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Jan 28, 2017 at 22:56 vote accept Terry Tao
Jan 27, 2017 at 6:04 answer added john mangual timeline score: -1
Jan 27, 2017 at 3:18 comment added Terry Tao Fair enough. The result was first discovered by Monge anyway, so I'll change the attribution to avoid confusion.
Jan 27, 2017 at 3:18 history edited Terry Tao CC BY-SA 3.0
added 24 characters in body; edited title
Jan 27, 2017 at 2:18 answer added Robert Bryant timeline score: 14
Jan 26, 2017 at 22:17 comment added Abdelmalek Abdesselam seems related to the classical Hesse-Gordan-Noether problem as, e.g., in the two articles arxiv.org/abs/1506.06387 and arxiv.org/abs/1312.1618
Jan 26, 2017 at 20:36 comment added Gro-Tsen I think what most people call "the" Cayley-Salmon theorem is the one asserting that there are 27 lines on a smooth (or at least, general) cubic surface. I'm probably not the only one confused by your terminology, so maybe you should clarify. (It's particularly confusing that in your blog post you say it goes back to "at least 1915", when both Cayley and Salmon had been dead for quite some time!)
Jan 26, 2017 at 19:49 history asked Terry Tao CC BY-SA 3.0