Terry Tao, Ph.D. Small and Large Gaps Between the Primes

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  • Опубликовано: 11 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3,4 тыс.

  • @onoyoudont
    @onoyoudont 5 лет назад +8541

    I did some Maths subjects with him at university - I was 19 he was 12. He had a 150% workload and he blitzed them all.

    • @alephnull4044
      @alephnull4044 5 лет назад +78

      lol

    • @Oliver-bn7jt
      @Oliver-bn7jt 5 лет назад +139

      for real?

    • @onoyoudont
      @onoyoudont 5 лет назад +441

      Oliver Cairn yep, for real

    • @onoyoudont
      @onoyoudont 5 лет назад +1071

      Oliver Cairn three years before that I was in my final year of high school I got a distinction inthe state Maths competition. He was 9 and topped the state, against 17 year olds. 1.8 million population in the state too.

    • @coenpietersen272
      @coenpietersen272 4 года назад +674

      I remember that as well. What I found even more impressive was that he also dated the prettiest cheerleader.

  • @samsoleymani4989
    @samsoleymani4989 4 года назад +3424

    Prof. Tao once walked to my linear algebra class on the first day of school thinking that he is supposed to teach that class. He actually had prepared a syllabus not knowing that it was not his class. The look on his face was priceless when the actual professor walked in. Later I took a PDE class with him. He is brilliant teacher. He loves math and teaching math and he doesn't do it for the money

    • @vulcrums
      @vulcrums 3 года назад +93

      typical genius..

    • @umuta1969
      @umuta1969 3 года назад +49

      @@vulcrums He's inspiring too.. I appreciate having the chance to meet him and take one of his courses..

    • @vulcrums
      @vulcrums 3 года назад +23

      @@umuta1969 i believe so.. you are so lucky and smart! i wish i can get into university.. lol.. too expensive for me..

    • @umuta1969
      @umuta1969 3 года назад +18

      @@vulcrums I feel lucky too, thank you for the kind words. I honestly believe in today's world going to college is overpriced and overrated. We can learn a great many deal online, just like we are able to watch Mr. Tao here, giving a lecture. For me the main thing is to see people that are best in what they do, observe them in real life, and understand we are not that different and they are all human, which translates into inspiration. For some reason we are inclined to perceive them as almost mythological, super creatures and nothing like us. Which is in fact could not be farther from the truth. I am not lying when I say you can achieve anything and be who you are without going to college, or without doing a lot of stuff people see as requisites. All one needs is a plan, a determination to stick to it, and reach out to others that could help.

    • @vulcrums
      @vulcrums 3 года назад +7

      @@umuta1969 you are right!

  • @captainsnake8515
    @captainsnake8515 4 года назад +7773

    Fun fact about Terence Tao: when getting his PhD, he almost failed his “general” exam, which is the most important test of your PhD. If you fail the generals you get kicked out. He was in his early 20’s at the time and expected the test to be way easier than it was so he studied pretty lightly and spent a lot of time, I kid you not, staying up late playing video games.
    Even the smartest mathematician in the world once almost failed a test because he wanted to play video games.

    • @radicalbarrel2729
      @radicalbarrel2729 4 года назад +216

      I think I got this

    • @farhant.3214
      @farhant.3214 4 года назад +60

      @@ashishkumarjha3851 yea, really motivating indeed, reading tao's writes in his blog :-D
      can't argue anymore, seems at other perspective things like myths must perish ._.

    • @rpaddy93
      @rpaddy93 4 года назад +197

      GRE most important test of a PhD? You clearly misunderstood something - the GRE is just an entry requirement, you take it BEFORE starting a PhD.

    • @captainsnake8515
      @captainsnake8515 4 года назад +44

      Patrick Reichert apparently I misremembered the essay- he actually referred to them as “generals” in the essay. Thanks for telling me.

    • @chrislombardi3968
      @chrislombardi3968 4 года назад +76

      Yeah, he apparently had a deep Civilization addiction. I, too, saw my studies suffer due to Civ. And that is all that my mind has in common with T.T.

  • @heyyoududeyesu
    @heyyoududeyesu 8 лет назад +5386

    I finished this video without understanding a single sentence. In fact, i dont even remember anything he have just said.
    Thumbs up, good video.

    • @allyourcode
      @allyourcode 8 лет назад +137

      I think the title describes very well...
      Basically, this addresses two related questions: How small is the minimum gap between consecutive primes that occurs infinitely often (i.o.)? How large is the gap between consecutive primes that occurs infinitely often?
      As to the first question, the best result so far is on the order of hundreds, but there is an conjecture (known as the "Twin Primes Conjecture") that it goes all the way down to 2. Zhang really started this ball rolling back in 2013 with his result that the answer must be < 70 million (BTW, this story appeared in the New York Times).
      As to the second question, there is an open conjecture that the strongest answer is K * log^2(p_n), but the best result is smaller than that (yet funnily enough, involves more logs). The conjecture comes from pretending that primes occur randomly.

    • @ohnoyoyo
      @ohnoyoyo 7 лет назад +35

      I made about 40 seconds in and he lost me.... and then he said "this is almost the most basic questions you can ask" and I lol'd! Terence Tao is my new hero! (I just had to edit this for a simple typo - fml etc)

    • @Saphir__
      @Saphir__ 6 лет назад +3

      allyourcode Huh?

    • @howardlam6181
      @howardlam6181 5 лет назад +2

      @@ohnoyoyo Well, if you're looking for prime numbers consecutively, you want to know how many numbers you have to look before you find one.

    • @onerelic1337
      @onerelic1337 5 лет назад +22

      He might be smart, but hes not a good teacher...

  • @johnrodgers4967
    @johnrodgers4967 8 лет назад +749

    It's interesting hearing someone speak a different language using the same words that I use.

  • @wtfskilz
    @wtfskilz 3 года назад +1463

    I love how mathematicians are honorable and always mention the names of those who found the formulas and such.

    • @thedoublehelix5661
      @thedoublehelix5661 3 года назад +136

      Actually, a lot of formulas aren't named after who first discovered it. A lot of other formulas were named after the first European who discovered it.

    • @captainkielbasa5471
      @captainkielbasa5471 2 года назад +43

      @@thedoublehelix5661 the first people to discover most things were European people, so you're right

    • @thedoublehelix5661
      @thedoublehelix5661 2 года назад +186

      @@captainkielbasa5471 You don't know what you're talking about unfortunately.

    • @captainkielbasa5471
      @captainkielbasa5471 2 года назад +9

      @@thedoublehelix5661 Modern mathematics and scientific fields are products of western thinkers... only a seething dishonest anti-white dreg wouldn't admit to this reality.

    • @thedoublehelix5661
      @thedoublehelix5661 2 года назад +39

      @@captainkielbasa5471 What are you doing in the comments section of a math video you clearly wouldn't be able to understand?

  • @mnlnl65091
    @mnlnl65091 4 года назад +986

    Years ago when I was a graduate student visiting UCLA. I sat in one of his PDE seminar. I am deeply shocked by the intuition he demonstrated in that one-hour talk. That is the difference between fields medalist and ordinary smart people.

    • @NormReitzel
      @NormReitzel 2 года назад +8

      Yah, you can clearly see that, even in this video.

    • @thechemtrailkid
      @thechemtrailkid 2 года назад +6

      Yes, it’s amazing to see. I think anyone who studies math for a while will have moments of it. It’s like having mathematical dead reckoning - knowing what avenues of arguments will be fruitful.

    • @tranhuunghia2761
      @tranhuunghia2761 Год назад +3

      @@thechemtrailkid yep, I often say it "Math sense". Btw it's also like the sense that some great football players perform such as Messi or Ronaldo, they seem to know where to stand or to run into and make it easy to do. We just can practice it to some levels but can't reach theirs 😢they're born to be the bests

    • @jonallen7619
      @jonallen7619 Год назад

      @@tranhuunghia2761 lol, you can tell you don't know anything about football. You cannot compare it to math u dolt.

    • @lugia8888
      @lugia8888 Год назад +1

      Lol ok

  • @VitoPlaysGames
    @VitoPlaysGames 9 лет назад +9888

    His brain seems to be processing faster than his mouth can speak.

    • @MyLife-og2kr
      @MyLife-og2kr 9 лет назад +742

      It's common in people with high IQ's. Terence just happens to be one of the top 3 people with the highest IQs in the world. With people with high IQ, their brain processes so much so fast that you will often find them saying "um" and "uh," because that is their brain trying to process words and their thinking process.

    • @leeketteringham9180
      @leeketteringham9180 9 лет назад +79

      +Leng Lee therefore their high iq is actually a hinderance

    • @MyLife-og2kr
      @MyLife-og2kr 9 лет назад +175

      Eh.. some people say that Albert Einstein couldn't tie his shoes for the life of him, but that didn't stop him from building the atomic bomb. Therefore, I don't think that it is a hindrance, rather a gift.

    • @beau5149
      @beau5149 9 лет назад +70

      +Lee Ketteringham You're being too general in saying hinderance. A fairer statement would be that sometimes the lapse between objective mental function and expression of said objective is hindered by the difference.

    • @MyLife-og2kr
      @MyLife-og2kr 9 лет назад +2

      So he practically built the atomic bomb, because without him the atomic bomb wouldn't be possible until centuries later. possibly. Haha

  • @SalesforceUSA
    @SalesforceUSA 3 года назад +406

    Tao is a very good communicator. Modest, fluent, responsive, considered, honest, and humorous. Very good person, a great scholar and a gentleman to the core.

    • @Keralasha444
      @Keralasha444 Год назад

      Considerate *

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Год назад

      Lies again? Polite Home Delivery Anal Gap

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 11 месяцев назад

      Lies again? Polite Home Delivery USD SGD

    • @astro_penguin_
      @astro_penguin_ 5 месяцев назад

      Yes. I think his delivery style isn't for everyone but personally it works well for me. I love him

  • @CA-qx1mv
    @CA-qx1mv 9 лет назад +138

    I hardly do well in math, and yet I understood what he was saying clearly and precisely. Considering the theoretical principles that he is working on, this presentation was very concise, even for novice beginners. You can tell he is thinking about it every moment, the problems and solutions he is trying to figure out, even while giving this presentation. Beautiful, really. And yet, people want to insult his teaching and writing? You've obviously not had very many professors.

    • @TuanDuong-gs6ui
      @TuanDuong-gs6ui Год назад

      You are cap and fake af. I bet you not even graduate BA degree and u tell ppl you understand this lecture

  • @ChrisGoblinHD
    @ChrisGoblinHD 8 лет назад +2818

    I laughed along with them at 4:51 so I can seem smart

    • @bryang3443
      @bryang3443 8 лет назад +56

      nah, more like to fit in

    • @icd.f44.9
      @icd.f44.9 7 лет назад +96

      *fake desperate laugh*
      I'm laughing because I understand that

    • @xgenuch3062
      @xgenuch3062 7 лет назад +111

      *laugh in mathematics*

    • @wedeldylan
      @wedeldylan 7 лет назад +21

      All they're laughing at is how short Zhang's world record stood due to Tao, the speaker

    • @drewb1263
      @drewb1263 6 лет назад +11

      havnt even got to that part of the video but I gave a thumbs up like a nodding dog

  • @jasonzheng976
    @jasonzheng976 3 года назад +50

    I admire his teaching way, fast ,clear and talking with writing at the same time.

    • @darioinsi9370
      @darioinsi9370 2 года назад +8

      Really you find his teachings clear? Really are not

  • @twolonet1118
    @twolonet1118 9 лет назад +2260

    His mouth isnt fast enough for all his thoughts...

    • @leeketteringham9180
      @leeketteringham9180 9 лет назад +38

      You'd think with his iq he'd know how to enunciate properly

    • @fuzzbeta6634
      @fuzzbeta6634 9 лет назад +9

      +elliot Melcer exactly what i was thinking

    • @kingkoy7397
      @kingkoy7397 8 лет назад +5

      I think he could've been calculated the prime gap of his tongue. It should be a great idea to understand what he's lecturing all about.

    • @qball447
      @qball447 8 лет назад +5

      +king koy Says the guy that can barely form proper sentences, and "been calculated" needs work mate.

    • @2CSST2
      @2CSST2 8 лет назад +2

      +Lee Ketteringham I guess he should know how to cook awesomely as well?

  • @ggPescesgg
    @ggPescesgg 4 года назад +850

    He actually explains it in a way that pretty much anyone can follow, shows how brilliant he really is.

    • @jonjetmore4018
      @jonjetmore4018 3 года назад +351

      Please don't underestimate how dumb I am

    • @pankakotakismegalomavropou3355
      @pankakotakismegalomavropou3355 3 года назад +12

      Allahu akbar

    • @bconni2
      @bconni2 3 года назад +39

      yeah , "anyone" with an IQ over 140. but don't kid yourself, this level of mathematics only a small % of the population can grasp.

    • @marcospark2803
      @marcospark2803 3 года назад +11

      "Anyone" is too many people ...

    • @LolLol-kj5yd
      @LolLol-kj5yd 3 года назад +3

      I can’t

  • @Literally100
    @Literally100 4 года назад +79

    I use this video to fall asleep comfortably. Listening to someone happily talking about numbers and scientific stuff just soothes me so well even though I do not comprehend the material.

    • @scapedrag7893
      @scapedrag7893 3 года назад +11

      backhanded compliment

    • @HeyHo-gn3zm
      @HeyHo-gn3zm Год назад

      @@scapedrag7893 Not really. If this was said about music, would you reply the same? If I didn't like the music I wouldn't listen to it but not long ago I was listening to something being played and it was a relaxing way to fall asleep.

    • @scapedrag7893
      @scapedrag7893 Год назад +2

      @@HeyHo-gn3zm a lecture is not intended to be relaxing and make you fall asleep lol

  • @sorcererprince7670
    @sorcererprince7670 8 лет назад +1327

    You lost me at..."hello"...

    • @dondreytaylor8001
      @dondreytaylor8001 7 лет назад +7

      lol same.

    • @pankaj-kalra
      @pankaj-kalra 7 лет назад +1

      Sorcerer Prince Lolololollololollotrolol xD

    • @TomSmeding
      @TomSmeding 7 лет назад +45

      Tao didn't even say "hello" in the video. Must've been a productive watch for you :)

    • @mochiliao3048
      @mochiliao3048 5 лет назад

      No "hello"...

    • @itogaichi
      @itogaichi 3 года назад +1

      @@TomSmeding r/woooooosh

  • @diabl2master
    @diabl2master 5 лет назад +67

    Those of you saying "I can't pass this class", it's not a class. Lecture courses don't consist of running through the history of advances in a subject with only the bare-bones theory. Professors, researchers, and sometimes undergrads, will do open lectures where they'll give the gist of a topic to other mathematicians who may not have knowledge in that area. They won't necessarily go deep into theory, as is the case here. In the first 20 mins he's glossing over a ton of complex heavy machinery used to improve the bounds.

  • @alvaroooooo11
    @alvaroooooo11 4 года назад +1674

    This guy is teaching his teachers lol

    • @peorakef
      @peorakef 4 года назад +133

      *lecturing ;) in uni some profs still visit each other's special lectures bc they often lecture on original research so everyone will learn smth new

    • @gerry5336
      @gerry5336 3 года назад +5

      is this a PhD viva? Seems that it is indeed a lecture

    • @bruhbruh6670
      @bruhbruh6670 3 года назад +1

      @@gerry5336in PhD viva there are like 4-5 people

    • @gerry5336
      @gerry5336 3 года назад +1

      @@bruhbruh6670 you mean it is a viva or not?

    • @Sidhharth_889
      @Sidhharth_889 3 года назад +5

      @@gerry5336 he got his PhD when he was 20 this is not PhD viva

  • @pythagorasaurusrex9853
    @pythagorasaurusrex9853 4 года назад +1454

    Einstein: "Nothing in the universe can be faster than light."
    Tao: "Hold my brain."

    • @jinjunliu2401
      @jinjunliu2401 4 года назад +51

      @@efekaanaltas he'd stutter so much more, because his mouth physically can't move that fast

    • @jayborisagar408
      @jayborisagar408 4 года назад +2

      Nothing is faster than your mind's idea

    • @Iamrich00
      @Iamrich00 4 года назад +2

      @@jayborisagar408 those are at the speed of light

    • @allahm-ast3mnlywlatstbdlny164
      @allahm-ast3mnlywlatstbdlny164 3 года назад +3

      mashallah

    • @dio8429
      @dio8429 3 года назад

      @Selam jesse what the fuck are you talking about

  • @warsilver99
    @warsilver99 8 лет назад +1318

    What does the drowning number theorist say?
    loglogloglogloglogloglog...

  • @brentvelasquez6751
    @brentvelasquez6751 3 года назад +21

    2 minutes into this lecture and you start to realize that he’s literally on another level.

    • @bconni2
      @bconni2 3 года назад +2

      that's typically how intelligence works. . most of us understand consciously or subconsciously how valuable really, really, smart people are to the survival and advancement of our species.

  • @TBOTSS
    @TBOTSS 5 лет назад +133

    Superb talk. Very easy to understand and presented by a man who clearly loves and understands his subject.

    • @robertveith6383
      @robertveith6383 2 года назад +4

      No, it is difficult to understand with how fast he is speaking, and the camera is too far away from
      the board.

    • @pebbleman721
      @pebbleman721 2 года назад +7

      @@robertveith6383 skill issue

    • @yty1941
      @yty1941 Год назад

      @@pebbleman721 ikr... This camera is much closer than what I get sitting in first row of a public school's lecture hall...

  • @tensevo
    @tensevo 5 лет назад +1172

    ...but can his brain run Crysis?

  • @oxyiinc7518
    @oxyiinc7518 3 года назад +111

    Tao’s genius at mathematics began early in life. He started to learn calculus when he was 7, at which age he began high school; by 9 he was already very good at university-level calculus. By 11, he was thriving in international mathematics competitions. Tao, now 31, was 20 when he earned his Ph.D. from Princeton University, and he joined UCLA’s faculty that year. UCLA promoted him to full professor at age 24.

    • @maitreyo137
      @maitreyo137 3 года назад +2

      He is not 31

    • @francishunt562
      @francishunt562 2 года назад +13

      He's 46, but I take your point about his wonderful ability being evident at an early age.

    • @thisisobviouslynotmyrealname
      @thisisobviouslynotmyrealname Год назад

      has there ever been a math genius whose genius appeared later in life?? I think math genius is the kind that always appears early in life

    • @lord_haven1114
      @lord_haven1114 Год назад +2

      I think you’re in the wrong spot. This is a math lesson, not a documentary. And anyone can check out his wiki without people copying and pasting random factoids for likes.

  • @edclam
    @edclam 5 лет назад +136

    So over 1M people tried to watch this. There's hope with humanity, methinks :D

    • @bluevalley82
      @bluevalley82 3 года назад +3

      I’m sure most of the views want to see not math

    • @diwu4575
      @diwu4575 3 года назад

      You should ask how many of them finished watching this.

    • @voxpopuli735
      @voxpopuli735 3 года назад

      Many are watching not to study maths but to study him. :)))))

    • @walkwithmeEU
      @walkwithmeEU 3 года назад

      Well.. no. The math nerds rewatched it again and again, remounting to more than a million views.
      P.S I belong to the maths nerd community

  • @MyLife-og2kr
    @MyLife-og2kr 9 лет назад +64

    I'm not a math person. Math was the only subject I failed at in high school and college, but it is a great pleasure to watch a math genius in the works

    • @MyLife-og2kr
      @MyLife-og2kr 9 лет назад +1

      I don't know if it's a compliment or not, but... math sucks, the way that he does it however is like art lol

    • @MusicILike-cy4et
      @MusicILike-cy4et 8 лет назад +12

      +Leng Lee Math is beautiful. Its just that most math instruction is done poorly.

  • @yestom1170
    @yestom1170 4 года назад +84

    Worst nightmare: here is a quiz to test your understanding of what I just told you.

  • @fxvtv
    @fxvtv 5 лет назад +200

    This isn't the only place where I've lasted 48 seconds.

  • @dimi_records
    @dimi_records 8 лет назад +668

    Oh, wrong class

    • @valiok9880
      @valiok9880 5 лет назад +6

      lmao

    • @eddie-xx
      @eddie-xx 4 года назад

      😂

    • @unlockwithjsr
      @unlockwithjsr 4 года назад

      😂😂😂

    • @gdash6925
      @gdash6925 4 года назад +2

      theres no wrong class

    • @deidara_8598
      @deidara_8598 4 года назад +1

      @@eddie-xx Your comment is rather interesting, because instead of containing an emoji character, it contains an svg referring to an image on youtube's servers. Did you make this comment on your phone? If so, it would be an interesting experiment to see if one could edit the package sent to youtube when making a comment to potentially upload any image as a comment.

  • @tebogokhanye7035
    @tebogokhanye7035 2 года назад +30

    It is quite a privilege to live in the same lifetime as prof. Tao.

  • @zenozama5798
    @zenozama5798 8 лет назад +821

    he's teaching university smartest teachers

    • @fghfghggffghv612
      @fghfghggffghv612 6 лет назад +35

      Ooorr, maybe they are all dumb, and he is trying to teach them what a prime is but, even with an incredible elaborated argument, they still dont get it .

    • @storm-9494
      @storm-9494 5 лет назад +17

      fghfghgg ffghv you’re dumb

    • @alexlewis1036
      @alexlewis1036 5 лет назад +3

      @Ryan Sun Not that far...just...maybe a year's study to understand properly the surface-level mathematics involved, and many more of specialized study on different parts (distributed across a number of people, as in the polymath group) to effectively apply it...but you might be able to understand what he's saying in a year.

    • @theirrigationnetwork9870
      @theirrigationnetwork9870 5 лет назад +3

      He’s describing his current research field

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master 5 лет назад +1

      He's not really teaching

  • @darkmatrix80
    @darkmatrix80 9 лет назад +29

    I don't know anything about maths, just watching this because it makes me feel clever...

  • @jellybean6902
    @jellybean6902 3 года назад +64

    Teacher : Terry, stop talking in the class, do you want to come and teach them ?
    Terry : Hold my beer 🍺

    • @NoName-xc6cg
      @NoName-xc6cg 3 года назад +6

      Teachers have stopped using this phrase because there is always that one kid to ruin it for them hahahaha

  • @djc1234
    @djc1234 9 лет назад +3792

    Yeah, but can he make a calculator say 'boobies'?

    • @barneywheelock9107
      @barneywheelock9107 9 лет назад +492

      darren cassidy That was his PhD thesis.

    • @Itsdaquenchiest
      @Itsdaquenchiest 9 лет назад +42

      And for reference, he probably can

    • @icelandmoon
      @icelandmoon 9 лет назад +127

      darren cassidy More impressively I use my girlfriends boobs as a calculator.

    • @FinalFanManiac
      @FinalFanManiac 9 лет назад +158

      icelandmoon If you count passed 2, call a doctor.

    • @keithrichards9034
      @keithrichards9034 9 лет назад +8

      darren cassidy That's a good question and can he actually turn and face the people he's talking to...?

  • @kaplumbagaefendisi
    @kaplumbagaefendisi 8 лет назад +223

    I wached until finish just because of he seems like talking about something really important and I have no idea what is that.

    • @amlecciones
      @amlecciones 5 лет назад

      Me.

    • @innocenboy
      @innocenboy 4 года назад +16

      Beginning was about prime numbers: it is really important for humanity to know a lot about prime numbers, because we use them everywhere. For example, cryptography of internet(security), debit-credit cards. For this we need to know very big prime numbers, so normal people cannot guess it. The theorem he was improving was the spaces between prime numbers. If we found 1 prime number, how many more steps minimum we need to make to find the next prime number in the sequence.

    • @SWard-oe8oj
      @SWard-oe8oj 4 года назад

      @@innocenboy r/woosh

  • @rogerstephenroth8073
    @rogerstephenroth8073 3 года назад +12

    I amazed at Terry Tao 230 IQ and brilliance of his math lecture, very impressive indeed.

  • @AiZeno
    @AiZeno 8 лет назад +34

    I'm diploma student in chemical engineering currently watching phd math and the way he teach them is very straight-forward and easy to understand with his voice tone

    • @gulpbiys5705
      @gulpbiys5705 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/sbCQdalG2CM/видео.html

  • @alwaysuseless
    @alwaysuseless 7 лет назад +342

    Tao is brilliant and very likable. And happily, the first half of the talk had a lot of Oh, of course! moments. Admittedly, the second half had a few What did he say? moments or Does "cover" mean "include"? Etc. Very informative talk, though, despite an occasional avoidable lack of clarity. It's not that Tao thinks faster than he can talk, as some commentators suggest. I've known Field Prize winners whose presentations are always crystal clear. Still, we shouldn't let an imagined ideal spoil our appreciation of the good. After all, there aren't that many people actively engaged in the research and who could have given us this update (to 2014). Thanks to the UCLA Math Dept. for making this available! Prime number distribution is a tough and fascinating field.

    • @dezenaamvergeetiknie
      @dezenaamvergeetiknie 6 лет назад +4

      *Read more*
      field.
      Could've just shown it :P

    • @amlecciones
      @amlecciones 5 лет назад

      Agree

    • @williamchurcher9645
      @williamchurcher9645 4 года назад +11

      Hmm, good points made here. I will defend him by saying that, without meaning to insult, cover is a fairly commonly used word in university mathematics, for example in compactness. A set of sets cover another set if the union of those sets contains the target set.

    • @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar
      @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar Год назад

      Please enumerate the moments of "occasional avoidable lack of clarity"
      Otherwise we might conclude your Y-Tube name is an accurate characterization of your behavior.

  • @SalesforceUSA
    @SalesforceUSA 3 года назад +97

    We need more of Terry Tao on UCLA , I would listen to him for hours.

    • @iamalive2826
      @iamalive2826 3 года назад +6

      It is not a music bro

    • @ahmedhaaqil3903
      @ahmedhaaqil3903 2 года назад +3

      @@iamalive2826 if one listens to music's for hours, that individual possesses a worrisome habitual behavior.
      Very unhealthy, and (uncalled for but..) stupid.

    • @luca.uss28
      @luca.uss28 Год назад +3

      @@ahmedhaaqil3903what😂

    • @willrose5424
      @willrose5424 11 месяцев назад

      Is fast forward on or do I have adhd? Who would pay for this? Only drug users would like this type of teaching.

    • @haveatyou1
      @haveatyou1 8 месяцев назад

      Saddest comment in you tube

  • @wtw5002
    @wtw5002 8 лет назад +29

    Watching lectures given by Terence Tao, Edward Witten, and Manjul Bhargava has led me to a single definitive conclusion; 99.99999% of us are just meat with eyes.

  • @jumbokevin
    @jumbokevin 6 лет назад +267

    7:25 "shave down the fuc...four" Good save there!

  • @shankee1987
    @shankee1987 4 года назад +25

    He won Mathematics Olympiad Gold at the age of 12 in 1988... This guy is a prodigy.....

  • @КонстантинСеров-я6й
    @КонстантинСеров-я6й 5 лет назад +1474

    At 2x he starts speaking chinese all of sudden...
    P.S. I love my girlfriend so much!

    • @suyashsrivastava9582
      @suyashsrivastava9582 5 лет назад +20

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @LoveIncest
      @LoveIncest 4 года назад +13

      😂😂😂

    • @gordonsmith352
      @gordonsmith352 4 года назад +36

      He's Australian.

    • @babbisp1
      @babbisp1 4 года назад +3

      @@LoveIncest Funny how i read your username right after searching deadly women double trouble that has incest. Quite a coincidence

    • @rishavkru3274
      @rishavkru3274 4 года назад +3

      @@babbisp1 what?

  • @ChrisCokeRobinson
    @ChrisCokeRobinson 9 лет назад +397

    Nope, im never passing that class..

    • @AlexLococo
      @AlexLococo 9 лет назад +3

      +Ivan S I've ADD too, but I find this too interesting to not keep focus.

    • @legendarylightyagamiimmanu1821
      @legendarylightyagamiimmanu1821 7 лет назад +8

      Christopher Coke Robinson I have ADD, ADHD, and Manic Depression. Is this a competition now? btw i understood only everything I saw in this video.

    • @AlexLococo
      @AlexLococo 7 лет назад

      Bipolar dissorder type I (mainly manic)/II (mainly depressive)¨, ADHD Combined Type¨, though. ADHD is the umbrella term, and ADD is now called ADHD Predominantly Inattentive because later in life it is usually expresses other sorts of hyperactivity that aren't hyperkinetic (e.g. anxiety, aggressiveness, restlessness; if unattended, it usually evolves into a second comorbid pathology, like, GAD and/or BPD-T I or II, but usually II), which means that what was usually called ADHD is now called ADHD Predominantly Hyperkinetic (GAD and BPD can evolve here from untreated ADHD, but it's more commonly type I). The real difference between the three types of ADHD aren't physiological, but behavioural, and urine phenethylamine levels remain fairly similar across the three groups. Which means, more often than not, the following:
      1) you don't have BPD, but instead cyclothimia, and can be treated /relatively/ easily.
      2) You do have BPD, and it evolved as a behavioural overcompensation of having ADHD in a capitalist society.
      3) You were born with a "bipolar" brain, and the "random" fluctuations in mood and motivation made your psychiatrist misdiagnose ADHD on top of the bipolar dissorder, and you don't actually have ADHD. It's not an uncommon mistake, and it's one hard to notice, specially with children (you know, very few kids are actually suicidal).

    • @iKSWag23
      @iKSWag23 6 лет назад +1

      Christopher Coke Robinson let’s be honest...you would never even get close to being eligible for this class

    • @adilevy64
      @adilevy64 5 лет назад +4

      Dave McCallister it isn’t a class. It’s a lecture. There are other mathematicians in the room

  • @fofana1336
    @fofana1336 4 года назад +216

    When you realize he was teaching a partly bald men while he's fully haired

    • @samberg3864
      @samberg3864 4 года назад +19

      By this logic newborns or Joe Rogan should teach everything

  • @PaliAha
    @PaliAha 9 лет назад +733

    I'm a TRUCK DRiVER.
    Watching this I'M LOST.

    • @Randy1337
      @Randy1337 9 лет назад +6

      +Pali Aha hahahaha :D

    • @jonathanlinderer7271
      @jonathanlinderer7271 9 лет назад +5

      +Pali Aha He speaks really fast and the math is pretty obscure I think.

    • @xodiachd6823
      @xodiachd6823 9 лет назад +16

      +Pali Aha Haha it's ok, you've done more good for the world than this "genius"

    • @xodiachd6823
      @xodiachd6823 9 лет назад +1

      Randomfully Wonderful I guess that's true

    • @jonathanlinderer7271
      @jonathanlinderer7271 9 лет назад +6

      Well some of mathematical thought has practical applications. In this case though, I've gotta say I don't really see the use. Lol. I think its interesting, but what does studying gaps between prime numbers actually accomplish?

  • @dstupack
    @dstupack 9 лет назад +18

    The point is, people aren't there for him, and this isn't a course. It is a research lecture, and people are there to see what his work is - where it is in the historical context, and where he is taking it. While many disciplines use ppt, mathematicians continue to love chalk (and dislike whiteboard) in the way they tell their stories.

  • @leomiller2291
    @leomiller2291 3 месяца назад +1

    A Terence Tao lecture at my fingertips that I can watch anytime I desire? This really is the best timeline.

  • @Macooasme
    @Macooasme 8 лет назад +9

    This is how highly productive and focused people work.
    Amazing

    • @PastPerspectives11
      @PastPerspectives11 6 месяцев назад +2

      Highly productive, focused, and a 200+ IQ - LOL

  • @pk7685
    @pk7685 5 лет назад +1214

    21:03 I actually laughed there. No joke.

    • @timotheebernard216
      @timotheebernard216 5 лет назад +15

      Me too!

    • @ninepuchar1
      @ninepuchar1 5 лет назад +45

      Log log log log😂😂😂,trying to take breath

    • @dsan0_338
      @dsan0_338 4 года назад +10

      Because the end equation concludes with “a lot” of Logarithm (Log) which technically the math theorist finds himself into. Aka theres too many (Logs) in which the guy who’s solving the equation is “drowning” in.

    • @iski4317
      @iski4317 4 года назад +26

      Dsan0_ 3 no? It‘s glog glog glog as in glug glug trying to breathe

    • @thelearner3962
      @thelearner3962 4 года назад +3

      You must be really good in math then I guess.

  • @hm5031
    @hm5031 5 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for the video! I am a sophomore (becoming a junior) in high school and learned a lot about the nature of numbers.

  • @glockgoon7
    @glockgoon7 8 лет назад +179

    this guy must get so much respect from math students at UCLA

    • @SP-qi8ur
      @SP-qi8ur 5 лет назад +4

      Ya think?

    • @lamepickuplines
      @lamepickuplines 5 лет назад +91

      I was a math undergrad at UCLA... I had and still have so much respect for this man. He makes analytic number theory look like elementary algebra. This video is probably one of my favorites of all time on RUclips. I don’t think people realize how important the twin prime conjecture really is. Together w the Riemann hypothesis they can change our world so much once proven.

    • @samajlo4336
      @samajlo4336 5 лет назад +2

      @@lamepickuplines Can you please tell me where can I find his lectures?

    • @lamepickuplines
      @lamepickuplines 5 лет назад +1

      Alpha Centauri honestly his video lectures I have only found on RUclips, he doesn’t upload them himself you can go on his personal website and he has like a blog where he updates his current research and things like that!!!

    • @jeffryjeff4033
      @jeffryjeff4033 5 лет назад +7

      Ho Sane this is a genuine question - how is this important?

  • @jrock2310
    @jrock2310 9 лет назад +523

    I was bored so came here & became a math genius.

    • @Randy1337
      @Randy1337 9 лет назад +1

      +Jeff Connors

    • @viniBR232
      @viniBR232 9 лет назад +9

      Yep. Same here. I've smoked some dry grass too before.

    • @daniellikahong
      @daniellikahong 9 лет назад +7

      +Jeff Connors I was bored so came here & became a youtube genius watcher. :D

    • @ТимурМагомедов-ф7ж
      @ТимурМагомедов-ф7ж 8 лет назад

      Эта лехкатня

    • @viniBR232
      @viniBR232 8 лет назад

      Well, based on this last comment it seems our friend Jeff just watched Russian video and became Russian.

  • @zmaj12321
    @zmaj12321 4 года назад +14

    Tao is a great presenter! I am definitely not very knowledgable in this subject but it was very clear to understand.

  • @robertmoss9619
    @robertmoss9619 8 лет назад +446

    Professor at 24 years old what a guy!

    • @kodama4351
      @kodama4351 7 лет назад +5

      Robert Moss he has 43 years old.

    • @dlevi67
      @dlevi67 6 лет назад +171

      He was a professor at 24. That was in 1999.

    • @alexterrieur8834
      @alexterrieur8834 5 лет назад +72

      And in this video he is teaching to teachers

    • @shaky0407
      @shaky0407 5 лет назад +6

      He's so down to earth.

    • @JamesJoyce12
      @JamesJoyce12 5 лет назад +5

      For the longest time Nietzsche was the youngest professor

  • @thegreathawk3659
    @thegreathawk3659 5 лет назад +723

    This guy is just filling in for the real professor, Lil Pump.

    • @eyeofthetiger6002
      @eyeofthetiger6002 4 года назад +8

      Must be intimidating for his fellow colleagues knowing that they are not all child maths prodigies! Lol.

    • @rexz97
      @rexz97 4 года назад

      Lol underrated

    • @CodyBanks10
      @CodyBanks10 3 года назад +4

      @ham burges Some infinities are larger than some infinities. Some child prodigies are bigger than some child prodigies.

    • @brett8460
      @brett8460 3 года назад +1

      @ham burges whoosh

  • @amex4453
    @amex4453 3 года назад +2

    Why did I watch somebody explain math for an hour for no reason? Passion truly is magentic.

  • @swizzbeats1212
    @swizzbeats1212 9 лет назад +878

    I watched it on 2x the speed

    • @keepyouright6157
      @keepyouright6157 9 лет назад +96

      +Isaac Newton Only you, Newton.

    • @reza4975
      @reza4975 9 лет назад +22

      No matter how good you were, your theory of time was invalid.
      Einstein's theory of relativity proved your theory of time wrong.
      You stated that if we were able to locate each particle, its direction and its speed we will be able to time travel.
      That statement was proved wrong. Explain your self.

    • @user-sc2jz9ng6k
      @user-sc2jz9ng6k 9 лет назад +65

      +Isaac Newton Using Leibniz's integration notation as a profile pic? I thought you hated that guy?

    • @cowayofficial
      @cowayofficial 9 лет назад +19

      +Corey Hayes leibniz is his hidden love,thats why

    • @user-sc2jz9ng6k
      @user-sc2jz9ng6k 9 лет назад +5

      +Devry Pasaribu Gotta love math humor lol

  • @soheelegb6851
    @soheelegb6851 5 лет назад +65

    his brain processes faster than his mouth can speak and he speaks faster than my brain can process

  • @architmahatorollno.332
    @architmahatorollno.332 4 года назад +29

    This vedio should automatically start with 0.75x speed.

  • @SaveSoilSaveSoil
    @SaveSoilSaveSoil 5 лет назад +4

    Whoever recorded and uploaded this video, thank you very much

  • @ridcomics9364
    @ridcomics9364 9 лет назад +10

    Man his mind is in a mania mode.
    I am always amazed at how people think like this.
    It's a struggle to get your thoughts out.
    great stuff.

  • @TheAlexandersword
    @TheAlexandersword 3 года назад +8

    What is his primary focus in mathematics? Because whatever it is, eventually he will be remembered as the one who advanced it forever. Truly an exceptional teacher too!!

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder 3 года назад +9

      He’s made valuable contributions to many areas. Not sure he really has *the* primary focus, but you can guess he’d like to solve the Riemann Hypothesis and the Twin Prime Conjecture. However these days you don’t solve big number theory problems by doing number theory, you take detours into equivalent problems in algebra etc.

    • @therandomthoughtsofaninsig5492
      @therandomthoughtsofaninsig5492 Год назад

      Harmonic Analysis

  • @LivingDead53
    @LivingDead53 6 лет назад +8

    Being locked in a psych ward for like 80-some days with a rubber pen and sheets of notebook paper, I came up with a few factors of primes by using my triangle or my building square. They fizzle out though. :( Still, Tao is my hero. I hope to one day pass calculus. It's my dream. I love math. I just suck at it.

  • @Jinouga502
    @Jinouga502 5 лет назад +150

    He's talkign so fast that if you turn the subtitiles on its in Binary.

    • @MolotowCocktail24
      @MolotowCocktail24 4 года назад +10

      But binary is terribly slow and inefficient to code something

    • @Srewotgames
      @Srewotgames 4 года назад

      NEKROZ OF BRIONAC exactly you’d need lines and lines of binary for a couple of words

  • @kamilziemian995
    @kamilziemian995 3 года назад +1

    Terence Tao talks about prime number are so clear and informative.

  • @jordanmicahcook
    @jordanmicahcook 8 лет назад +42

    I think his mind is going so fast that it is hard for him to slow down enough to put it into words.

  • @Swanmaster123
    @Swanmaster123 8 лет назад +71

    Imagine not properly preparing before one of this guys lectures. You'd be blankly staring tge entire time.

    • @alephnull4044
      @alephnull4044 5 лет назад +8

      I'm like that in all my maths lectures regardless

    • @Reivivus
      @Reivivus 4 года назад

      Imagine the final exam in his class

  • @mathbbn2676
    @mathbbn2676 4 года назад +1

    The teaching of the teacher is very clear and clear to the students.

  • @mohammadaminmasoomi3597
    @mohammadaminmasoomi3597 5 лет назад +4

    He is a genius. And he advice us if we want to explain and understand the laws in the nature.we must ask why

  • @LOR.e_xplores
    @LOR.e_xplores 7 лет назад +20

    When the teacher is teaching and you don't understand anything. You don't even know what questions to ask in order for you to grasp. This is how I feel while watching this video.

    • @hohowan7e
      @hohowan7e 3 года назад

      He is not good at manifesting question in easy and simple way due to the limitation of his ability.

  • @doncorleone7940
    @doncorleone7940 4 года назад +76

    i searched for "how to bake" then i dont know why im here.

  • @JMnyJohns
    @JMnyJohns 5 лет назад +17

    If you are undecided - this is very approachable and interesting. Though he speaks very quickly he makes sure to write everything down and the concepts are straightforward enough to follow with just a High School level understanding of math. It's pretty cool.

    • @rubengarciaquismondo
      @rubengarciaquismondo 2 года назад

      @Alex Lee calc 1 is high school level stfu. At least in europe. All calc classes should be taught in high school bc they arent really math. “Real” math starts with analysis, set theory and linear algebra. Its crazy how the math undergrad level in the US is so low. In Europe we start freshman year straight away with real analysis and what they call in the US “abstract” linear algebra. In the US they learn it on the 3rd year of undergrad. Its embarassing. While on my second year in Europe I learn measure theory, measure theoretic probability theory, etc. and on my 3rd year undergrad i learn functional analysis

    • @undefined888
      @undefined888 2 года назад

      @Hongsun L. you guys don't learn calculus in highschool??

    • @VS-is9yb
      @VS-is9yb Год назад

      @Hongsun L. Calculus is taught in schools. At least in Usa and in UK. And in Germany and in France. And in Russia and in China...

    • @TuanDuong-gs6ui
      @TuanDuong-gs6ui Год назад

      You are cap af I bet you not even graduate BA degree

  • @Evil_pinata
    @Evil_pinata 8 лет назад +70

    His secret: he does a lot of speed

  • @ooffoo5130
    @ooffoo5130 3 года назад +8

    "Well you see, some of them are small, some of them are large. Thank you for attending this lecture."

  • @Saperwill
    @Saperwill 8 лет назад +329

    2+2=3

    • @molaskarlaskar
      @molaskarlaskar 8 лет назад +36

      0÷0=2

    • @joshi5507
      @joshi5507 7 лет назад +9

      no. 2+2 is 5.

    • @purefatdude2
      @purefatdude2 6 лет назад +45

      2+2=4-1=3 QUICK MATH

    • @simohayha6031
      @simohayha6031 5 лет назад +1

      @@kyotokhon5031 actually it is 10, so I can't tell if you're doing that on purpose. 2+2x4, first multiplication than add 2. Lol fail? Cause your comment doesn't fit in with the rest.

    • @antimageantimage3424
      @antimageantimage3424 5 лет назад +1

      @@molaskarlaskar you're actually right

  • @mern2351
    @mern2351 9 лет назад +261

    Wat

  • @bishwanathmaji8987
    @bishwanathmaji8987 3 года назад

    How quickness he is about his lecture on prime -gaps...so Experienced n brilliant on his topics...

  • @zfrmusic6663
    @zfrmusic6663 3 года назад +45

    For a historically great mathematician who will no doubt become a timeless name like Gauss or Euler, he is quite a down to earth teacher and effective

    • @Mster_J
      @Mster_J 2 года назад

      "Oiler" is how it’s pronounced. Not " ew-ler" or "u-ler" as people commonly mispronounce

    • @VinOnline
      @VinOnline Год назад +93

      @@Mster_J You have been gifted the skill of reading people's pronunciation through text.

    • @obinator9065
      @obinator9065 Год назад

      @@Mster_Jtoilet paper

    • @parmenides2576
      @parmenides2576 11 месяцев назад

      Tao seems like a nice guy but comparing him to Euler is one of the most insane things I have ever read on RUclips, and that’s saying something

  • @googl2503
    @googl2503 4 года назад +10

    After watching all of this video, I finally was able to figure out how to sign up Amazon Prime!

  • @fieldtinny33
    @fieldtinny33 Год назад

    I met Terry on a night out. He found the meaning of life, the universe and everything. Didnt share though as so humble and modest.

  • @Kashby281
    @Kashby281 5 лет назад +55

    9:21 "If you want to get to anything below 6 to get down to 2 you will need a new method"
    Well If you get the 6 right and you minus 4 off it then that equals 2.
    *_I AM LOOKING FORWARD TO RECEIVING MY NOBEL PRIZE_*

    • @parvezkhan3910
      @parvezkhan3910 4 года назад +2

      Well, you don't get Nobel in Mathematics, Field's Medal is something you can get for sure!

    • @Kashby281
      @Kashby281 4 года назад +10

      @@parvezkhan3910 *_THE FIRST EVER NOBEL PRIZE IN MATHEMATICS_*

    • @_Nibi
      @_Nibi 4 года назад +4

      @@Kashby281 We're witnessing history in the making right here!!

    • @Phymacss
      @Phymacss 7 месяцев назад +1

      Oh my god you are a genius please teach us your ways of thinking🙏🏻

  • @neptuneninja
    @neptuneninja 6 лет назад +7

    I know this guy, he's from Australia, Adelaide South Australia if I remember correctly. He's a math prodigy who won medals at the math olympics
    When he was only around 12-13, everyone else in the competition was around 18. But as a kid he went by the name of Terence not Terry.

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder 2 года назад +1

      You do realize “Terry” is the typical nickname for any Terrence?

  • @themptytree3145
    @themptytree3145 3 года назад +9

    Imagine having your name written on that board.

  • @blackmarlin3166
    @blackmarlin3166 5 лет назад +19

    He is what happened when I overclocked my PC.

  • @dylanzwick
    @dylanzwick 9 лет назад +47

    There's a stereotype out there of the genius who can't communicate with "regular" people. I think it's mostly false.
    I've been to a number of math talks and, in my experience, the best mathematicians give the best talks. I think it's a combination of genius lending itself to all aspects of life, including public speaking, and the idea that if you've thought about something deeply and understood it profoundly, you can figure out the simplest and most appropriate way of explaining it. That's certainly how I feel every time I listen to Tao talk or read his blog.
    Mind, this is a heuristic and not an absolute rule! Some mediocre mathematicians are great speakers, and some brilliant mathematicians are almost indecipherable.

    • @The112Windows
      @The112Windows 8 лет назад +2

      They are able to explain well because they understand the concepts they are explaining with great depth.

    • @thetedmang
      @thetedmang 6 лет назад

      TL;DR

    • @iKSWag23
      @iKSWag23 6 лет назад

      What makes you think people care what you have to say

    • @frontseatastronaut
      @frontseatastronaut 6 лет назад +1

      @@iKSWag23 same to you

  • @lapislazulimoon
    @lapislazulimoon 4 года назад

    It is truly rare to find a lecture that you need to slow down instead of speed up

  • @stephenhughes1862
    @stephenhughes1862 7 лет назад +13

    This guy is awesome! God bless mathematics!

  • @fiveredpears
    @fiveredpears 9 лет назад +8

    There's intelligent, then there's brilliant, then there's genius, then there's Terry Tao.

  • @tuannabolas591
    @tuannabolas591 3 года назад +5

    He is specialist of prime number including all operations related to it.

  • @robertb8447
    @robertb8447 9 лет назад +9

    Instructions unclear, used prime numbers to create a time machine and am stuck in infinite loop.

  • @PullingEnterprises
    @PullingEnterprises 5 лет назад +9

    9:50 "Here it's saying you can find infinitely many intervals of 600 that contain two primes."

  • @jimjimakos1101
    @jimjimakos1101 2 года назад

    Great mathematical a smart mind these people we need them to helping us in the math problems to give us solutions and helping us to understand anything we dont know about math have a great day terence tao

  • @kevinoduor9841
    @kevinoduor9841 4 года назад +6

    he gives an important lecture to professors in T-shirt. times have changed.

  • @naufalhajjaj8286
    @naufalhajjaj8286 5 лет назад +35

    We need Richard Feynman in our generation to explain this concisely to us.

    • @axemenace6637
      @axemenace6637 5 лет назад +13

      I dont think Feynman was suited to talk about analytic number theory. Tao is a much better candidate.

    • @naufalhajjaj8286
      @naufalhajjaj8286 5 лет назад +3

      @@axemenace6637 I know.. But I need somebody that can explain it concisely to the mass.. Not necessarily exactly like Feynman..

    • @nasajetpropulsionlaborator8727
      @nasajetpropulsionlaborator8727 5 лет назад +2

      Naufal Hajjaj the only thing feynman did in his career is rape underprivileged minorities

    • @romanempire1405
      @romanempire1405 4 года назад

      He Is The New Feynman

    • @romanempire1405
      @romanempire1405 4 года назад +1

      @@nasajetpropulsionlaborator8727 What

  • @alexcooper4527
    @alexcooper4527 Год назад +6

    What is astonishing and cute is that Terry Tao, despite his fame and accomplishment has stayed humble. And despite teaching for so many years, he still cannot maintain eye contact, which is a typical trait of a genius who are usually introverts. It comforts me because, I too struggle to maintain eye contact, although I manage to get above average grades. I have learnt some social skills by closely observing behavior of others and learning gradually from them. It is self-reassuring in a way to know that there are other people like me, who are much more accomplished in their lives. It is OK to be an introvert, as long as you still care about people and are passionate about your work and your family.
    I wish everyone who is reading my message to have a nice day, a happy week, and a wonderful year. 🙂

    • @programmerpctheory1413
      @programmerpctheory1413 Год назад +1

      Damn that comforts me too, even though I don't fully believe you. Thanks!

    • @LexiNc8284
      @LexiNc8284 Год назад

      @@programmerpctheory1413LMAOOO

  • @chazj8706
    @chazj8706 5 лет назад +6

    Thank u prof Tao. Your book is awesome and saved my real analysis class

    • @anarghamondal2036
      @anarghamondal2036 3 года назад

      Agree. Prof. Tao's Analysis I and Analysis II are both very beautiful and concise books.

  • @bobeatschocolate
    @bobeatschocolate 7 лет назад +4

    I'm very mesmerized by your ability to write so smoothly on a chalkboard. I usually whiteboard everything but I love the smoothness of chalk and when you have noticeable symmetry in your alignment of words / numbers on the board... AH i'm just sitting here in the dark LOVING it lol.

    • @1SSJA
      @1SSJA 4 года назад

      It depends on the chalk you use

    • @bryantgouveia
      @bryantgouveia 4 года назад

      This is the weirdest, gayest and creepiest comment I have ever seen on yt...

  • @yajuneshmr9775
    @yajuneshmr9775 3 года назад +13

    His Brain: 240 fps
    His mouth: 60Hz

  • @BlackRose3610
    @BlackRose3610 3 года назад +10

    These people have so little appreciation for this mans jokes