Wolfram Alpha
de rlsinclair, 19 de mayo de 2009
Aportes: 23
Idioma: English
rlsinclair (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 12:26:19
http://www.wolframalpha.com/
It says “place of Origin - France”
I am not impressed.
tommjames (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 12:29:29
rlsinclair:I have just looked up “Esperanto” in the new “Wolfram Alpha”.It also says 2000 speakers and 0 native speakers. Even less impressive!
http://www.wolframalpha.com/
It says “place of Origin - France”
I am not impressed.
jan aleksan (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 12:43:03
nshepperd (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 13:08:06
Hmmm, estas ero de misaĵo tie! Mi pensas ke Zamenhof'o ne estis franca! Sed vidi la literajn frekvencojn kaj longecoj de tradukaĵojn estas iomete bone(?)...
ceigered (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 13:52:54
jan aleksan (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 14:24:35
Ironchef (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 14:32:25
rlsinclair:I have just looked up “Esperanto” in the new “Wolfram Alpha”.I had exactly the same reaction last night when I entered it. Just proves again that you cannot believe everything you read online. I constantly remind my kids that Wikipedia is a great tool but should be used carefully. I've found errors in printed books too so nothing is perfect I think this new tool has value though; so we'll see how it works out.
http://www.wolframalpha.com/
It says “place of Origin - France”
I am not impressed.
Rogir (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 15:04:26
Matthieu (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 16:16:20
By the way, I'm pretty sure they're wrong about French too: 64.86 million speakers? There are 65 million people in France, and French is spoken in many more countries. (And according to them, 79% of France population speak it… This would be very surprising.)
andogigi (Mostrar perfil) 19 de mayo de 2009 18:45:34