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12:00 AM
It’ll be 55 tonight.
I’ll toss you 68 on the way down.
We have 30% humidity, so it feels hot.
But there's a 5 mph breeze with gusts of 10, so it’s not so bad.
Good swimming weather.
Which is why Cerb is swimming right now.
When I lived in hotswampland, I could only sleep with a fan blowing on me constantly.
 
@tchrist I didn't know you were that popular.
 
Groupies groupies everywhere.
> A new western starring Tommy Lee Jones, Hilary Swank, Meryl Streep and others is coming to New Mexico. The Homesman is based on the novel by Glendon Swarthout. It follows the journey of a claim jumper, played by Tommy Lee Jones, and an independent pioneer woman, played by Hilary Swank, who team up to escort three women driven mad by the Nebraska frontier back to Iowa.
Hm.
I guess it won’t be trash if Meryl Streep consented to participate.
I can see how Nebraska would do that. Wonder why they’re filming in Nuevo Mexico though.
Nebraska is one of those states you should bring a magazine along to read when driving through.
 
12:42 AM
How is this possible?
15 °C difference within a couple of km?
 
And two places with a 6°C difference in about quarter of that.
 
Yeah, weird.
 
1:07 AM
As anyone can tell you who has ever been cockle-doodle-done at oh-dark-thirty, the Chicken is a sexually dimorphic beast. In contrast, the Bald Eagle is not. Is Man?
@Cerberus That’s completely normal.
For those who live not in a tepid climate.
Green is 60s.
Yellow is 70s.
Orange is 80s, and red is 90s.
Do you see how close together the green and red are?
Nuff said.
 
@tchrist Not without any indication of the scale, no.
 
It’s easy to lose 20 degrees in ten miles, especially if two of those are up.
Maybe even less than that.
It’a 3–5 degrees per thousand feet of altitude.
On average. Local conditions can vary.
 
Freaky.
 
Perfectly normal.
It’s called physics.
 
And one would expect lower areas to be warmer, not colder.
 
1:15 AM
They are. Usually. Did I misspeak?
Hm.
There are times when it doesn’t work that way, but usually you lose about 5 degrees per kilofoot.
 
But the city is near the water, so lower.
 
Yes.
 
And yet it is colder.
 
Oh that.
Yes, that’s the San Francisco Bay microclimate.
It is quite chilly there.
The Pacific is a cold mistress.
So the Bay sucks in cold air.
The difference in temperature between San Francisco at the top of Bay and San Jose at the bottom can easily be 20 degrees.
So going up out of the Bay, it actually gets warmer for a while, because you are getting away from it.
I know this seems weird.
And inland it simply bakes.
Does that make more sense now?
The mountains surrounding the Bay keep the cold air “in”.
Once you get up out of there, you get a more normal relationship of temperature and elevation.
Notice how it gets warmer as you go SSW down to the other end of the Bay, away from the mouth opening into the Pacific.
It’s always cool at the coast, too.
 
@Cerberus Aren't you glad you asked?
 
1:24 AM
When you live in a state like California or Colorado, during the summer you can choose whether to be in the 50s or in the 90s just by moving around a little bit.
I’m thinking it probably doesn’t work this way in the Low Countries.
 
@tchrist Quite. Difference are never that great near the coast here. And we, too have all sorts of bays.
@DavidWallace Quite...
 
But you don’t have a desert climate inland, and high mountains guarding the bays.
That’s the difference.
 
We have dunes and dikes...
 
I know; I’ve been.
 
But, really, it doesn't get that cold here even if you are on an island.
 
1:26 AM
I guess the Sierra Nevada down by Granada is the only comparable situation I can think of.
 
There is no cold air to "keep in".
 
At least there is snow up there during summer.
 
I've seen Granada covered in snow.
 
The dark green areas in the Colorado map are currently in the 50s.
@Cerberus Really?
That seems unusual.
 
Your using F temperatures with me is like my speaking Dutch to you.
Oh, it is very unusual.
We were lucky.
Snowy Alhambra, quite nice.
 
1:28 AM
@Cerberus I should have thought you would have gotten used to it now. It should be part of every English class.
 
It is not of any practical or artistic use to us.
 
It’s like 91 outside right now. If I wanted, I could drive a half-hour and be in the 70s, or an hour and be in the 50s.
 
Wow!
 
Or you can just use C to accommodate me. Because I know y'all know C.
 
1:30 AM
I’m impressed.
 
Not my picture btw.
 
We don’t use it.
 
But that's what it looked like.
You use it in science.
 
It isn’t how we think, or what any weather forecast map ever shows.
So it is like speaking a foreign language. Awkward. Not at the tip of your tongue.
 
1:31 AM
And I cannot talk about 50s or 60s or 70s or whatnot, because your degrees are too fat.
 
Well, I am speaking a foreign language to accommodate you all the freaking time.
 
Court of the Lions.
 
And posting snowy Alhambra pictures too!
 
@Cerberus Not, not when you use measurements. Then you are still speaking a foreign language to me. It requires screwing up my brain. Not nice.
Listen, I know it seems nuts.
All my European friends always think that.
Until they come here.
For the first time.
And then after a few days, a week at most, they finally understand why we are this way.
And they sympathize again, because we have no choice. It is simply how it is here.
I have seen that light bulb go on many times.
You haven’t been here, so you do not really see how it is, or why.
So it annoys you.
We do not think this way to annoy you, you know.
 
So everyone must imitate your local customs in every minute detail?
 
1:35 AM
Non sequitur
I’m speaking my native language. I should not be expected to half-speak a foreign one in the middle of doing that.
And so I do not.
 
Maybe you could try not thinking of your own locality as the centre of the universe...
 
You’re the one who is doing the translating in his head.
 
I'm not.
 
Good.
So why do you need to do it with numbers if not with words?
Just get used to it, like we have.
They say numbers are the last thing one learns not to translate.
 
You might have noticed that I do not use your spelling either.
Why should I?
 
1:38 AM
Hello?
I don’t understand you.
“I do no you’re your spelling” does not parse.
Are you perhaps overheated? :)
 
It has at last cooled down to an acceptable temperature.
 
And when do I ever complain that you spell things wrong?
I still think you need a fan.
And not David’s kind, either.
He won’t say, because he knows the answer.
And he knows I’m right.
 
I already have many fans. Or "prisoners", as some unkind surfacers might call the dead souls.
 
When do I ever complain that you spell things wrong?
 
If you do not complain about that, then why would you complain about Celsius?
 
1:43 AM
@Cerberus You were the one complaining.
 
Besides, I believe you have complained about Commonwealth spelling a lot. But my subconscious chose to forget the exact circumstances.
 
Belief is not fact.
 
> Not, not when you use measurements. Then you are still speaking a foreign language to me. It requires screwing up my brain. Not nice.
 
And in this case, you are self-deceiving.
I don’t complain about Commonwealth spellings.
Ever.
Try again, this time with sugar on top.
You’re thinking of Rob, you know.
Not me.
I’m sure he would be flattered.
I’m not sure that I am. :)
 
No, I believe you have. Not that it matters.
 
1:46 AM
The reason I never complain about Commonwealth spellings is that I actually use about a third or so of them myself.
It would be the height of hypocrisy to bitch about my own spellings.
Again, belief is one thing, fact is another.
 
Do you?
 
Duh.
Apr 19 at 17:27, by tchrist
Neither is not traditionally analysed as a premodifier.
 
I think I'm not at the point where I might or might not see some light in the sky.
 
Dec 14 '12 at 5:06, by tchrist
Why do you have a clock so labelled?
 
It seems to be ever so slightly lighter in the east.
But I could be mistaken.
 
1:49 AM
Mar 29 at 13:47, by tchrist
I just know that I cannot get any analogue signals, because there are not any anymore.
 
Great.
 
Jan 15 at 12:55, by tchrist
The short dotted one signalling comments.
 
Sep 13 '12 at 2:55, by tchrist
@Cerberus That’s spelled wrong.
 
Mar 25 at 13:04, by tchrist
I’ve just come from reading Paarfi of Roundtree, who is given to such embellishment and turn of phrase, and from working out the intricacies of various ornate fugues from the High Baroque, two unrelated endeavours that are nonetheless linked by their very complexity and so condition the mind to continue in the same line and tone.
 
Hey, I can see my house from here!
 
1:51 AM
@DavidWallace Oh, thanks!
From where?
@DavidWallace Wait, that was about Spanish spelling.
 
@DavidWallace That was español, tío.
jinx
 
@Cerberus No, it was actually a joke. He meant that he thought it was "contracts" that you were taking out, not "contacts".
 
Dec 4 '12 at 2:11, by tchrist
Whence all this attention to glamour?
 
Or at least, that's what I thought he meant, at the time. Maybe he really WAS correcting your spelling!
 
Dec 20 '12 at 5:33, by tchrist
The dialogue is hackneyed at times.
@Cerb See what I mean now?
But wait!
There’s more!
May 1 at 13:32, by tchrist
@AndrewLeach Then you get to use creative licence.
Oct 26 '12 at 20:06, by tchrist
That's three points off your licence, son.
Feb 28 at 21:56, by tchrist
Trust yourself: you’ve got a native-speaker licence. After proper pickling, everybody sees double.
Feb 8 at 13:44, by tchrist
I want to find and revoke the licence of the evil EFL teacher out there who is tricking his gullible students into calling letters like a, b, c “alphabets” instead of letters.
Nov 4 '12 at 11:19, by tchrist
Oh, she has a coiner’s licence. And I’ve heard superrich before.
@Cerb Say Uncle?
Oh, very well.
Sep 13 '12 at 3:25, by tchrist
Why, when we can have our own little jihadist defence of the holy faith?
Aug 2 '12 at 19:25, by tchrist
Your defence of people’s right to close is why he freaks out on Mahmax, and on you, and on the rest of us.
Aug 3 '12 at 18:54, by tchrist
Blowback here, here, and here, amongst others.
Mar 24 at 19:35, by tchrist
Suicide is a capital offence, and notion.
 
1:58 AM
Very well.
 
Sep 9 '12 at 18:13, by tchrist
What, you were flagged offensive? On what offence?
@Cerberus Ok. Thank you.
 
But you do it with almost everything else, then.
 
Heh. :)
You actually made me laugh out loud.
Chuckle, at least.
It was quite audible.
Perhaps even a guffaw.
As you see, I am quite conscious of spelling.
Just because I choose to spell things in ways that make sense to me does not mean I think people who spell things differently than I do are spelling them wrong.
Well, provided the dictionary admits multiple spellings. Lolcat txtmsging duzzint cunt.
In computing, the robustness principle is a general design guideline for software: :Be conservative in what you do, be liberal in what you accept from others (often reworded as "Be conservative in what you send, be liberal in what you accept"). The principle is also known as Postel's law, after Internet pioneer Jon Postel, who wrote in an early specification of the Transmission Control Protocol that: RFC 761: Transmission Control Protocol. Jon Postel (ed ), January 1980. :TCP implementations should follow a general principle of robustness: be conservative in what you do, be liberal in wha...
Sep 13 '12 at 2:56, by tchrist
There is no acute on the a in catedral.
 
2:22 AM
Jig’s up!
 
Watch out for stobor.
 
4 hours ago, by tchrist
> One man’s theology is another man’s belly laugh. —R.A. Heinlein
 
I knew you'd get that reference. But I'm an empiricist.
 
I’m literate.
 
yargggh
trying to think of a word D:
 
2:25 AM
Plenty of literate people haven't read Heinlein.
 
anyone got something for "limited to one narrow viewpoint"?
sorry for the random outburst haha
 
@Robusto Yes, the ones who died before he was born.
 
@Zach one-eyed?
 
Myopic.
Shortsighted.
 
@DavidWallace something like that
 
2:25 AM
Intransigent.
 
myopic is nice, @tchrist
 
Bullheaded.
Stubborn.
 
@tchrist I don't think Tunnel in the Sky is part of the "essential" Heinlein for most people. Though I do remember it quite fondly.
 
Religious.
@Robusto It was in my JHS set.
 
@Zach You could say someone has "tunnel vision" regarding a particular thing.
 
2:27 AM
Has blinders on.
 
focussed
 
you guys are animals ;)
@Robusto that's nice too
 
meows
 
I feel like there was one word in particular, and intransigent might have actually been it
 
You could say they liked to thread-jack a chat.
@Zach No.
 
2:28 AM
@Robusto not right?
 
Intransigent is more about reluctance or refusal than it is about one's perspective.
 
yeah okay, I see that from the online definition at least
 
But @tchrist's definition would serve, in both the literal and figurative senses. Use religious.
Actually narrow-minded is probably your best bet.
 
I believe I thought of the word because of someone's religious attitude
 
@Robusto I was typing that!
 
2:31 AM
originally, I mean
 
Religion is like that.
 
Bigotry?
Orthodoxy?
 
Other words related to religion also apply: you can say that someone has a parochial viewpoint.
 
@Robusto YOU SAINT
get it? religious word and all? ;)
it was parochial
 
Now that's a religious compliment.
 
2:32 AM
genuflects
 
parochial 3. adj Narrowly restricted in scope or outlook; provincial: parochial attitudes.
 
Insular.
:)
 
@Cerberus it was actually just the narrow-mindedness that I was referring to, not prejudice/hatred
 
@Zach I am no saint. Neither am I a sinner, except as defined by those with a narrow-minded religious point of view.
 
Right. (Not that orthodoxy is hateful in itself...)
 
2:35 AM
@Cerberus If not, it will serve until something hateful comes along.
 
@Cerberus bigotry is though isn't it?
 
As opposed to what? Heterodoxy? Cacodoxy? Urodoxy? Paradoxy? :)
 
@Robusto Oh, it can serve hatred...
 
holds breath
 
> Bigotry is the state of mind of a "bigot", a person obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices, especially one who exhibits intolerance or animosity toward members of a group.
 
2:37 AM
They shouldn’t be called bigots, lest they be embiggened. Better to call them little-idiots, or just littleots for short.
 
A bigot is always biased but a bias is not always bigotry.
Big-endian?
 
Bigot. Biggerot. Biggestot.
 
Big ist tot.
 
Ja.
 
Er stieß die Maus mit dem Finger an, um zu sehen, ob sie noch lebte.
Eine kleine Mausmusik, bitte.
 
2:46 AM
Hi@Cerberus
 
Heh
 
Und so zum Bett. Ohne Nägel, bitte. Das ist nicht nur möglich, sondern nachgerade geboten.
 
good night
 
Good morning.
 
Bis später.
 
2:49 AM
@DavidWallace: Is it night there?
 
No, I was talking to Robusto.
 
Oh
Here its a fresh and a cool morning.
@DavidWallace: It'll be pretty cool at your end?
 
Yes, quite cool today.
 
The mountain and climate of NZ are awesome.
 
Any particular mountain?
 
2:53 AM
@tchrist Now the sky is very light.
Has been for some time.
 
Mt Taranaki ?
 
@Cerberus 18/12/6/hike
 
@Cerberus: It'll be freaking cold at your end?
 
@Sudhir Alas, no! It's still warm.
 
First light in Amsterdam was an hour and a half ago.
 
2:55 AM
What's temp?
 
At 3:18am to be precise.
 
It's about 20 degrees here, the air in the city.
@DavidWallace Right. Although that was not visible for me yet.
 
@Sudhir Yes, Mt Taranaki is pretty cool.
 
@Cerberus:Its awesome temp to live here in India.
We love this temp.
 
2:56 AM
@Cerberus When was first light visible for you?
 
@DavidWallace I wasn't looking, so I don't know. Probably half an hour ago? 20 minutes ago?
 
6, 12, 18, hike.
 
That photo was 5 minutes ago. It looks brighter in real.
 
So the sky is darker above you than in the rest of Amsterdam? Is that something to do with being the guardian of Hell?
 
Notice how the sky is still quite light next to the bright street light.
 
2:57 AM
@Cerberus:Did you ever see clear Sun?
 
@DavidWallace Well, there are streetlights here, and houses, so it's harder to spot the light with certainty.
 
Hmm, yes, good point.
 
@Sudhir What do you mean?
 
He cannot see the Milky Way.
So it never gets dark where he lives.
 
I mean you ever felt the hotness of sun.
 
2:59 AM
It's funny how Tchrist will not even accept a photo as proof.
 
@Cerberus Not if it's something he knows.
 
@Sudhir Yes? How can anyone not feel it?
 
Proof of what?
 
Sun with full illumination
 
@DavidWallace Ah, I see.
 
2:59 AM
That you have an inappropriate flash?
 
Like how I pronounce WH, for example.
 
@tchrist That I see light in the sky that isn't moonlight.
 

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