In the early 1990s, Edward Witten and other string theoretical physicists discovered a new theory that integrated all five string theories. This will revolutionize the string theory as all the theories can be combined into one equation as shown below. This is the first time to prove string theory mathematically. Witten proposed this theory and he called it the M Theory of the University of Southern California in 1995.
For those unfamiliar with Paul Erds, he is one of the world's most famous collaborators, an excellent mathematician and is known for working with other mathematicians. I work in collaboration with other people. Individual Erds numbers indicate degrees from zero, and this collaboration map can be traced back to themselves. Through it, Erds is related to a lot of people, but 512 people he works directly have only one Erd, and they are the names I think. How many women are there?
I started sending e-mails in various directions to spend a lot of time asking people to answer my questions. Most of them did not hesitate to answer. I have found a lot of information about the industry through people working in the industry and most of them seem to have a good attitude toward answering all the questions I have to ask. I had to make a few contacts with Myspace alone, so I could find many answers about making audio technology for video games. I started a record of art research in June 2006, and by December of the same year I felt my thought completed. I will do my best to make audio for the game. At the moment, I had several things worth noticing about this industry.
Women have made major discoveries in the scientific community, but they have to fight for recognition. In the 19th century England, a young woman named Marianne found some of the most famous geological discoveries on the Jurassic coast. Because of her gender, she is not considered a scientist. However, her works still stimulate today's experts. In the 1960s, we met three intense and clever ladies who served as Catherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson, NASA's "Human Computer". Despite their expertise, they were driven to bystanders, hidden, forced to use separate dining and bathroom facilities for skin color