada Lovelace so much, as I'm always yearning for the deepest secrets that maths, logic, and physics have to offer, but still can't understand elementary stuff like Gram-Schmidt orthogonalisation or integration by parts.
So glad we have those letters of correspondence. A glimpse into the past of these incredible mathematicians is so rewarding to hear about. Great video
What a wonderful "article" about Ada Lovelace. She was definitely a woman ahead of her time. And also, how wonderful that all these learned and historically significant male mathematicians took her and her work seriously. Thanks for a great trip down history's lane.
I really enjoy this video format! It reminds me of how I like to take an afternoon off from software development to go hiking and reflect. It's a wonderful way to recharge.
Beautiful video Tibees. A lovely voice describing math with a beautiful background. 🙂
As a software developer since the late 80's, Lovelace has always been close to my heart. To perceive a problem, and find a solution to it, and then develop upon it, it's an approach that speaks to me. No, I don't make websites, I'm more involved in low-level stuff on the processor level, and translating runtime things to bridge programming languages. The mathematics with its roots in Turing (and Ada, at least in terms of implementation) is something that makes my blood flow. Anyway, I named one of my cats after Ada Lovelace, Ada. My other cat is named Curie after Marie Curie, but that's only because Cecilia (Payne Gaposchkin) didn't really translate well in cat-ish, sounding very hissy and hostile. There's so many great women historically, and I find them utterly uncelebrated.
My computers are named Ada, Margaret, and Hypatia.
I also have a cat named Marie Curie
Why? As a software developer? She never had any part in software, just translation work and did propose using loom design cards as a means of entering data - that's it. Everything else is made up in the name of female empowerment, like so many things since the 90s.
Grace or Hopper might be another good option for a cat name. :)
Great video! Walking through the mountains and going through math must be a wonderful experience
Wow! This is what you call content. I recently found your channel and I'm in love with your content and your personality. Also, explaining this while trekking is the coolest idea ever! Your voice is so soothing and the video editing is awesome!
Welcome Back!!! Much love and respect from the USA!!!
A beautiful hike, and mathematics! You are living my dream!
A new genre of videos is born... Great hiking and thoughtful science! Plus that relaxing asmr-ish voice (on purpose?) And of course, pretty on the eyes (but this is last in the list, a bonus)
This might be the best video ever on RUclips 🙌
Amazing amount of ground covered and so quickly?! Your simplification of things as to partial fraction decomposition, possible numbers/imaginative numbers, accelerating force/motion, impossible numbers and uncertainty is quite methodological. Ada Lovelace as a "computer programming pioneer" is quite inspirational as is Jacob Bernoulli's derivation of the "sum's of integer powers (1' + 2'.....+n' = 1/2n2 + 1/2n)".
Amazing story and great trail. Thank you.
Ada's Bernoulli Numbers program was the first published piece of software. Babbage had obviously already written a few programs (though not as complex) while designing the Analytical Engine and we can now see his notebooks, but it is fair to say Ada started the Open Source movement.
You're kidding, right?
@@kreigrastalovich2577 What would he be kidding about? She wasn't "the first programmer", it's just obviously not true.
hearing you talk is very calming
OMG That is a beautiful place. I have added it to my bucket list.
I took a course on complex number theory in college as an undergrad. It was definitely an interesting course and has some interesting use cases in science and engineering.
So beautiful!! Your explanation, you, the scenery, your content. Ahh! Love to you, Tibees!!
ada’s rush to get to the good stuff is something i am going through as well as a middle schooler. so to solve this problem of mine i downloaded khan academy, and swore that i would complete all the math courses in order. (like first early maths-kindergarten-1st grade…) so by the time i DO get to the good stuff, i’d be prepared.
there is something in math that i love so much about it. and i wanna explore more of it. i just *feel* that there is more to know. i hope to achieve my milestone one day.
THANKS FOR YOU BEAUTIFUL VIDEO TIBEES!!🙏🙏😊👍😊
Fascinating and intriguing, as well as educational, very informative
I work in a computer store and there is a little computer museum and its nice learning more about the first software engineer. Cool video.
She had nothing to do with software engineering.
Great view of a New Zealand landscape! Each of mountains and rivers can be represented with mathematical functions.
Lovely Video Toby. Brilliant to relax with you on camera interspersed with the learning material.
Having studied the calculus on a degree course, I could relax and enjoy the beauty of the NZ background with Toby in peak condition.
Your voice is so relaxing. You're currently helping me get over a migraine ❤
Serendipitous for me in the extreme! I'm just starting Walter Isaacson's best seller, The Innovators. Chapter 1 is on Ada and Babbage! Thank you. I'm very excited to read this book. I just finished his Code Breaker about Jennifer Doudna and gene splicing. He must have a great editor because every sentence was worth reading.
So glad to see a new video :DD
Beautiful mountains 🗻 , clear water and blue skies ☁.
I want it.
I could watch your vids and listen to your dulcet voice all day! Oh, and Ada Lovelace is awesome also! Love your detailed explanations.
I can't believe you tricked me into watching a calculus video. See, this is how you get a computer science student to pay attention to calculus.
yes!!! what an incredible video idea i feel so relaxed AND i've learned a lot! thank you :)
Ada Lovelace was an incredible mind! Thank you for sharing her story with us. It would take me forever to finish hiking the trail you were on. I'd have to stop continuously to gaze in wonder of that incredible landscape! Thank you for sharing your beautiful country with us.
Thank you so much for valuable contents
That was really interesting. Thank you 😊
Beautiful view, and calm place to do math, Lovely!!.
I ❤this video. Will go back to the math when I’m done with unit testing.
thank you for the math history!
The math is all over my head, but I love the beautiful scenery.
Beautiful nature!
Mount Cook looks gorgeous and I'm looking forward to learning more about Ada Lovelace :)
Lovely to see you back home :)
One of the many brilliant minds taken from the world far too young.
Thank you for such a Brilliant video :) I found this to be the motivation I needed to push through finals !
Casually returns after two months talking about the origins of computer science from the top of a mountain
Very good ,we need videos like this
What a beautiful video. Lovely presentation! Bravo! ❤❤❤❤
4:17 For that equation, some use ratio and proportions.
It was really nice seeing you on Jet Lag recently!
Wow Tibees thank you, this is both informative and quite wonderful 😊
Love to see her learning path. We usualy only see the end resuls. But its much more interesting to learn how someone struggled to learn and see its not always a straight path. Just like walking. 😅
What a beautiful place!
What Majestic views. thanks for the story of Ada Lovelace. I am going to reward you with a special women and a quote from her. "Life is an unfoldment, and the further we travel the more truth we can comprehend. To understand the things that are at our door is the best preparation for understanding those that lie beyond" (Hypatia of Alexandria. Mathematician, Astronomy, Philosophy) there is a cool movie made about Hypatia it's called Agora played by Rachel Weisz.
1:24 You know she told him if he was doing his job, she wouldn't have had to waste her time finding and reporting this bug.
Cutest and calmest voice
I wish you had some off-topic videos just talking about different stuff, cause your voice is very relaxing and ASMRish to me, but math/science stuff stresses me out lol
Ada mentioned the idea that computers might be used to make music - it would be quite something for someone over 100 hundred years ago such as her to time travel to now and observe (and hear!) audio synthesis, recordings, and generative AI to make music!
Is this New Zealand? Wow it's very pretty! Interesting talk.
Thanks that was really nice.
It's really no mystery how Ada developed her interest in maths. Her mother Anne Isabella Noel Byron had an life long interest in the subject--Lord Byron disparaged her as "the Princess of the Parallelogram") Indeed during the Regency period maths was consider a suitable subject for young ladies. It was thought to order the mind
You're my new favourite youtuber
Sooo interesting!! Thanks!
how beautiful, Tibees!
Few people know that Ada Lovelace was Lord Byron's daughter. That Lord George Gordon Byron :)
Interesting they both died aged 36 years.
The logorithums are morbous equation
Got a CS degree from a good university and we didn't once learn of this matriach. What a shame.
we love you toby tibees
Thank you 👍❤️
Your voice is divine
Yes tebee benouly is makinting the numbers count over the 5 of the answer 25 and u keep placing the numbers as 1half by 1
Half added to the number too the answer of the sum
Analytical Engine 'harumph harumph'! It'll never catch on, or I'll eat my stove pipe hat!
This is lovely ❤
I can't imagine learning Calculus by mail! Though I guess it's not that different from our modern asynchronous online courses.
Ada's mother encouraged her interest in math in part because it was the opposite of the interests of Ada's absent father, the poet Lord Byron.
Hi Toby, I’m a big Gordon Lord Byron poetry fan.
YOU RECORDED THIS DURING JET LAG!!!
Linda Lovelace was mentioned in an episode of QI with Stephen Fry, where they talked about the first computer program, written on “punchcards” for looms. Apparently the new technology was too much for French textile weavers, and fearing loss of livelihood, they threw their wooden shoes into the looms to damage/destroy them. The shoes are called sabots… and this is where the word “sabotage” originated. The more you know.
Zen proverb, do one thing at one time. While you hike enjoy hiking and when you study then enjoy studying. By the way, this is not rule and depends on individual.
beautiful video as always.
You’d find it easy but can you take the hunter college high school entrance exam in NYC. There are two practice tests on the Hunter website.
Thank you soo much for sharing this..
🤓🤓🧠🧠🔥🔥🌟🌟
Great video.
That is why 3×3=9 because it takes 9 months to concieve
I would have blasted my ankle a dozen times if I tried to talk and walk like this on a trail 😂
excellent Tibee
> What, no bumping into *XENA on Argo* along the hiking trail in New Zealand?
- Just as well. She would probably make you take *Gabrielle's* place as her sidekick.
Just reminded of De Morgan's therum, which lions have never used.
Im hypnotized 😂❤🎉 I wish I could hold a conversation with you but I would need to study 😂😢
What a nice video! 😀
always interesting history
"Everything is connected," that is this Analog Universe, but the realisation that this connection is Absolute Zero-infinity reference-framing containment/positioning, tells us not to assume we know anything solid in a hyperfluid in/of probabilistic projection-drawing vertices in vortices. Not surprising the Babbage Calculator was a strange difference "Engine".
I agree Calculus is there up front, but without Mathologer's presentations, the nothingness I know is without the vector-values of time-timing sync-duration Calculus.
Euler's Unit Circle derivivation indicates how life is the continuous rediscovery of absolutely nothing, the default POV in the functional Totality of pure-math relative-timing condensation modulation, made-of-making Analog Quantum-fields.
Brilliant stuff.
Your writing seems to be filled with knowledge too incoherent for me to understand.
i like your voice
Very calming and peaceful. Thank you.