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From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
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Dear Wolfram Research,

I have submitted an application form and am now submitting samples.
I've answered six questions.  Please let me know if you want more.

I am not planning on sending you paper unless you want a pile
of reprints of papers.  Instead, I will point you to online versions.

First, my short vita is at:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/vita.html
If you want a longer version, I could update mine,
but you can get many details on my publications from
the HCI Bibliography.  Here is a canned search:
	http://www.hcibib.org/gs.cgi?terms=%25A%20Gary%20Perlman
I made a little table of my skills, as they relate to
software development:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/skills.html

My vita has links to examples of my work, but here are some highlights:

My main work at OCLC is on FirstSearch, a bibliographic
and full text retrieval system used in about 15,000 libraries.
I coordinated all user interface development,
from analysis, to design, coding, and usability testing.
My experiences in making FirstSearch usable, multilingual,
accessible, portable, and modifiable are summarized in:
"The FirstSearch User Interface Architecture"
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/fsmulti.doc
This will be presented at an ACM SIGCHI conference:
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/cuu/
You can try the demo version of FirstSearch at:
	http://www.oclc.org/cgi-oclc/uncgi/fs5.scr.cgi

|STAT is a data analysis package that has been in use
for over 20 years.  Here is its home page:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/stat/
Here is the user manual in PDF (circa 1986, but I list it
here because it is work that is more mathematical than
other work I have done):
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/stat/handbook.pdf
Of course, it is not in any way comparable to Mathematica,
but on the other hand, how many job applicants do you get
who have written a data analysis package used by thousands?

In my spare time, I have cobbled together the HCI Bibliography,
a free-access online bibliography on human-computer interaction:
	http://www.hcibib.org/
It has an online search engine which has handled about 200K
searches in the past year, 350K in all.

As part of the HCI Bibliography, I started cataloging HCI
resources on the Web, in part to meet my own information needs
for working on FirstSearch, and pages generated from these
have been "hit" over half a million times in the past two years:
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/hci-sites/
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/publications/
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/education/
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/intercultural/
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/kids/
	http://www.acm.org/sigcaph/links/
My suggested readings page has had 38K hits in the past 2.5 years,
and has been supporting, through the Amazon.com associates program,
the ACM SIGCHI Central Ohio chapter, BuckCHI:
	http://www.acm.org/chapters/buckchi/
which I helped create, served as Chair, and now serve as Secretary.

Supporting a lot of this information gathering is the Semi-Structured
Toolkit, which I describe in a keynote address I gave at the 1992
Australian conference on HCI:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/papers/ozchi.html

I edited a book on the best HCI papers from the Human Factors
and Ergonomics Society meetings:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/hfeshci/
and the preface describes the process used:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/hfeshci/preface.html

Other papers can be found in links from my home page:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/
but many people are most impressed by my paper in
the Best of the Journal of Irreproducible Results:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/armleg.html

That should be enough technical material for you.
On a more personal note, I am very happy where I
am at OCLC, having been there for a little over 4 years.
People at OCLC are very nice, and very positive
about their work.  It's a high tech but low key place.
I was at OSU in computer science for eight years
(I managed this despite never coming up for tenure)
and consulted a lot locally; when I decided to leave
academia, mainly because of a lack of colleagues,
I was able to choose the place I liked working at most,
and OCLC was kind enough to make a special position
for me.  And Columbus is a nice place to live
(but you wouldn't want to visit here).

I used to have other hobbies, but now we have kids,
so my new hobbies are reading books, playing games,
building gigantic wooden swing sets, etc.
SOmetimes I even write little books:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/stories/bunny01.htm
We have two boys, Mark 7 and George 3.
Both are very nice and clever, of course.

My wife is an associate professor in Psychology
at OSU.  Politics at OSU and within Psychology
are wearing her down, despite her being well
funded and having won, for example, an APA
young investigator's award.  She has colleagues
who she respects highly at UIUC, and they have
been urging her to apply.  One of her colleagues
suggested that Wolfram was worth considering,
and given my affinity for developing software,
particularly mathematical software, motivated
me to take these steps.

My wife is anxious to see things move along,
so if there is interest, let me know.  If not,
well, at least I'm enjoying my job now, and maybe
things will improve for my wife.

So, it's your move.

Gary Perlman

PS: People find this true story amusing:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/ant.html

PPS: this message has 23 URLs, if you care to know

From FirstSearch@oclc.org Thu Aug 31 00:47:03 2000
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Subject: A study in complexity
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Database: PerAbs ReadersGuideAbs WorldCat
Query: kw: stephen and kw: wolfram

Full-text source: PerAbs
A study in complexity

Author:           Hotz, Robert Lee Source:           MIT's Technology
Review v100n7 (Oct 1997): 22-29 ISSN:             0040-1692 Number:    
      03446633 Copyright:        Copyright Massachusetts Institute of
Technology Alumni Association 1997


(Photograph Omitted)

He conducts secret experiments alone after hours at the software
company he founded. He has the arrogance to announce that he's going to
reinvent physics-and though he won't share his
findings with anyone, his colleagues think Stephen Wolfram just may be
brilliant enough to do it.

In the bright sunshine filtering through Caltech's blooming jacaranda
trees, there is little to distinguish the plump, middle-aged physicist
from the knot of faculty and students outside the university
auditorium, save the tiny StarTac cellular phone clipped to his baggy
black trousers, his laptop computer-the thinnest money can buy-and the
attentive publicist who carries it for him.

Working up his nerve, a 17-yearold Caltech physics major edges up to
the man and asks him to autograph a set of computer disks. The
physicist is Stephen Wolfram. The disks contain a computer program he
designed called Mathematica, the centerpiece of the $100 million
company he founded after leaving academia in 1986.

As Wolfram scribbles his signature with a modest flourish, he seems to
savor a moment of perfect personal equilibrium, such as a tightrope
artist might enjoy after a back flip on the high wire, kept aloft
solely by his faith in himself. Indeed, many consider Wolfram one of
the most intriguing high-wire acts in physics today.

Working without a net-the security of an academic position or the
collaboration of colleagues-Wolfram is using the pattern-generating
capacities of computers to try to uncover fundamental rules underlying
the extraordinary, chaotic complexity of the universe. In doing so, he
says, he is rebuilding physics from the bottom up by developing
techniques that rival the mathematical equations conventional
physicists use to describe and predict events in the world around us.

To physicists, mathematics is a language. It offers a
vocabulary-geometry, calculus, and quadratic equations-that allows them
to describe many of the properties of the universe, from the
relationship between the radius and the circumference of a circle to
the behavior of subatomic particles. Its most famous epigram-E=mc sup 2
-conveys in poetic shorthand the frozen energy of mass and the power to
destroy cities.

But traditional physics has been unable to explain many common
phenomena in nature, from the singularity of snowflakes to the
self-organizing properties of neural networks in the human brain.
Simply put, they are too complex. To investigate these phenomena, many
scholars, including Wolfram, have turned to the emerging field of
complexity theory. Complexity theory seeks explanations for apparently
unpredictable phenomena-the flight of a swarm of bees, the ebb and flow
of the stock market-in the interplay of their myriad simple components.
In each case, individual actors-bees or brokers-make separate decisions
based on simple rules; taken together, their actions create dynamic,
apparently random patterns.

Wolfram and his colleagues believe the complexity of the universe
belies an underlying simplicity in which a few basic rules give rise to
complicated and unpredictable behavior. Indeed, if one conceives of God
as a clever programmer, then one can imagine our vast, expanding
universe as the elaborate consequence of an algorithm that set the
conditions of the cataclysm known as the Big Bang. Everything that has
followed-from black holes and organic chemistry to the rise of human
consciousness and the spontaneous melody of a jazz improvisation-is an
inevitable result.

Some of the rules that govern the behavior of the universe, we know:
the laws of motion, the speed of light, the relationship between matter
and energy. Others, however, may be embedded in systems so complex that
they defy conventional analysis. To investigate the universe from this
new perspective, scientists like Wolfram use computer simulations the
way previous generations of scientists used microscopes, radio
telescopes, cyclotrons, and particle accelerators. To the extent that
the universe may behave like a computer obeying a programmer's
instructions, they argue, computer models are the best device for
learning how it works.

Wolfram says the computer experiments he has been conducting after
hours at Wolfram Research in Champaign, Ill., have led him into a new
world of basic science. The problem is, he won't tell anyone what he
has discovered there. He has not published a formal research paper in
years, nor has he presented his findings at any scientific conference
though he does promise eventually to publish them in a book. Even close
colleagues say they know only the general outlines of his work.

"Is there a simple computer that is the universe-a logical
representation of how the universe fundamentally works?" Wolfram asks.
"I will admit to having made quite a lot of progress on that question.
It strongly encourages me to say the answer is yes."

But for now, that is about as much as he will reveal of his research.

With almost any other scientist, Wolfram's secretive midnight computer
hacking might be dismissed as eccentricity or-less charitably-as the
activity of someone unwilling to accept the consequences of his career
choices. His erudite patter on the future of physics, modulated by his
soft British accent, might seem just so much high-tech hyperbole, the
kind of self-promotion that is as much a part of software packaging as
shrink-wrap plastic. (This is, after all, a man whose corporate press
release describes him as "one of the world's most original
scientists.") So why is anyone listening?

"If I were less well known, people would just say, 'The guy is a nut
case. Forget him,"' Wolfram admits. But a remarkable number of
respected computer scientists, physicists, and mathematicians seem, for
the moment, to have suspended their disbelief. Some say they take
Wolfram seriously because of his published record as a physicist, his
work developing Mathematica, and the strength of his intellect.
"Everybody, himself included, has been looking to him for a major
contribution," says physicist Norman Packard, who helped Wolfram
establish the Center for Complex Systems at the University of Illinois.
The founder of a financial analysis firm in Santa Fe, N.Mex., Packard
now applies complexity theory to help Swiss banks play the stock market.

Others stress the potential of the emerging field of computational
physics. Neuroscientist Terry Sejnowski, who researches complex neural
networks at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla,
Calif., says Wolfram offers a "vision of the future of science"-a
science "based on computational principles rather than the classical
mathematical tools that so many generations of scientists have relied
on."

"I think what he is doing goes to the bedrock of particle physics,"
Sejnowski says. "He is talking about a computational [model of the]
universe based on quite new principles."

"If he succeeds he will make us rethink the world we are in," says
Steven Levy, author of Artificial Life, an introduction to the emerging
field of computer-driven complexity studies. "I think he has a shot at
it."

CAMPUS CLASHES

Wolfram has come to Caltech to lecture on Mathematica as part of a
15-city tour to publicize the release of the newest version of the
$1,295 software package. The encounter is also a personal homecoming of
sorts for the 37-year-old CEO.

When he was barely out of his teens, the baby-faced doctoral student
was Caltech's impatient wonder boy, a rising star whose work applying
high-energy physics to cosmology was bright enough to attract the
interest of Nobel laureates Richard Feynman and Murray Gell-Mann. But
on this day at Caltech, mellowed by age, marriage, fatherhood, and
commercial success, Wolfram no longer resembles the study in adolescent
impetuosity who was known to choose his vacation spots simply by buying
an airplane ticket to whatever destination appeared at the top of the
departure board. Over a lunch of pork tenderloin and a green salad,
Wolfram politely deflects personal questions about his wife, who is a
mathematician, and his newborn child, out of privacy concerns prompted
by the Unabomber case. But he talks eagerly about his extensive
collection of seashells, the many dead ends of contemporary physics,
and the proper role of a scientist in a free-market society

A self-taught prodigy who never bothered with an undergraduate degree,
the English-born Wolfram published his first paper on a problem in
particle physics at 15. After stints at Eton and Oxford, he received
his PhD in physics from Caltech at 20. At 21, he made headlines as the
youngest person to receive a so-called genius grant from the MacArthur
Foundation. The grant was based on the quality of his intellect more
than on any single body of work and was intended to give Wolfram the
freedom to step outside the mainstream, explains Kenneth W. Hope, an
assistant dean of social sciences at the University of Chicago who
administered the MacArthur grant program. "He was so remarkably smart,"
Hope recalls. "He dazzled a lot of people."

"Working with him [was] like playing basketball with Michael Jordan,"
says Rocky Kolb, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the
University of Chicago, who coauthored 10 papers on high-energy physics
and the nascent universe with Wolfram early in his career. "He pushes."

Indeed, his talent and ambition seemed to be matched only by his
arrogance. Described as brash even by his friends, Wolfram had an
"amazing lack of respect for the work of other people," Levy recalls.
He hurried through a succession of prestigious faculty positions at
Caltech, the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, and the
University of Illinois, leaving patches of bad feeling smoldering
behind him like a series of burned bridges.

He left Caltech after a dispute over the ownership of a computer
programming language he developed. At Princeton, colleagues recall, his
reliance on electronic computation seemed to unsettle older scientists
more accustomed to slide rules and chalkboards. His impatience with
academic formalities and faculty politics soon led him to relocate to
Illinois, lured by the possibility of greater independence and the
promise of quick tenure. At Illinois, however, Wolfram "stepped on a
lot of toes," Packard says. "The political game of the university is a
complex one and is not always amenable to the brash, demanding whiz-kid
interloper." Again, impatience won out. And when he spurned academia
for the business world, many felt he had left his promise unfulfilled.

But in dozens of influential research
papers, he had left his mark on physics, cosmology, computer science,
and complexity theory. In 1981, for instance, he independently
reinvented cellular automata, a concept that mathematicians John von
Neumann and Stanislaw Ulam had created in 1953 for modeling complex
systems on computers. Wolfram subsequently used them to create a widely
used system for classifying complex phenomena. The publication of his
papers on cellular automata helped to lay the groundwork for the
development of the field of artificial life, a branch of complexity
studies that uses computer modeling to simulate ecosystems and explore
patterns of evolution.

Christopher Langton, director of the Artificial Life project at the
Santa Fe Institute for Complex Studies in New Mexico, emphasizes the
importance of Wolfram's work to the development of the field. "I don't
think there is any doubt that Stephen Wolfram made fundamental
contributions. His original work on the statistical mechanics of
cellular automata singlehandedly revitalized the field and has served
as the basis for countless other contributions by thousands of
researchers around the world."

Wolfram was also a "prime instigator" in creating the field of
computational physics-the use of computers to model problems in basic
physics-notes Gerald Tesauro, a physicist at the IBM Research
Division's Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y To
some extent, Wolfram's difficulties in academia stemmed from the
interdisciplinary nature of this new field, which cuts across the
organizational grain of academic departments, tenure tracks, and
faculty prerogatives. According to his former collaborators, the
physicist encountered considerable difficulty in obtaining funding for
his work through conventional academic channels. Several computer
scientists suggest that Wolfram may also have been handicapped by a
lingering skepticism among some members of the scientific community
about the true value of the kind of computer research he performs.
Computer experiments, the skeptics say, are only elaborate electronic
games with little or no connection to the real world. Indeed, the very
first such computer program, a pattern-generating program called Life,
was once distributed as part of a commercial package of computer games.

"There may have been some element of a question mark regarding the kind
of science that Stephen represents," Packard says. "This kind of
science is new and not exactly easy to take for the traditional
scientific community. But I think it has more to do with the intrinsic
difficulty-intellectually, politically, and culturally-of getting
academic disciplines to really embrace interdisciplinary research."

Wolfram's impatience with the organizational constraints of academia
matched his mounting frustration with the mechanics of coaxing
computers to model the hypotheses he wanted to pursue, a
dissatisfaction that drove him to develop Mathematica.

"Quite early on, I was interested in doing experiments on computers,"
Wolfram recalls. "One of the things that held me up was that I just
didn't have the right tools to do what I wanted to do. I spent a lot of
my days writing a lot of pieces of software to support these
experiments. I realized this was silly. I was spending lots of time
putting together tools which in some cases could be quite general
tools, but I was putting them together for very specific computer
experiments.

"'Maybe,' I thought, 'there is a better way to do this."'

And what is Mathematica, exactly? Even Wolfram and his marketing
department are hard pressed to give a simple description of this
comprehensive mathematics processing program. Incorporating hundreds of
math and physical constants and the world's largest collection of
mathematical formulas, it offers a wide range of computational tools
for scientists, engineers, and mathematicians interested in computer
modeling and simulations. The program not only performs calculations
but also generates graphics and provides the formatting tools of
desktop publishing so that researchers can present their work.

It is a versatile tool shaped by each user's individual purpose.
Researchers have used the software's modeling capabilities to solve
problems as diverse as designing the bicycle track for the 1996 Olympic
Games, predicting flow rates of molecules in commer-
cial shampoos using various kinds of ingredients, and determining how
tidal waves evolve as they sweep toward shore. So many
computer-graphics artists have used Mathematica to create arresting
geometric images that Wolfram opened an art gallery on his company's
Web site. According to the company's estimates, a million researchers
in 90 countries use the program, including all the Fortune 500
companies, the federal government, and the world's SO largest
universities.

The program has competitors, such as Mathcad, Scientific Workplace, and
Theorist. But with the newest release of Mathematica-Version 3.0-last
fall, Wolfram "established his superiority," says Columbia University
civil engineering professor Gautum Dasgupta, who uses Mathematica to
model the effects of major earthquakes. As head of an international
teaching group, he also uses the program to develop computer tutorials
for universities around the world. Dasgupta credits Mathematica's
"overall comprehensive approach" with distinguishing it from other,
more specialized programs. Other users note the program's emphasis on
technical innovation-in which they see the characteristics of the man
who designed it.

To produce the most recent version, Wolfram spent two years rebuilding
the program from the ground up. Now he has vowed to reconstruct the
world of physics, using Mathematica as the intellectual tool to do it.

THROUGH A MONITOR, DARKLY

Researchers like Wolfram turn their backs on the world outside the
laboratory They gaze instead through the windowpane of a computer
monitor into a hypothetical universe, harnessing the power of the
computer to explore the behavior of mathematical structures and complex
systems.

Every computer program embodies an algorithm, or a set of instructions,
that governs the way numerical data are modified by the computer, much as
the laws of nature govern the way objects behave in the real world. To
conduct experiments on a computer, Wolfram explains, researchers use
numbers or symbols to represent objects and then manipulate them
according to the rules they have established. "My work is all really
based on one big idea: that everything can be expressed as a symbolic
expression," he explains. Because these kinds of simulations can be
performed in a hypothetical universe rather than one bound by the laws
of nature, he argues, computer experiments represent "a new kind of
science."

When Wolfram first turned his attention to complexity studies in the
early 1980s, he was looking for a way to explain complex phenomena-the
patterns on mollusk shells, the behavior of molecules swirling in
turbulent fluid, and fluctuating prices on the stock market. "I tried
to use methods from statistical mechanics and various other quite
formal, sophisticated areas of physics and I was fairly disappointed
that I did not get very far using these conventional methods," Wolfram
says. "It is quite plain that the [conventional] approach has been a
failure for biology and studying more complex physical systems."

Instead, he developed a computer-modeling device called cellular
automata. Cellular automata are self-replicating, self-organizing
groups of cells that live, die, and form patterns based on simple rules
that instruct each cell to change its behavior in accordance with the
behavior of neighboring cells. They provide a uniquely useful tool for
scientists studying how the interaction of individual elements
influences a system as a whole. As in nature, it is extraordinarily
difficult to predict what pattern will result from a given set of
rules. The only way to find out is to set the initial conditions and
let the program run.

"I found that very simple rules, instead of producing fairly simple
behavior, actually produce extremely complicated behavior," Wolfram
says. "That is a piece of intuition that many people just haven't got
yet. When you see a complicated phenomenon in nature, your instinct is
to try and make a complicated model to explain it. Somehow, nature
itself does not need that. People don't understand that there are
really simple experiments that can tell you really interesting things
about, for example, how biological systems can be constructed."

Scientists in a variety of fields have begun using cellular automata
and other kinds of computer simulations to investigate questions
traditional physics can't answer. Physicist Per Bak at Brookhaven
National Laboratory is looking into his computer for a theory that
accounts for the ability of matter to organize itself into ever more
complex forms. Stuart Kauffman at the Santa Fe Institute is
investigating self-organizing behavior as a key to understanding the
origin of life. Langton at the Santa Fe Institute is developing
standardized computer programs to allow researchers to study complex
systems, from a collection of single-celled animals in a pond to a
group of competing companies.

But Wolfram, once again, is going his own way. In his view, much of the
research into complexity is "impenetrable nonsense" with "a fair amount
of rhetoric and not much science." But when it comes to trying to
explain his own work, he shares the difficulty: "I am talking about
concepts that are reasonably fundamental and reasonably abstract. That
means most words that describe it sound vacuous."

Where many researchers are using complexity studies to explore biology,
Wolfram says he is exploring the underlying order of the universe
itself. "I wondered what would happen if we started from scratch and
ignored everything that had been achieved in physics, to see what we
could do," he says. "I have spent the last 10 years doing the most
obvious experiments. Of course, you often do not realize they are
obvious until you have been thinking about it for years."

Computational physics "is a great field because nothing is known,
absolutely nothing," he declares. "There is a computer universe there
that just has not been looked at."

Wolfram is somewhat sheepish about the secrecy of his work, but says he
simply wants to work undisturbed by intellectual competition. Not
everyone is bothered by his silence. "Maybe Stephen has a really good
idea but is just being very careful about building a solid case for
it," Langton says.

Colleagues around the country say Wolfram has alluded to some of his
findings in Internet exchanges with a few key researchers. "He is
wrestling with what is probably the hardest question in physics-the
relationship between physics and computation. That is a pretty heady
topic," says Danny Hillis, an influential computer theoretician who
pioneered the concept of massive parallel processing, the basis of most
new supercomputer designs.

"He has given only tantalizing hints as to what the answers he has
found would be," says Kolb at the University of Chicago. "He seems
confident he is on to something."

"He is looking for some deep connections between fundamental physics
and fundamental ideas in computer science," says Gregory J. Chaitin, a
noted mathematician at IBM's Watson Research Center. The idea that the
way the universe works is analogous to the way computation works "is a
very intriguing idea that a number of people have speculated on, but
there has been no serious work. Maybe he won't find anything. But maybe
he will find something very interesting indeed."

A SCIENTIST WITHOUT PEER

Whether Wolfram succeeds or fails as a physicist, the manner in which
he has chosen to pursue his research poses some provocative questions
for the practice of science.

What sets Wolfram apart is his insistence on working independently, not
just without collaborators but also without the supporting
superstructure of the conventional research establishment: he relies on
his own funding and equipment and has no one to answer to but himself.

"My view about doing basic science," he explains, "is that if you have
no choice, then getting paid by a university is a fine thing to do. If
you have a choice, there are a lot better ways to live.

"As CEO of a company, the fraction of my time that I get to devote to
basic science is probably much larger than the fraction of time that a
typical senior professor at a university would devote to basic
research. If you are a senior university professor, you are out raising
money from the government, being on committees, and teaching classes.
It is only in the extra bonus time that you get to do research."

Wolfram says he wants to revive an older tradition in which people
pursue science as a personal calling, whether or not they are the
beneficiaries of public patronage. Too many scientists today, he says,
give up their research simply because they can't get the public to pay
for it. Indeed, one of the attractions of computational research, he
says, is that it requires nothing more expensive than a personal
computer.

"I don't have to beg the government," he says. "I don't have to
convince anyone at the National Science Foundation that what I am doing
is not as nutty as they might assume or as the peer review system might
say it is."

No public funding, however, means no real obligation to communicate his
findings, and no need to submit himself to peer review. "It may sound
arrogant, but I have moved pretty far away from what most scientists
know about," Wolfram maintains. "That means there are fewer and fewer
people I can talk to about what I am doing. Your typical top scientist
does not know this stuff.

"I am my own reality check," he concludes.

Some researchers say Wolfram is blazing a path for other scientists to
follow. With full-time faculty research jobs scarce and funding for
basic industrial research increasingly rare, many scientists are
seeking new ways to balance the demands of commerce against the lure of
knowledge for its own sake. And the idea of financial independence is
becoming more attractive.

By creating a software company to support his work, "he has built a new
model for funding science-the scientist as entrepreneur, rather than
the scientist as public welfare recipient," says Sejnowski at the Salk
Institute. Wolfram, he says, reminds him of Edwin Land, who founded
Polaroid and then continued to pursue basic research into the physics
of color and vision in his corporate lab.

"In starting your own business," physicist-turnedentrepreneur Packard
concurs, "you don't have to deal with the same kind of political
complexities, and you don't have to tolerate a lot of the bull you have
to tolerate in a university. You are not at the whim of the scientific
culture of some funding agency."

There is certainly no shortage of iconoclastic loners in contemporary
science. Princeton University mathematician Andrew Wiles spent seven
years working secretly in his attic to polish a 200-page proof of
Fermat's Last Theorem, one of the most famous problems in his field.
When he unveiled his solution in a series of dramatic lectures in 1993,
he made headlines around the world. Only then, however, did a
sharp-eyed graduate student spot-and help fix-a critical error.

Indeed, the aloofness that Wolfram considers one of his virtues, others
see as self-defeating. "He is battling with himself when he chooses to
work in complete isolation," one former Princeton University associate
says. "He is hurting himself by not interacting more with the
scientific community at large."

Other colleagues worry that his research muse has become a computer
widow. In the past 18 months, for example, he has had little
opportunity to brood on basic science, concentrating instead on
polishing the new release of the program. They question whether Wolfram
will ever be willing to loosen his hold on company operations enough to
permit sustained, reflective research. While admiring his commercial
success, they worry that he has been sidetracked by his tools-like a
sculptor who spends all day sharpening her chisels but never sets one
to marble, or a novelist who spends all day fiddling with the fonts in
his word processing program.

"He has invested a lot of time in [Mathematica]," Hillis says. "That is
great for the rest of us who use it, but it is probably bad for
physics."

The program Wolfram developed to facilitate his own research may, in
the end, overshadow it; the man who sought such a prominent place in
the history of science may have to settle instead for a mention in his
own company's annual reports. But as the scientific community waits and
watches, it is not yet clear how this particular high-wire act will
end. Wolfram remains balanced delicately on the tightrope of his
ambitions.

"I seriously doubt that Stephen would set himself up for the fall he
would take if he never delivers on the promise," Langton says. "I am
willing to place my bets on Stephen, even though I don't know when they
might pay off."

Author Affiliation:

ROBERT LEE HOTZ reports on research and technology issues for the Los
Angeles Times, where he shared a 1994 Pulitzer Prize with his
colleagues for coverage of the 1994 earthquake in Northridge, Calif.

From wri-hr@wolfram.com Wed Aug 30 15:25:26 2000
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Message-Id: <v04210123b5d30f2b8786@[140.177.200.177]>
Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 14:21:15 -0500
To: Gary Perlman<perlman@acm.org>
From: Wolfram Research Resumes<resumes@wolfram.com>
Subject: Employment application to Wolfram Research
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"
Status: RO

Thank you very much for your interest in opportunities at Wolfram 
Research, and for the Employment Application that you submitted to us.

For us to move your application forward, we would like to ask you to 
visit http://www.wolfram.com/opportunities/appquestions/ and respond 
to whatever questions you feel are appropriate.  We have found these 
questions to be highly effective in matching applicants with 
opportunities at Wolfram Research.

When you visit this page, please use:
     First Name:   Gary
     Last Name:    Perlman
     Applicant ID: 18987

So that we can assemble as complete a picture as possible of your 
skills and interests, we also invite you to send us your current 
resume and cover letter, as well as nonproprietary samples of your 
work. For guidelines on submitting this information, please visit our 
web site at http://www.wolfram.com/opportunities/formats.html.

We look forward to hearing further from you.

Best wishes,
  Human Resources
Wolfram Research, Inc.

From perlman Mon Sep 11 13:20:53 2000
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	by turing.acm.org (8.9.2/8.9.2) id NAA06664;
	Mon, 11 Sep 2000 13:20:46 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
Message-Id: <200009111720.NAA06664@turing.acm.org>
Subject: [18987][Gary:Perlman]
To: resumes@wolfram.com
Date: Mon, 11 Sep 100 13:20:46 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: perlman
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL25]
Content-Type: text
Status: O

Dear Wolfram,

I filled out an application form on August 30, 
answered a handful of questions, and followed
up with a message on September 1st, but I have
not heard any response.

Since that time, I have been reading up on Mathematica,
mostly on the Wolfram site, and I have become more
excited about contributions I could make to Wolfram.
As you may have been able to tell, I have had a long
interest in mathematics education, having, in grad school
published a paper in NTCM's The Mathematics Teacher
on making mathematical notation more meaningful,
which actually turned into my doctoral dissertation
topic.  I am impressed by the potential of notebook
pages, presented through Mathematica or MathReader,
for all levels of mathematics education.  One
area that I think I could make immediate contributions
would be in usability testing of the MathReader,
and in seeing it through changes to make it
more usable by a wider audience.

I also think I could lead projects concerned with
making Wolfram software more accessible to wider
audiences, audiences including non-English and
visually impaired, depending on market demand.

If you could be so kind, I would appreciate
some sort of update this week.  After that,
I will assume there you have no interest.

Thank you for your time.

Gary Perlman

From christin@wolfram.com Tue Sep 12 12:09:19 2000
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Message-Id: <v04011718b5e4047f8812@[140.177.117.37]>
In-Reply-To: <200009111720.NAA06664@turing.acm.org>
Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 11:07:05 -0500
To: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
From: Christine Cunningham <christin@wolfram.com>
Subject: Re: [18987][Gary:Perlman]
Status: RO

We have sent your application and other materials to a couple of department
managers.  I am waiting to hear back from them (they do tend to be slow
when responding to HR so a lack of comment should not be considered a lack
of interest) but I have asked them again for their comments and let them
know that we needed to get back to you this week with an indication of
whether we'd like to interview.

Christine Cunningham
Human Resources Administrator

>Dear Wolfram,
>
>I filled out an application form on August 30,
>answered a handful of questions, and followed
>up with a message on September 1st, but I have
>not heard any response.
>
>Since that time, I have been reading up on Mathematica,
>mostly on the Wolfram site, and I have become more
>excited about contributions I could make to Wolfram.
>As you may have been able to tell, I have had a long
>interest in mathematics education, having, in grad school
>published a paper in NTCM's The Mathematics Teacher
>on making mathematical notation more meaningful,
>which actually turned into my doctoral dissertation
>topic.  I am impressed by the potential of notebook
>pages, presented through Mathematica or MathReader,
>for all levels of mathematics education.  One
>area that I think I could make immediate contributions
>would be in usability testing of the MathReader,
>and in seeing it through changes to make it
>more usable by a wider audience.
>
>I also think I could lead projects concerned with
>making Wolfram software more accessible to wider
>audiences, audiences including non-English and
>visually impaired, depending on market demand.
>
>If you could be so kind, I would appreciate
>some sort of update this week.  After that,
>I will assume there you have no interest.
>
>Thank you for your time.
>
>Gary Perlman


From perlman Tue Sep 12 14:09:52 2000
Received: (from perlman@localhost)
	by turing.acm.org (8.9.2/8.9.2) id OAA27353;
	Tue, 12 Sep 2000 14:09:41 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
Message-Id: <200009121809.OAA27353@turing.acm.org>
Subject: Re: [18987][Gary:Perlman]
To: christin@wolfram.com (Christine Cunningham)
Date: Tue, 12 Sep 100 14:09:41 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: perlman
In-Reply-To: <v04011718b5e4047f8812@[140.177.117.37]> from "Christine Cunningham" at Sep 12, 0 11:07:05 am
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL25]
Content-Type: text
Status: O

Dear Ms. Cunningham,

Thank you for the update.  I understand that it's hard to generate
interest form an application out of the blue.

Given that I had only interacted with automated systems,
I was half wondering whether there was anything connected at the other end.

My time pressure is this.  If there is no interest in me,
then my wife is not going to apply to UIUC.  But if there is,
then my wife needs to get her letter writers time to prepare
for an October 1 deadline.  Academic letters at her level tend
to be several pages long, and she does not want to ask
people to do so much preparation and then tell them she
is not applying.  She would like to ask for the letters
by the end of this week, if she is going to need them.

I apologize for the rush and the push.  It's not the sort
of first impression I like to make.

Sincerely,

Gary Perlman

> We have sent your application and other materials to a couple of department
> managers.  I am waiting to hear back from them (they do tend to be slow
> when responding to HR so a lack of comment should not be considered a lack
> of interest) but I have asked them again for their comments and let them
> know that we needed to get back to you this week with an indication of
> whether we'd like to interview.
> 
> Christine Cunningham
> Human Resources Administrator
> 
> >Dear Wolfram,
> >
> >I filled out an application form on August 30,
> >answered a handful of questions, and followed
> >up with a message on September 1st, but I have
> >not heard any response.
> >
> >Since that time, I have been reading up on Mathematica,
> >mostly on the Wolfram site, and I have become more
> >excited about contributions I could make to Wolfram.
> >As you may have been able to tell, I have had a long
> >interest in mathematics education, having, in grad school
> >published a paper in NTCM's The Mathematics Teacher
> >on making mathematical notation more meaningful,
> >which actually turned into my doctoral dissertation
> >topic.  I am impressed by the potential of notebook
> >pages, presented through Mathematica or MathReader,
> >for all levels of mathematics education.  One
> >area that I think I could make immediate contributions
> >would be in usability testing of the MathReader,
> >and in seeing it through changes to make it
> >more usable by a wider audience.
> >
> >I also think I could lead projects concerned with
> >making Wolfram software more accessible to wider
> >audiences, audiences including non-English and
> >visually impaired, depending on market demand.
> >
> >If you could be so kind, I would appreciate
> >some sort of update this week.  After that,
> >I will assume there you have no interest.
> >
> >Thank you for your time.
> >
> >Gary Perlman
> 
> 


From christin@wolfram.com Wed Sep 13 16:44:52 2000
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References: <v04011718b5e4047f8812@[140.177.117.37]> from "Christine
 Cunningham" at Sep 12, 0 11:07:05 am
Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 15:43:21 -0500
To: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
From: Christine Cunningham <christin@wolfram.com>
Subject: Re: [18987][Gary:Perlman]
Status: RO

I'm passing  your email along to the Director of HR.  Perhaps she can speed
things up a bit.




>Dear Ms. Cunningham,
>
>Thank you for the update.  I understand that it's hard to generate
>interest form an application out of the blue.
>
>Given that I had only interacted with automated systems,
>I was half wondering whether there was anything connected at the other end.
>
>My time pressure is this.  If there is no interest in me,
>then my wife is not going to apply to UIUC.  But if there is,
>then my wife needs to get her letter writers time to prepare
>for an October 1 deadline.  Academic letters at her level tend
>to be several pages long, and she does not want to ask
>people to do so much preparation and then tell them she
>is not applying.  She would like to ask for the letters
>by the end of this week, if she is going to need them.
>
>I apologize for the rush and the push.  It's not the sort
>of first impression I like to make.
>
>Sincerely,
>
>Gary Perlman
>
>> We have sent your application and other materials to a couple of department
>> managers.  I am waiting to hear back from them (they do tend to be slow
>> when responding to HR so a lack of comment should not be considered a lack
>> of interest) but I have asked them again for their comments and let them
>> know that we needed to get back to you this week with an indication of
>> whether we'd like to interview.
>>
>> Christine Cunningham
>> Human Resources Administrator
>>
>> >Dear Wolfram,
>> >
>> >I filled out an application form on August 30,
>> >answered a handful of questions, and followed
>> >up with a message on September 1st, but I have
>> >not heard any response.
>> >
>> >Since that time, I have been reading up on Mathematica,
>> >mostly on the Wolfram site, and I have become more
>> >excited about contributions I could make to Wolfram.
>> >As you may have been able to tell, I have had a long
>> >interest in mathematics education, having, in grad school
>> >published a paper in NTCM's The Mathematics Teacher
>> >on making mathematical notation more meaningful,
>> >which actually turned into my doctoral dissertation
>> >topic.  I am impressed by the potential of notebook
>> >pages, presented through Mathematica or MathReader,
>> >for all levels of mathematics education.  One
>> >area that I think I could make immediate contributions
>> >would be in usability testing of the MathReader,
>> >and in seeing it through changes to make it
>> >more usable by a wider audience.
>> >
>> >I also think I could lead projects concerned with
>> >making Wolfram software more accessible to wider
>> >audiences, audiences including non-English and
>> >visually impaired, depending on market demand.
>> >
>> >If you could be so kind, I would appreciate
>> >some sort of update this week.  After that,
>> >I will assume there you have no interest.
>> >
>> >Thank you for your time.
>> >
>> >Gary Perlman
>>
>>


From perlman Mon Sep 18 08:49:38 2000
Received: (from perlman@localhost)
	by turing.acm.org (8.9.2/8.9.2) id IAA20436;
	Mon, 18 Sep 2000 08:49:36 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
Message-Id: <200009181249.IAA20436@turing.acm.org>
Subject: Re: [18987][Gary:Perlman]
To: christin@wolfram.com (Christine Cunningham)
Date: Mon, 18 Sep 100 08:49:36 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: perlman
In-Reply-To: <v04011710b5e5974f70bd@[140.177.117.8]> from "Christine Cunningham" at Sep 13, 0 03:43:21 pm
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL25]
Content-Type: text
Status: O

Good morning,

Has there been any news on my application?

Gary Perlman

> I'm passing  your email along to the Director of HR.  Perhaps she can speed
> things up a bit.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> >Dear Ms. Cunningham,
> >
> >Thank you for the update.  I understand that it's hard to generate
> >interest form an application out of the blue.
> >
> >Given that I had only interacted with automated systems,
> >I was half wondering whether there was anything connected at the other end.
> >
> >My time pressure is this.  If there is no interest in me,
> >then my wife is not going to apply to UIUC.  But if there is,
> >then my wife needs to get her letter writers time to prepare
> >for an October 1 deadline.  Academic letters at her level tend
> >to be several pages long, and she does not want to ask
> >people to do so much preparation and then tell them she
> >is not applying.  She would like to ask for the letters
> >by the end of this week, if she is going to need them.
> >
> >I apologize for the rush and the push.  It's not the sort
> >of first impression I like to make.
> >
> >Sincerely,
> >
> >Gary Perlman
> >
> >> We have sent your application and other materials to a couple of department
> >> managers.  I am waiting to hear back from them (they do tend to be slow
> >> when responding to HR so a lack of comment should not be considered a lack
> >> of interest) but I have asked them again for their comments and let them
> >> know that we needed to get back to you this week with an indication of
> >> whether we'd like to interview.
> >>
> >> Christine Cunningham
> >> Human Resources Administrator
> >>
> >> >Dear Wolfram,
> >> >
> >> >I filled out an application form on August 30,
> >> >answered a handful of questions, and followed
> >> >up with a message on September 1st, but I have
> >> >not heard any response.
> >> >
> >> >Since that time, I have been reading up on Mathematica,
> >> >mostly on the Wolfram site, and I have become more
> >> >excited about contributions I could make to Wolfram.
> >> >As you may have been able to tell, I have had a long
> >> >interest in mathematics education, having, in grad school
> >> >published a paper in NTCM's The Mathematics Teacher
> >> >on making mathematical notation more meaningful,
> >> >which actually turned into my doctoral dissertation
> >> >topic.  I am impressed by the potential of notebook
> >> >pages, presented through Mathematica or MathReader,
> >> >for all levels of mathematics education.  One
> >> >area that I think I could make immediate contributions
> >> >would be in usability testing of the MathReader,
> >> >and in seeing it through changes to make it
> >> >more usable by a wider audience.
> >> >
> >> >I also think I could lead projects concerned with
> >> >making Wolfram software more accessible to wider
> >> >audiences, audiences including non-English and
> >> >visually impaired, depending on market demand.
> >> >
> >> >If you could be so kind, I would appreciate
> >> >some sort of update this week.  After that,
> >> >I will assume there you have no interest.
> >> >
> >> >Thank you for your time.
> >> >
> >> >Gary Perlman
> >>
> >>
> 
> 


From perlman Thu Sep 21 16:53:02 2000
Received: (from perlman@localhost)
	by turing.acm.org (8.9.2/8.9.2) id QAA22666;
	Thu, 21 Sep 2000 16:52:57 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
Message-Id: <200009212052.QAA22666@turing.acm.org>
Subject: Re: [18987][Gary:Perlman]
To: resumes@wolfram.com
Date: Thu, 21 Sep 100 16:52:57 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: perlman
In-Reply-To: <200009111720.NAA06664@turing.acm.org> from "Gary PERLMAN" at Sep 11, 0 01:20:53 pm
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL25]
Content-Type: text
Status: O

Dear Wolfram,

My application has been with you for three weeks
with no action on your part.

Should I take this to mean there is no interest?

Sincerely,

Gary Perlman

> Dear Wolfram,
> 
> I filled out an application form on August 30, 
> answered a handful of questions, and followed
> up with a message on September 1st, but I have
> not heard any response.
> 
> Since that time, I have been reading up on Mathematica,
> mostly on the Wolfram site, and I have become more
> excited about contributions I could make to Wolfram.
> As you may have been able to tell, I have had a long
> interest in mathematics education, having, in grad school
> published a paper in NTCM's The Mathematics Teacher
> on making mathematical notation more meaningful,
> which actually turned into my doctoral dissertation
> topic.  I am impressed by the potential of notebook
> pages, presented through Mathematica or MathReader,
> for all levels of mathematics education.  One
> area that I think I could make immediate contributions
> would be in usability testing of the MathReader,
> and in seeing it through changes to make it
> more usable by a wider audience.
> 
> I also think I could lead projects concerned with
> making Wolfram software more accessible to wider
> audiences, audiences including non-English and
> visually impaired, depending on market demand.
> 
> If you could be so kind, I would appreciate
> some sort of update this week.  After that,
> I will assume there you have no interest.
> 
> Thank you for your time.
> 
> Gary Perlman
> 


From christin@wolfram.com Fri Sep 22 15:19:39 2000
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Message-Id: <v04011704b5f15faf6f3a@[140.177.117.37]>
Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2000 14:15:42 -0500
To: perlman@turing.acm.org
From: Christine Cunningham <christin@wolfram.com>
Subject: Wolfram Research
Status: RO

Dear Gary:

Forgive us for the delay.  I have finally received all of the comments on
your application.  I'm sorry, but while the reviewers were quite impressed
with your skills, we've decided that there is not a good fit for your
background and our needs at this time.

We do thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and wish you the best
of luck in your job search.

Sincerely,

Christine Cunningham
Human Resources Administrator

From kimp@wolfram.com Fri Sep 22 16:37:07 2000
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Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2000 15:34:32 -0500
To: perlman@acm.org
From: Kim Pershing <kimp@wolfram.com>
Subject: Phone Interview with Wolfram Research [ID# ]
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
Status: RO

Thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and for completing our 
online application. We would be interested in speaking with you about some 
of our current openings.

Please contact me by email (kimp@wolfram.com) or phone (217-398-0700) to 
arrange a convenient time for this interview. I look forward to hearing 
from you soon.

Kim Pershing
Interview Coordinator
Wolfram Research, Inc.
www.wolfram.com 

From perlman Fri Sep 22 17:01:41 2000
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From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
Message-Id: <200009222101.RAA15254@turing.acm.org>
Subject: Re: Phone Interview with Wolfram Research [ID# ]
To: kimp@wolfram.com (Kim Pershing)
Date: Fri, 22 Sep 100 17:01:38 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: perlman
In-Reply-To: <4.2.0.58.20000922153359.0235e470@pop.wolfram.com> from "Kim Pershing" at Sep 22, 0 03:34:32 pm
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL25]
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Status: O

Great.  Here is a list of possible times.
I am an hour ahead of your time zone,
so something after 4pm would be after 5 here
and most convenient for my work schedule.
I would prefer late afternoon, even if it's
not after 4pm your time.

	Next week good periods are:
	Monday - afternoon
	Tuesday - afternoon
	Wednesday - all day
	Thursday - afternoon
	Friday - all date

Gary Perlman

	> Thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and for completing our 
	> online application. We would be interested in speaking with you about some 
	> of our current openings.
	> 
	> Please contact me by email (kimp@wolfram.com) or phone (217-398-0700) to 
	> arrange a convenient time for this interview. I look forward to hearing 
	> from you soon.
	> 
	> Kim Pershing
	> Interview Coordinator
	> Wolfram Research, Inc.
	> www.wolfram.com 
	> 

I received the following message today after I phoned you,
but before your email above.

	> Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2000 14:15:42 -0500
	> From: Christine Cunningham <christin@wolfram.com>
	> Subject: Wolfram Research
	> Status: RO
	> 
	> Dear Gary:
	> 
	> Forgive us for the delay.  I have finally received all of the comments on
	> your application.  I'm sorry, but while the reviewers were quite impressed
	> with your skills, we've decided that there is not a good fit for your
	> background and our needs at this time.
	> 
	> We do thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and wish you the best
	> of luck in your job search.
	> 
	> Sincerely,
	> 
	> Christine Cunningham
	> Human Resources Administrator

From kimp@wolfram.com Mon Sep 25 10:10:16 2000
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Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 09:07:41 -0500
To: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
From: Kim Pershing <kimp@wolfram.com>
Subject: Re: Phone Interview with Wolfram Research [ID# ]
In-Reply-To: <200009222101.RAA15254@turing.acm.org>
References: <4.2.0.58.20000922153359.0235e470@pop.wolfram.com>
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Status: RO

Dear Gary,

Thank you for your email.  Will Tuesday, September 26, at 4:00pm our time, 
5:00pm your time, still be convenient?  If so, what phone number should we 
use to reach you at this time?

Thanks,
Kim Pershing
Interview Coordinator


At 04:01 PM 9/22/00 , you wrote:
>Great.  Here is a list of possible times.
>I am an hour ahead of your time zone,
>so something after 4pm would be after 5 here
>and most convenient for my work schedule.
>I would prefer late afternoon, even if it's
>not after 4pm your time.
>
>         Next week good periods are:
>         Monday - afternoon
>         Tuesday - afternoon
>         Wednesday - all day
>         Thursday - afternoon
>         Friday - all date
>
>Gary Perlman
>
>         > Thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and for 
> completing our
>         > online application. We would be interested in speaking with you 
> about some
>         > of our current openings.
>         >
>         > Please contact me by email (kimp@wolfram.com) or phone 
> (217-398-0700) to
>         > arrange a convenient time for this interview. I look forward to 
> hearing
>         > from you soon.
>         >
>         > Kim Pershing
>         > Interview Coordinator
>         > Wolfram Research, Inc.
>         > www.wolfram.com
>         >
>
>I received the following message today after I phoned you,
>but before your email above.
>
>         > Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2000 14:15:42 -0500
>         > From: Christine Cunningham <christin@wolfram.com>
>         > Subject: Wolfram Research
>         > Status: RO
>         >
>         > Dear Gary:
>         >
>         > Forgive us for the delay.  I have finally received all of the 
> comments on
>         > your application.  I'm sorry, but while the reviewers were 
> quite impressed
>         > with your skills, we've decided that there is not a good fit 
> for your
>         > background and our needs at this time.
>         >
>         > We do thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and wish 
> you the best
>         > of luck in your job search.
>         >
>         > Sincerely,
>         >
>         > Christine Cunningham
>         > Human Resources Administrator


=============================
Wolfram Research, Inc.
www.wolfram.com


From christin@wolfram.com Mon Sep 25 11:36:19 2000
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References: <v04011704b5f15faf6f3a@[140.177.117.37]> from "Christine
 Cunningham" at Sep 22, 0 02:15:42 pm
Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 10:31:46 -0500
To: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
From: Christine Cunningham <christin@wolfram.com>
Subject: Re: Wolfram Research
Status: RO

We're always glad to hear that kids are interested in our product in any
manner - thanks!


>Dear Ms. Cunningham,
>
>Thank you for your consideration.
>I enjoyed refreshing my knowledge of Mathematica.
>Any my kids like looking at the pictures in the Mathematica book.
>I do too.
>
>Gary Perlman
>
>> Dear Gary:
>>
>> Forgive us for the delay.  I have finally received all of the comments on
>> your application.  I'm sorry, but while the reviewers were quite impressed
>> with your skills, we've decided that there is not a good fit for your
>> background and our needs at this time.
>>
>> We do thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and wish you the best
>> of luck in your job search.
>>
>> Sincerely,
>>
>> Christine Cunningham
>> Human Resources Administrator
>>


From perlman Tue Sep 26 17:11:07 2000
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	Tue, 26 Sep 2000 17:11:06 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
Message-Id: <200009262111.RAA12494@turing.acm.org>
Subject: Re: Phone Interview with Wolfram Research [ID# ]
To: perlman@turing.acm.org (perlman)
Date: Tue, 26 Sep 100 17:11:06 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: kimp@wolfram.com
In-Reply-To: <no.id> from "perlman" at Sep 25, 0 11:08:11 am
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL25]
Content-Type: text
Status: O

Hello,

I am sitting at the phone number below waiting for your call.

Gary

> Tuesday 4pm your time is good for me.  I will be at 614-457-5508.
> 
> Gary
> 
> > Dear Gary,
> > 
> > Thank you for your email.  Will Tuesday, September 26, at 4:00pm our time, 
> > 5:00pm your time, still be convenient?  If so, what phone number should we 
> > use to reach you at this time?
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > Kim Pershing
> > Interview Coordinator
> > 
> > 
> > At 04:01 PM 9/22/00 , you wrote:
> > >Great.  Here is a list of possible times.
> > >I am an hour ahead of your time zone,
> > >so something after 4pm would be after 5 here
> > >and most convenient for my work schedule.
> > >I would prefer late afternoon, even if it's
> > >not after 4pm your time.
> > >
> > >         Next week good periods are:
> > >         Monday - afternoon
> > >         Tuesday - afternoon
> > >         Wednesday - all day
> > >         Thursday - afternoon
> > >         Friday - all date
> > >
> > >Gary Perlman
> > >
> > >         > Thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and for 
> > > completing our
> > >         > online application. We would be interested in speaking with you 
> > > about some
> > >         > of our current openings.
> > >         >
> > >         > Please contact me by email (kimp@wolfram.com) or phone 
> > > (217-398-0700) to
> > >         > arrange a convenient time for this interview. I look forward to 
> > > hearing
> > >         > from you soon.
> > >         >
> > >         > Kim Pershing
> > >         > Interview Coordinator
> > >         > Wolfram Research, Inc.
> > >         > www.wolfram.com
> > >         >
> > >
> > >I received the following message today after I phoned you,
> > >but before your email above.
> > >
> > >         > Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2000 14:15:42 -0500
> > >         > From: Christine Cunningham <christin@wolfram.com>
> > >         > Subject: Wolfram Research
> > >         > Status: RO
> > >         >
> > >         > Dear Gary:
> > >         >
> > >         > Forgive us for the delay.  I have finally received all of the 
> > > comments on
> > >         > your application.  I'm sorry, but while the reviewers were 
> > > quite impressed
> > >         > with your skills, we've decided that there is not a good fit 
> > > for your
> > >         > background and our needs at this time.
> > >         >
> > >         > We do thank you for your interest in Wolfram Research and wish 
> > > you the best
> > >         > of luck in your job search.
> > >         >
> > >         > Sincerely,
> > >         >
> > >         > Christine Cunningham
> > >         > Human Resources Administrator
> > 
> > 
> > =============================
> > Wolfram Research, Inc.
> > www.wolfram.com
> > 
> > 
> 
> 


From perlman Tue Sep 26 22:11:43 2000
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	Tue, 26 Sep 2000 22:11:37 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman>
Message-Id: <200009270211.WAA17325@turing.acm.org>
Subject: Re: Phone Interview with Wolfram Research [ID# ]
To: kimp@wolfram.com (Kim Pershing)
Date: Tue, 26 Sep 100 22:11:37 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: christin@wolfram.com, perlman
In-Reply-To: <4.2.0.58.20000925090223.00c24ac0@pop.wolfram.com> from "Kim Pershing" at Sep 25, 0 09:07:41 am
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL25]
Content-Type: text
Status: O

Thank you for all your work on my application.  I do
appreciate it, and enjoyed the process.

While I realize that it is unlikely that a director-level
position will open up, I would still like you to keep my
application open because:
 1. I think developing new products for new markets for
    Mathematica would be fun, and worthwhile.
 2. My wife has decided to apply for a position at UIUC,
    and if all goes well with that, she may get an offer
    in 3-6 months, at which time there might be an opening
    at Wolfram.

At OCLC, I am permitted to do consulting on a non-competitive
basis, so if you would be interested in having me try to
contribute to Wolfram products in the areas of usability
(at all age levels), accessibility, or multilingual markets,
I would consider doing that from Columbus.  Regardless,
in my capacity as director of the HCI Bibliography project,
	http://www.hcibib.org/
I am happy to point you to high quality HCI resources
for free:
 * usability - see my suggested readings at:
	http://www.acm.org/~perlman/readings.html#eval
 * accessibility - see the SIGCAPH links page at:
	http://www.acm.org/sigcaph/links/
   (This has a link to the CAST Bobby page.)
 * multilingual - see the SIGCHI intercultural page at:
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/intercultural/
 * kids and computers - see the SIGCHI kids page at:
	http://www.acm.org/sigchi/kids/

Now, back to our Web-paced development of FirstSearch,
where we come out with a new release every four weeks,
which still seems too slow to me.

Best wishes,

Gary Perlman

PS: I'm off to your online store for T-shirts,
which are great, but I want a Klein Bottle.

From cp@joplin.psy.ohio-state.edu Wed Aug 23 10:52:10 2000
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Date: Wed, 23 Aug 2000 10:47:09 -0400 (EDT)
From: Caroline Palmer <cp@joplin.psy.ohio-state.edu>
Message-Id: <200008231447.KAA19244@joplin.psy.ohio-state.edu>
To: perlman@acm.org
Subject: wolfram
Status: RO

Do you know anything about this company? they are
in champaign-urbana. Gary Dell sent me this.
They make Mathematica and other things.

