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14:00
@RussellSteen You are talking to maybe 3 mods, just ask.
17 messages deleted
Damn!
BAM! if that aint magic, then I don't know it anymore @RussellSteen ;)
Holy cow!
Actually, there are five mods in the room. XD
@IvoFlipse, pro sir.
I meant taking part in the discussion actively.
14:07
Nice, skeptics is becoming a mod magnet
In before @Ivo mentions scifi
I did not know about it until recently. I came over because the questions were absolutely was hilarious and the chat had people in it until I got off work.
lol @Borror0, I was about to point out that I move from site launch to site launch at this rate :P
@Kortuk What? The question about if papaya is an effective contraceptive is TOTALLY SERIOUS AND NOT FUNNY AT ALL. stare
just to be clear, I never ever want to see a question from Skeptics migrated to Fitness & Nutrition, no matter how ontopic-ish they would seem :P
14:11
Whyyy? =D
because all your questions are TOTALLY SERIOUS AND NOT FUNNY AT ALL.
Well except the poop one
@Borror0 ROFL.
@Sklivvz The poop one is the MOST SERIOUS AND LEAST FUNNY OF THEM ALL
haha
14:14
Cleaning your bum is a serious matter. Otherwise you come away smelling....
:P
@RussellSteen of failure
We have another answer at the top of the MultiCollider...
link
><
5
Q: What is the scientific explanation of "Orbs"?

rjstellingThis is a typical extract form a blog post about Orbs, Reading an article about orbs, the mysterious lights sometimes appearing in photographs, I was reminded of how little we know of the world surrounding us. And here is a example image: Could they really they Ghosts, Spirits or...

14:21
That question just made my day better, I am going to come to this site regularly.
You have ruined my productivity.
Speaking of productivity, back to work! Thanks to @Borror0 for leading me to water...
14:53
I understand the reason not to, but it would REALLY help if we could do private messages.
@Borror0 I couldn't believe that "orbs" even made it onto the site, given how much info there is on the subject on the internet.
15:18
@RussellSteen Hi, your tornado question is probably going to be closed
0
Q: How can one be so 100% sure that a specific post/account is a spammer/scammer?

TimI wish I could lose my memory about this, but sorry I just ain't able to. Before I asked mine, I hope DJClayworth's question (after update) can be addressed: Should we close questions challenging specific ads? Now here comes mine. Seriously, to whom it may concern, please answer me: Are you 10...

 
2 hours later…
17:26
@Sklivvz -- No worries on closing it. It's a bad question.
@RussellSteen Thanks
@RussellSteen I've nuked it (if you really disagree let me know and I'll set it to closed only ok?)
nuked is fine :)
18:00
Hey Sklivvz. Are you certain about hte 3-body problem always producing unstable orbits in numerical simulation?
It wouldn't surprise me if some simulation algorithms did that, but I didn't think all of them did.
@anthony137 Let me find a reference
The n-body problem is the problem of predicting the motion of a group of celestial objects that interact with each other gravitationally. Solving this problem has been motivated by the need to understand the motion of the sun, planets and the visible stars. Its first complete mathematical formulation appeared in Isaac Newton's Principia (the n-body problem in general relativity is considerably more difficult). Since gravity was responsible for the motion of planets and stars, Newton had to express gravitational interactions in terms of differential equations. Newton proved in the ...
Right. It doesn't have a convenient closed-form solution.
Ah. I see what you're saying. I don't think that forces the selection of a reference frame, though.
Normally it's chaotic (in the general case)
It just makes it easier to calculate. The "Circular Problem" as described in the linked section is a simplification of the general 3-body problem
But if you can separate the system into 2 two-body-problems (by fixing a reference frame) then you can have a decent solution
18:09
Yes, but I'm pretty sure if I were to run a numerical simulation in some whacky reference frame, I could still get nearly the right solution.
If you fix a reference frame, it's just easier
Sure
We are in vehement agreement
Which was my original point. The selection of reference frame is arbitrary, but some frames are easier to calculate in than others.
you say "easier to calculate", I say "natural"
I could calculate the Earth-Moon-Sun system from the rotating reference frame of Mercury, but it'd be horrendously complicated.
yes yes
18:11
I don't like that attribution. "Natural" has connotations of "Correct" which implies that there is only one natural reference frame.
we are simply using two different vocabularies - in physics you would call natural something that is easier to calculate due to simplifications and so on
For all problems
Fair enough. That might be a good clarification to add to your answer.
natural implies that and in fact, there is only one reference frame in which everything is easier to calculate. there is a whole field of physics devoted to that
classical mechanics is all about that
For any given problem. Yes.
18:13
What I was objecting to was the implication, perhaps only in my mind, that natural meant there was one reference frame in which all problems are easier to calculate.
sure i'll point out what i mean by natural - i didn't get your point before
no, of course not e.g. moon around earth and earth around sun has a different natural reference frame
Right.
thanks for bringing this to chat by the way
No problem. Easier to hash out this way.
Wow. Fredley's coming up with some really good questions.
12
A: Is the "proof" of geocentrism scientically valid?

SklivvzHere is the only correct, natural1 physical answer: The Earth and the Sun both move around their center of mass Since the center of mass is located within the Sun surface, it is correct to say that the Earth rotates around the Sun within reasonable limits. On the other hand, of course you can ...

18:21
sighs
I don't know how that other guy's answer has more upvotes than yours.
Suggestion to vote to close:
-1
Q: Why are we told vaccines are efficient in preventing diseases when no studies have been made?

DanielWhy are we told that vaccines are efficient in preventing diseases when not even one Peer-Reviewed Double Blind Study of any vaccine has been done?

Voted, although for a different reason than you.
I went for "Not a real question"
That one should be closed for just about all of the reasons.
Heeey... where did Fredley's Dvorak vs. Qwerty question go?
likely to one of the other QA sites.
It wasn't a skeptics question
18:31
It wasn't? I thought it was a great question for this site.
10
Q: Dvorak vs QWERTY

titaniumdecoy Possible Duplicate: Which keymap for programmers? Dvorak? A friend of mine is trying to convince me to learn to type in Dvorak. The main reason I would consider switching is to relieve the strain on my hands from long periods of typing. Is it worth the effort to learn a new keyboard ...

That is just one of the MANY on the subject.
It's a good question, to be sure.
Just more appropriate on another QA site.
Hrm.
Neither that question nor the related "exact duplicate" answers the question Fredley proposed, though.
shrugs
I still think it's a great question for our site. In that link, one of the lower-voted answers references an article from Reason.com
I honestly love the question, and if it was moved, I wish that there was some way to see that it happened and where it went, but if we accept questions like that, then it opens the door for any of those comparison questions (PC vs Linux vs Mac, iPhone vs Android vs Blackberry vs WP7 vs Palm, Coke vs Pepsi, Cats vs Dogs, etc.)
I might be over-zealous about OOS though. Others don't seem to be as ardent about it.
18:46
I'm not sure that slope is as slippery as you're portraying it.
19:00
Maybe not quite, but out of scope is out of scope. The more off-topic questions we allow, the more dilute and less useful this site is.
See, that's the thing. I don't think it was out of scope. The original question was, "Dvorak claims to result in faster typing than qwerty. Is this claim true?"
That's a claim I've seen made many, many times.
With stories about "Designed to type faster" and references to army studies.
I think it's perfect for a Skeptics site. It's just as good, imho, as the Atkins Diet question was.
@Ustice The question was self-deleted by the owner.
@Fabian Or that.
I may steal it from him.
Thanks, Fabian, for the insight.
19:06
@anthony137 Sure, all content is cc-licensed
@anthony137 I do think the deletion was the reaction from the comment
Maybe just ping the poster in chat and encourage him to undelete
What comment? I didn't see it.
I think that he means mine.
I didn't see it.
If I see him, I'll encourage him to re-post. I thought it was a good question.
19:53
@Ustice -- sorry for misunderstanding your comment earlier
 
4 hours later…
23:46
0
Q: Censure vs. Assist

Russell SteenI choose to use this question as an example arguing for assistance. We're a relatively small community and I think we may be at risk of driving off people who will be productive users by being too quick and terse in our "not a question" "no citation" style comments. Sure if someone has 500+ rep...


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