| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 1310.1 |  | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Thu Oct 18 1990 08:35 | 7 | 
|  | >>    OK, since my first mandelbrot problem seems to have been answered
>>    pretty quickly, I'll ask one more before I leave for New England (and
>>    the Math Dinner!):
	I thought the dinner wasn't until tomorrow (Friday).
	Dan
 | 
| 1310.2 |  | CHOVAX::YOUNG | Where is our Laptop VAXstation? | Sat Oct 20 1990 14:30 | 6 | 
|  |     As you obviously now know, Dan, the dinner *was* Friday night as you
    thought.  However I had to leave for New England on Thuirsday to attend
    a QFD symposium in Merrimack (and coincidentally have a valid reason
    for Digital to pay the air fare!).
    
    --  Barry
 | 
| 1310.3 |  | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Sat Oct 20 1990 16:39 | 10 | 
|  |         re .0,
        
>>    	What point, on the boundary of the Mandelbrot set is the
>>    	closest to the origin?
        
        There is at least one solution (the boundary is closed). 
        If there is a unique solution, then it must be on the
        real line, for aesthetic reasons. :-)
        
        Dan
 | 
| 1310.4 | Anything Further? | WOOK::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Tue May 14 1991 16:22 | 4 | 
|  | I'll hazard a guess along the same lines as .-1 and conjecture that if there are
more than one solution, then the solution is not on the real line.
Wook
 |