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by nomilk 848 days ago
I think it’s a shared trait among the ultra successful (think: bezos, jobs, musk, wolfram), that they unrelentingly pursue good ideas. In that relentless pursuit, people will inevitably have their (bad) ideas shot down.

Wolfram becomes audibly irritated at bad ideas, but mostly only when they should have been better, more complete, better explained (in their interest of time, for example) etc.

I think most of those who work with him know that he pursues truth, not what will make people feel good in that moment/meeting.

I’ve worked around people who are the opposite and try to morph reality so that whatever flimsy idea is suggested is somehow considered ‘correct’, and it results in long term frustration and inefficacy.

2 comments

> that they unrelentingly pursue good ideas.

They also unrelentingly pursue bad ones. 3D fire phone interface, boring company + everything with Twitter, trying to fight cancer with a fruitarian diet ....

> bezos, jobs, musk, wolfram

One of those things is not like the other lol

Jobs, because he didn’t do it himself?

The commonality is they all brought $1b+ ideas to market; they didn’t just have good ideas, but did the hard work necessary to execute on them.

In what world is anything Wolfram has created a $1b+ idea?
Mathematica has half-billion+ in annual revenue and has been a mainstay of engineering work for decades. So ... this world?
Alright, I'm gonna need a source cited on that one lmao. Absolutely no way.
Well it's an employee-owned company. Your data is as good as mine. You assert that Wolfram's work is worth less than $1billion. You're quite emphatic about that fact. Let's just do some back-of-the-napkin math to assess if your premise has any validity.

Mathematica has been around for over 40 years. It has 1600+ employees. Tell me, how could a private company make payroll for 1600 top earners without hundreds of millions in revenue? They had no outside funding that we know of.

Obviously this company has made $1 billion dollars in its lifetime. Many times over I'd guess.

Didn't Apple contract with them for parts of Siri, using Wolfram Alpha?