Braids & anyonic topological computing
Recorded at ANPA 2006, Cambridge (2006), featuring Louis Kauffman. From the Michael Wright Collection, held by the Archive Trust for Research in Mathematical Sciences & Philosophy.
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mw0000557-cc-b_p- Format
- Audio recording
- Collection
- Michael Wright Collection
- Repository
- Archive Trust for Research in Mathematical Sciences & Philosophy
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- Made available for personal scholarly use. Rights in recordings are generally held by the speakers or their estates. If you believe this recording infringes your rights, please contact [email protected].
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This transcript was generated by speech-recognition software from an archival recording and has not been hand-corrected. It will contain recognition errors — particularly for proper names and technical terminology — so please verify against the audio before quoting. Timestamps play the recording from that moment.
0:00 So they may have been... Alright, we'd better check that one. Well, okay. We'll put some... Don't worry, don't worry. But I understood that it was because it had been opened. No, no, no, as you can see, that's a mint copy. I haven't looked around it at all. No, I just simply noticed that there was a cut of paper. Well, as you might have been aware, I'm thinking of changing printers anyway. It's probably just a simple snap of the pen, there's no big deal. I mean, it's very nice there. It's a nice piece indeed, I like it. A lot of people do. That's entertaining. No, I wouldn't put it over there. You see, I haven't smacked all of you. So, have you spotted the yellow dot? Yes, actually. I mean, it would have been impossible on a black and white one to comprehend what it was. Yes, yes, straight away, actually. It speaks up straight out of the corner. And listen, Keith, I'm sorry I'm not going to be able to come and see you, you know, because I've got to get back on the tent. But listen, I'm going to be, I tell you, going to be over here again in Cambridge on the 4th of September for five days. I'm not going to the 4th of September. Well, you're not going to the thing at the Newcastle. It won't be a big thing. Well, there's something at the Newcastle. Oh, it's the big thing, this is. Yeah, it's this huge meeting on... Well, I need to go. It's my niece's 23rd birthday on the 7th, so she's here in Cartier, all these people. It's a big meeting on vibrations of space-time and structure, and that's what we've been talking about for lots of years. Do I need to go and write it? Yes, you do. Well, I'm going to try and have a review. You can do it there. Thank you for your attention. If not, and I'll be around for a few days after the meeting in Berlin, but I'll be here basically for a week at the beginning of the second half of the course. I was going to say, whilst never in the course, I've got my uses for the second, which is here. Oh, great. Well, I'll probably be here the day after. I'm sure we'll get kept. I'll send any time. Yeah, I've got no reason to go home. I can stay at home. Andy Parker-Rose's and your course are probably the first thing I'd like to see. First of all, a lot to all of you. And first of all, congratulations.
2:30 Hello Jenny. How am I? I'm glad you came back here. Yeah, so am I. That was extremely interesting talking about boat changes and the blues. I had to come back anyway to collect my recorder and take us off Boeing. And also to give my, to give my thing, sorry, to give the blues things back because I had to leave so early on the Saturday. I'll just repeat my apologies. Oh well, forget it, forget it, forget it. I'd say, you know, ancient history, the whole walk on the bridge. In all seriousness, if you've done that, I would have had the chance of an hour and a half extremely good and very interesting, as it were, one-on-one tutorial with Lou. So, as I'm trying to say... Well, I think I know what I'm going to do.
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