Ngo Bao Chau (with appropriate accent marks) has a blog. It is in Vietnamese, because he is Vietnamese. http://thichhoctoan.net/ I don’t know how much he writes about math because I don’t read Vietnamese. I know he writes a lot about politics, or at least used to.
Cedric Villani writes about math for Le Monde sometimes and has a blog on his website. http://cedricvillani.org/ I am not good at French, so I don’t read it.
I think 10% for living Fields medalists who blog is pretty high, and many of those living are older. (And two have basically withdrawn from mathematical society.)
Thanks for pointing these out, which I had not seen before.
Neither blog seems to have almost any mathematical content, and the posts seem few and far between, so I don’t think that they budge the bottom line. Even in the case of Gowers, the average number of mathematical posts is about one a month.
Also, the category “Fields Medalists” is in some sense cherry-picked, in that it happens to include Gowers and Tao in particular: if one broadens consideration to all of the prizes that I listed, the fraction of bloggers is much smaller (though the winners of the other prizes also tend to be older).
You missed two blogging Fields medalists.
Ngo Bao Chau (with appropriate accent marks) has a blog. It is in Vietnamese, because he is Vietnamese. http://thichhoctoan.net/ I don’t know how much he writes about math because I don’t read Vietnamese. I know he writes a lot about politics, or at least used to.
Cedric Villani writes about math for Le Monde sometimes and has a blog on his website. http://cedricvillani.org/ I am not good at French, so I don’t read it.
I think 10% for living Fields medalists who blog is pretty high, and many of those living are older. (And two have basically withdrawn from mathematical society.)
Thanks for pointing these out, which I had not seen before.
Neither blog seems to have almost any mathematical content, and the posts seem few and far between, so I don’t think that they budge the bottom line. Even in the case of Gowers, the average number of mathematical posts is about one a month.
Also, the category “Fields Medalists” is in some sense cherry-picked, in that it happens to include Gowers and Tao in particular: if one broadens consideration to all of the prizes that I listed, the fraction of bloggers is much smaller (though the winners of the other prizes also tend to be older).