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00:45
@Mithoron exactly another 100 days
 
1 hour later…
01:48
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ :/
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ absolutely
 
2 hours later…
04:12
-1
Q: How to justify this contradiction in acid-base equilibrium of methanol and water?

schrodinger_16Let's talk about the following compounds - water and methanol. We know that methanol is slightly more acidic than water, because water's ability to donate a proton as an acid is reduced due to extensive hydrogen bonding. The $\mathrm{p}K_\mathrm{a}$ values are approximately $15.5$ and $15.7$, ...

-1
Q: Gas Releasing from a Cylinder

schrodinger_16How does pressure change inside a cylinder of a gas (say, carbon dioxide) at a given temperature, and external pressure - if gaseous carbon dioxide is released from the cylinder at constant temperature? How can we draw a graph of pressure as a function of time? Would it matter if the constant...

Was I wrong over those two cases
I have been resisting the urge to trash talk
 
2 hours later…
06:02
It's not a homework question, it's something I've been wondering about. What gave you the right to assume it's a homework question? Is that how Stackexchange works for every question they don't intend to answer? — schrodinger_16 2 hours ago
the entire problem arises over the use of the word "homework" itself
the OP is right that it isn't from their textbook, but that's because conventionally "homework" is supposed to mean just that
i personally find the use of the word homework ambiguous, and confusing for infrequent visitors, that's why I don't use it at all in my own canned comment: "Hi %name%, welcome to Chem.SE! We require you to show your efforts on this problem. What formulae/steps did you try? Where did you get stuck? Please add this to your question. Thanks! "
@AvnishKabaj I suggest using this canned response instead. It avoids mentioning "homework", as the very mention of the word "homework" can lead to a debate with the OP as to what is homework and what is not, as happened with you
i personally feel we all should drop the usage of the word "homework" altogether, as its usage on our site differs radically from its intended definition in the dictionary and elsewhere on the internet
and ends up confusing OPs quite frequently
-------------------
the way I see it is that that FAQ post was created for textbook questions _only_ (where the "homework" makes sense), but later it got applied to every second question that lacked effort (and wasn't textbook homework). So, instead of creating a new FAQ, somehow people thought it good to expand upon the original one instead and yet retain the word "homework" (-_-)
and confuse generations of OPs
@any-regular is my summary right? ---^
hmmm, seems I am right. Math.SE originated the first usage of "homework" - and quite correctly. Their "homework" literally means textbook problems that students need help with
two months later, Phy.SE somehow considered it appropriate to also merge "self-study problems, puzzles" along with it - ruining the definition of the word homework, and sowing seeds of confusion that would irritate OPs for close to a decade now!
and since our former leader ManishEarth was a Phy.SE veteran, it makes sense why our community also follows almost the same guidelines as were set in Phy.SE
adding in the definition for completeness: "homework - schoolwork that a pupil is required to do at home" (oxford). It is even obvious to a layman that our definition of "homework" is completely inaccurate
imho, we should have a separate close reason for "low effort questions", or drop the word "homework" altogether
wow, what a wall of text I have just posted o.O
06:36
I have had incidents like this before but the response is like
> lol no this is not homework
This dude just starts calling out on other users
@GaurangTandon
> i personally find the use of the word homework ambiguous, and confusing for infrequent visitors, that's why I don't use it at all in my own canned comment: "Hi %name%, welcome to Chem.SE! We require you to show your efforts on this problem. What formulae/steps did you try? Where did you get stuck? Please add this to your question.
I don't want to be this nice
 
1 hour later…
07:39
@orthocresol Have you already been around when he was active?
@GaurangTandon that’s essentially what we have proposed before. It didn’t seem to catch on, though. I agree with everything you said
@Martin-マーチン, no
you're lucky then ;)
@orthocresol :( if it didn't catch on, it's probably because - due to repeated meta/chat discussions around the topic of "homework" - every community member has developed their own interpretation of what homework stands for, what it should stand for, whether it's acceptable or not, etc.
@Martin-マーチン he answered one of my questions - back in 2014 - as a newcomer, I didn't know all his answers were exactly like that
Your answer's a bit difficult to follow, thanks though. — Gaurang Tandon Mar 31 '14 at 4:52
lol, I find that comment of mine funny now
I only upvoted his post so that he felt good that his effort in writing a detailed long answer didn't go wasted
08:13
What would it be good if there were a citation with your question ;)
@GaurangTandon Wohooo I downvoted that instantly
@Martin-マーチン thanks for nullifying my guilt of upvoting it ^_^
@Martin-マーチン i know, but I was a complete beginner at that time :P In fact, now I am surprised my question didn't get closed as "unclear what you're asking" at that time
I don't think it's a bad question, and wouldn't have wanted to close it, but the lack of a citations makes it somewhat irrelevant a few years later...
yes, though honestly, I think that's my lowest quality contribution to chem.se till date
but why in the world did it get +17k views! o.O why are so many people concerned about a weird typo in a random book which even I forgot a few years later :-O
08:30
wild guess: If you let Google sensei search for boiling point increase, your questions triggers all the words; i'd expect it to right up there with Wikipedia sensei.
08:46
yah, totally right
 
1 hour later…
10:01
1
Q: Boiling point of a liquid increasing with temperature?

Gaurang TandonIn my textbook, a statement is given, as follows: Boiling point of a liquid increases with increase in temperature However, I was wondering, isn't this wrong? The boiling point of a liquid always remains the same, it doesn't change. Hence, my question is: Is the above statement wrong? If ...

His face might be unclear, but his question isn't
@GaurangTandon wow, someone pour some ice water on that dude
@GaurangTandon Uncle Al is not the most popular guy around
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ already did
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ ofc he isn't, not sure how that relates though :/
--------------------
"**This question is missing context or other details:** Please improve the question by providing additional context, which ideally includes your thoughts on the problem and any attempts you have made to solve it. This information helps others identify where you have difficulties and helps them write answers appropriate to your experience level." I love the math.se close reason, glad they don't mention homework even once.
10:30
Thanks for the detailed answer @pentavalentcarbon , taking a few days off my dissertation so I'll go through your answer when I come back to it
11:00
@GaurangTandon it means the first rule of the old-timer club is you don't talk . . . I mean link to one of his answers
11:26
@GaurangTandon You seem to be very interested in upper limits today :-)
12:19
Those who write element names in lowercase shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. — Ivan Neretin 28 mins ago
13:05
Names of chemical elements actually are spelled with a lower case initial in English.
He probably means element symbols.
 
1 hour later…
14:22
@Abcd yeah ;)
finally some upvotes to my rep graph :D
14:50
@Abcd
I appreciate your desire to help, but this edit actually didn't fix any formatting
please read the formatting wiki for details
15:22
@Abcd by the way, did you find Solomons and Fryhle pdf online? I have a dozen links on Google, and every link ends up at the same page. Some blue site that says "To see our book library service available in your country you need Free Membership Registration You have to create a FREE ACCOUNT in order to continue READING or DOWNLOAD"
but at second step, they ask for credit card information :-O They do say they're not gonna me a charge me a single rupee, but why then they also need my CVV number o.O
My friend found the pdf somewhere and emailed it to me
@GaurangTandon Do you want it too
@GaurangTandon How do you access the articles of pubchem
even they are money mongers
@Abcd yeah please _/\_
@GaurangTandon Whats your email
@Abcd pubchem articles are always free? I think you meant those by elsevier, royal society, ACS, etc.?
@Abcd can you email it now?
@GaurangTandon yes
15:27
@Abcd please send here [email protected]
thanks!
@GaurangTandon who in the world uses sharklasers email
@GaurangTandon their research type articles
@Abcd me. disposable email. please send fast or it'll self-detonate :P
@GaurangTandon how to create disposable email
I'll send it through that
Your file is larger than 25MB. It will be sent as a Google Drive link.
@GaurangTandon it will take $\approx 8 \pu{ minutes}$ because it is 87 MB
@Abcd sure. but I am not supposed to mention it. google "how to access research papers for free" and read first hit
@Abcd use guerrilamail.com fastest way to create disposable emails
@GaurangTandon lol why wont you mention it XD
15:32
@Abcd use guerrilamail.com fastest way to create disposable emails
No body will report about you to police here XD
@Abcd thanks dude
@Abcd :P
Archive.org is legal right
Anyway you can find any book there
Just google
@GaurangTandon Sent
[bookname] archive.org
15:39
Got it?
@AvnishKabaj You are also scared of police XD
@AvnishKabaj Its not downloadable
@Abcd it is scroll a bit down
What
theres a book on SE questions and answers
8
Q: Elimination reaction on 2-fluorobutane using alc.KOH

user23939Question: Find the major product formed when 2-fluorobutane reacts with alcoholic $\ce{KOH}$ My answer: Elimination of $\ce{HF}$ takes place and a more substituted alkene should have formed. (Zaitsev product). I think the mechanism is E2 since strong base is used. but answer given is a less su...

@Abcd Ummm....
@orthocresol ?
I wonder if this is legal.
15:50
I cant believe this :p o_O
@GaurangTandon @AvnishKabaj @M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ Give it a look
@orthocresol it is not
@Abcd what is that? :/
@Abcd i didn't get it :-O can you paste the drive link here?
@GaurangTandon Compare it with the link of the question I posted
@Abcd yeah, good find. that's some super shady work going on here
Zhe
Zhe
Certainly not legal to charge $4.61 for it
15:52
@Martin-マーチン there is attribution to the author as well as the site (at the very beginning)... I'm not sure how CCBYSA works and never read it thoroughly
@GaurangTandon Sure, I will have to regenerate a link
for various reasons: Not the attribution the license requires, they charge for the "book", which is not permissible as of cc-by-sa 3.0 (share alike = free)
I can't find the price though.
Oh, now I see it.
the ebook costs Rs 317
Convert it to your currency
@Martin-マーチン they probably charge for the binding and shipping; not for the content?
15:53
It's an ebook.
@GaurangTandon ? So?
@Abcd no shipping; no binding :P
@Abcd please do. thanks
15:55
share alike does not prohibit commercial use
Zhe
Zhe
@orthocresol @Martin-マーチン If you want to file a infringement claim, support.google.com/legal/contact/…
so its legal?
Zhe
Zhe
I'm not sure what the terms of use are, but I'm not ok with someone charging for my content
actually this link shows the author has a big collection of such books! :-O
I wouldn't be surprised if the name is fake, too.
15:56
seems so, google searches for that name seem to lead the innocent George instead
Anyway, it seems to be missing a key part of the attribution, which is the hyperlink being required.
@Martin-マーチン Maybe we should escalate this, I am not fully confident dealing with it myself, unless you or Loong are...
0
Q: Is publication of Chem.SE stuff in the form of ebooks legal?

AbcdWhile googling around questions I found: this Compare it with this and other questions on website. Is such publication of Chemistry.SE work legal or not?

30
Q: Are these eBooks that copy from SE illegal?

PyRulezSo, this guy has made a bunch of eBooks based on Stack Exchange content. Making books of SE stuff is okay, but two rules need to be followed: Attribution License the work under CC-BY-SA as well This link claims that the books do attribute properly. I find it unlikely that he has properly lice...

ooh...
16:01
                     e
                  t
               a
            l
         a
      c
   s
e
Mathjax would have been better :p
meh stupid chat...
( ; __________ ; )
1
Q: Is publication of Chem.SE stuff in the form of e-books legal?

AbcdWhile googling around questions I found: this Compare it with this and other questions on website. Is such publication of Chemistry.SE work legal or not?

@orthocresol $$\mathrm{e^{s^{c^{a^{l^{a^{t^{e}}}}}}}}$$
awww... cute
@GaurangTandon Sent again. Please check
@GaurangTandon i have to delete this in 1 minute. Message "ok" when you have opened it
16:06
Oh well, I can't say I'm comfortable with it, but well...
Zhe
Zhe
33
Q: Are these eBooks that copy from SE illegal?

PyRulezSo, this guy has made a bunch of eBooks based on Stack Exchange content. Making books of SE stuff is okay, but two rules need to be followed: Attribution License the work under CC-BY-SA as well This link claims that the books do attribute properly. I find it unlikely that he has properly lice...

oh wait
too slow
:-D
The name is real, too
I was really hoping to forget this answer:
-6
A: What happens chemically to 5'-radiolabeled aqueous thyroxine (thyroid prohormone) when its I-131 undergoes beta+gamma decay?

El chimistoMy guess would be the following: The electron generated by the decay would most likely go either towards the O or the H. In either case, the oxygen (due to its electronegativity) will atract the electron forming an ion, and the hidrogen will be displaced. The oxygen will form a double bond and st...

35
Q: Seats in a Finnish cinema

ngnYou're given the map of a cinema theatre as a boolean matrix: 0 represents a free seat, 1 - occupied. Each Finn who walks in chooses the seat farthest away (Euclidean distance) from the nearest occupied one, or if several such exist - the first among them in row-major order. Output a matrix showi...

so true
16:44
@Abcd oops, sorry, I had logged off just at the moment. Can you please go to your Google drive, and share a public link for that file instead? I thought that's what you were going to do when you said earlier, regenerate the link and paste it in chat here.
@GaurangTandon Please ping me when you are online
@Abcd am back
Ok
It's downloading, many thanks! :D
Wc.
@GaurangTandon Wc = welcome
16:56
I know dude I was just joking
 
3 hours later…
19:32
@Abcd if he earns money, it's not legal
Wait, Indians do online legal stuff too?
George Duckett. Definitely Indian
20:07
@Abcd wait what?
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ the book sells for $4.61
soooo... do the profits get distributed to the SE users that made the answers?
what happens in the legal world?
wait hold on one sec
 
1 hour later…
21:18
@george-duckett please, attribute everything properly
 
2 hours later…
23:09
7 hours ago, by Martin - マーチン
share alike does not prohibit commercial use
Martin is correct, CC-BY-SA allows commercial use of content. The "for sale" aspect doesn't matter.
Holy moly
@Abcd
23:30
People spent 800$ for this Harry Potter Q&A
O_o
I don't think anybody spent $800 on that. It's being re-sold by a third party for that ridiculous amount.

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