« first day (1364 days earlier)      last day (3953 days later) » 

03:07
@TedShifrin
You're my last hope Ted.
That's sorry @Pedro. But @Alex is right :)
I need access to that paper Ted.
Let $\dim V = a$ and $\dim W = b$ so that $V$ has basis $v_1, \ldots, v_a$ and $W$ has basis $w_1, \ldots, w_b$. Then $V\oplus W$ has basis elements $v_1,\ldots , v_a,w_1,\ldots ,w_b\triangleq x_1,\ldots ,x_{a+b}$. Then $\wedge^n\left(V\oplus W\right)$ has basis $$\{x_{i_1}\wedge\cdots \wedge x_{i_n}|1\leq i_1<\cdots <i_n\leq a+b\}\triangleq \\ \{x_{j_1}\wedge \cdots \wedge x_{j_r} \wedge x_{k_1} \wedge \cdots \wedge x_{k_j}|1\leq j_1 < \cdots <j_r \leq a < k_1 < \cdots <k_s \leq a+b,r+s=n\}$$
I don't have any access you don't ....
Could someone tell me briefly if the riemann hypothesis where true how it would affect the primes?
like in 1 sentence?
if the riemann hypothesis where true then then we could be certain the primes.....
03:12
@TedShifrin Oh noes. All hope is lost.
I'm about to conclude my worl
@Alex: Is $n=a+b$?
@TedShifrin This is gonna be the general case.
so, $n\leq a+b$
Then your $i_n\le n$ be wrong.
why?
oh - yes. right.
03:14
Because you're picking $n$ things between $1$ and $a+b$.
Hi @Alex @Td
Hi @user127001
okay so this is what i'm not sure i'm understanding, I want to map these basis vectors to the appropriate summand in $\displaystyle \bigoplus_{r+s=n}\wedge^rV\otimes_k \wedge^sW$
@AlexanderGruber oplus
oplus
@PedroTamaroff yeah, whoops, i fixed
03:16
to make things right I had to turn my head
tehehehehe
question is, why is it $\otimes_k$ in the middle?
Stand on your head ;)
@TedShifrin No, tilt your head $45^{\circ}$.
Not as much fun, @Pedro
@TedShifrin
03:18
I'm trying to find a reference for some fiber bundle stuff and I'm having a heck of a time trying to find it in some of the books I was recommended, but it might be that I don't know exactly what I'm looking for
why did anyone make this.
2
Anyone think they can help?
There's a skew-symmetrization map from that to $\Lambda^n (V\oplus W)$, @Alex
@KyleSykes What book were you recommended?
One thing I'm trying to find a reference for was a sentence that says "Conversely, one can show that if $S^{n-1}$ is a group, it induces the (associative) normed real division algebra on $\mathbb{R}^n$"
Milnor and Stasheff, and Husemoller
03:20
@KyleSykes Did you get any help from your beard? Looks like serious business.
That was proved by Adams, I think. Those books are standard. Older but great is Steenrod.
It is very serious. Another dude in my program has one that's over a foot long.
hi.
@TedShifrin thanks, that gives me a starting place to look
Howdy @Mike
03:22
@TedShifrin I'm afraid that doesn't do much for me... maybe explaining this to me is an unrealistic thing to task you with
Another thing I was trying to find was more detailed information about why trying to construct Octonionic Projective Space leads to problems
@Kyle I don't think he was talking to you re: proved by Adams
@AlexanderGruber make bases for V and W, form a basis of $(V\oplus W)^{\otimes n}$, notice that in $\Lambda^n(V\oplus W)$ any one of these basis vectors can be rearranged to get the V vectors first and the W vectors second...
How do you understand exterior alg? Sub or quotient?
Oh. :\
03:23
@Ted Linear algebra homework for tonight has a proof in it. This is not gonna be fun.
Yes, I was @kyle. Shaddup @Mike
I thought I recalled seeing an Adam's theorem somewhere so I just assumed it was for me :o
Hi @Mik
Ram
Ram
@TedShifrin, you were talking about Universal Coverings.
Sorry! I misread the context.
03:25
@TedShifrin the answer is, i don't understand exterior algebra.
My lin alg homework always has proofs @Mike. We just finished the course with Spectral Thm and Sylvester's Law.
I advise you to ignore me, @Kyle
@Ted your semester is over already?
Hmm...did someone say something? :)
03:26
@Ted They're just learning matrix multiplication. Many students haven't taken an intro to proofs class.
The problem is "If the columns of B are linearly dependent, show the columns of AB are linearly dependent"
Not bad at all but it's seeing some silliness.
You will eventually, @Alex. And you should learn differential forms :) I'm sure your defn is quotient of the tensor alg.
Ram
Ram
@TedShifrin, help me in looking the $f^*(H^2)$. @Mike, I still found problems in my other proof too. If you remember our discussion
@TedShifrin yes it is. i don't know what $\Lambda$ is.
Anyways, the other question is that trying to construct octonionic projective space and trying to look at bundles like, say $\pi: S^{8n+7}\rightarrow \mathbb{O}\mathbb{P}^n$ with fibers $S^7$, you find that it apparently can't be done except for $n=1,2$, but I would like to know a bit more about why that is. This presentation I found doesn't cite anything and just states it. I wasn't sure if it was something common knowledge in fiber bundle-y stuff or not
It's the exterior algebra, @Alex. I use $\wedge$ only for the product.
03:29
Bye byes peoples of the math.
Stay mathy.
Later @Pedro
Night, @Pedro.
@TedShifrin is that used for something?
Yes, @user127001. Last day today. Finals start Wed
Huh? @Alex
i mean, what is it for? the exterior algebra
don't get me wrong, i am sure i will know its intrinsic beauty when i see it, but usually things are looked at for some purpose.
03:30
it's the cohomology ring of the n-torus
@Ted How many weeks per your semester?
Oh, sure, differential forms is the main creature.
15 @user127001 ... Very long.
differential 1-forms satisfy $\alpha \vee \beta = -\beta \vee \alpha$.
I think.
Wow @Ted your semester must begin very early then, if your semester is ending this early
addendum added so Ted doesn't yell at me.
03:32
$\wedge$, not $\vee$
@AlexanderGruber exterior products gives a coordinate-free definition for determinants, they give differential forms, they categorify elementary symmetric polynomials (and are special cases of schur functors, which give the irreducible GL(V)-reps of tensor powers of V, and categorify schur polynomials)
I can't tell the difference on my phone.
@seaturtles oh!-- that sounds very nice.
i shouldn't have bothered whilst seaturtles was around
Well, @seaturtles, in my multi course I define wedge using determinants ;) not in fancy grad courses, though ;)
03:34
it sounds pretty geometric.
Symmetric poly @sea?
Ram
Ram
@TedShifrin, do you remember my question, I couldn't proceed a bit further :-(
@Alexander Suppose V,W have dim=1. Pick basis vectors v and w respectively. Consider $\Lambda^3(V\oplus W)$. We know a basis for $(V\oplus W)^{\otimes 3}$ is $$\{v\otimes v\otimes v, v\otimes v\otimes w, v\otimes w\otimes v,v\otimes w\otimes w,w\otimes v\otimes v,w\otimes v\otimes w,w\otimes w\otimes v,w\otimes w\otimes w\}.$$ This is a spanning set in $\Lambda^3(V\oplus W)$.
Notice that in the exterior product, all of these vectors are among $$\{v\wedge v\wedge v,v\wedge v\wedge w,v\wedge w\wedge w,w\wedge w\wedge w\}$$ up to a $\pm$ sign by rearranging them appropriately.
this edit was approved? I was just about to reject it when it was approved. >8(
@Ram: Did you do the simplest cases as I suggested? I have no idea about your general problem.
Huh?@seaturtles Those things are $0$
Ram
Ram
03:36
Yes, I did, but K2 T2 is also very big, I mean I have to look at squares and cubes of 6 components. But I did it and it was trivial.
k2 - Klein Bottle
@TedShifrin yes, they are
@seaturtles i still haven't gotten to the definition of $\Lambda^n$ yet, i'm on $\wedge^n$. I think this may not be something I will understand.
@TedShifrin but larger numbers would mean I have to type more, and I can get the job done (showing how the basis vectors get separated) this way
@Alex: I explained earlier. Same thing, different notations.
@TedShifrin If $g\in {\rm GL}(V)$ then $\chi_{\Bbb S_\lambda(V)}(g)$ is the schur polynomial $s_\lambda$ in the eigenvalues of $g$. In particular if $\Bbb S_\lambda=\Lambda^n$ then $s_\lambda=e_n$ (the elementary symmetric polynomial)
03:38
@TedShifrin Oh, I see now.
$\Lambda^n$ is the exterior product, $\Lambda$ is the full exterior algebra
@seaturtles isn't this going to be $0$?
Ah @sea: You know way more rep theory than I currently do. ;)
doing $\Bbb S_\lambda={\rm Sym}^n$ gives the complete homogeneous polynomial
we're taking a $\wedge^rX$ with $r>\dim X$.
03:40
@Ram: I suggested thinking about more basic topology for starters, not cohomology.
@AlexanderGruber yes, but you see how the elts of the spanning set can be arranged so that each one looks like a vector in some $\Lambda^rV\otimes \Lambda^sW$. As I mentioned to Ted, doing a nontrivial example would require numbers that require too much typing.
Ram
Ram
Yes, RP2 to Torus it was null homotopic. So trivial.
@seaturtles oh, yeah, of course
what about K?
I get the whole $r+s=n$ thing now, definitely, with $\wedge^n\mapsto \oplus_{r+s=n}\wedge^r\otimes\wedge^s$
Ram
Ram
03:43
@TedShifrin, for Klein Bottle case, if it covering map, Torus is 2 sheeted covering space, so, deg 2, in Z2 its again zero. But
I mean, homology maps are degree 2, and in Z2, its dual is zero map
But you still need to think about sending $v\otimes w$ to $v\wedge w$ in the final step, @Alex. That's what I was talking about an hour ago.
Ram
Ram
I mean, homology maps are degree 2, and in Z2, its dual is zero map
But you're mapping K to T, @Ram, right?
@TedShifrin you mean reversing the map? i don't understand.
Ram
Ram
Yes, but at homology, it is 2 sheet covering map right, so degree is +or- 2. And in Cohomology we look at it's dual in Z/2. So
03:48
I'm saying that $\Lambda^r(V)\otimes \Lambda^s(W)$ needs to be skew-symmetrized to land in $\Lambda^{r+s}(V\oplus W)$.
Ram
Ram
@TedShifrin, yes I looked in wrong direction
No, @Ram, the 2-sheeted cover is the other way.
Ram
Ram
Yes,
I actually don't know the answer. I'll think about it during my kids' final on Wed. @Ram
Night, all. Hang in there, @Alex :)
@TedShifrin if we maintain the same ordering on the basis both from the $V,W$ comprising $V\oplus W$ and the $V$ and $W$ in $\wedge^r V, \wedge^s W$ don't we have the inverse map?
03:52
Later
Ram
Ram
Thanks, I too have to give seminar on Siegel's Theorem. Night
I have a ridiculously silly question guys
@TedShifrin see ya.
Night @Fernando.
night @Ted
The universal property for the localization of a commutative ring $A$ over a multiplicative subset $S$ states that if $g:A\rightarrow B$ is a ring morphism such that $g(S)\subseteq B^*$, then there exists a unique ring morphism $h:S^{-1}A\rightarrow B$ with $g=h\circ i$
where $i$ is the canonical morphism
so far so good
Now, suppose I pick a multiplicative subset $T$ such that $S\subseteq T$
now if I have a morphism $g':A\rightarrow B$ such that $g'(T)\subseteq B^*$, in particular $g'(S)\subseteq B^*$, so there's a unique ring morphism from $S^{-1}A$ commuting the diagram
so $S^{-1}A\simeq T^{-1}A$ which is obviously wrong
where did I lie?
03:58
@FernandoMartin i don't suppose i could persuade you to draw that
What do you mean by draw @AlexanderGruber?
I realize it's nonsense
@FernandoMartin like, make the diagram. i have a short memory.
but I can't find where my mistake is
it would be easier for me to see what you mean if it was all together
Oh, I don't know how to draw diagrams in here, but I could write it down and take a picture
03:59
works for me
@FernandoMartin oh... well, $S$ is a subset of fewer $C^\star$s
so it's not the same property right? the condition to be satisfied is stronger with the $T$ case, though it implies the $S$ case
does what I said make sense? @FernandoMartin
hmmm, I don't see why
The conditions on $\varphi$ are part of the hypothesis
Ahhh, got it
04:14
@FernandoMartin there should be cases where the universal property for $T$ fails because $T$ isn't a subset of $C^\star$, but the universal property for $S$ succeeds because $S$ is a subset of $C^\star$. if they don't always fail and succeed in the same places they shouldn't be the same property, no?
One needs to invert T as well
i.e. $T\subseteq S^{-1}A$ may not be comprised of units
thanks @AlexanderGruber
@FernandoMartin np
04:59
How do we know that logx < (x-1) for all x>0 except 1 ?
05:37
hmm, how bout this? $f(x) = x - 1 - \log(x)$ then setting $\mathcal{D}_xf = 0 = 1 - 1/x$ implies there's an extremum at $x=1$. $\mathcal{D}_x$ of that is $1/x^2$, which is positive, so it's a local minimum. @Sush
@AlexanderGruber,Thank you so much
@Sush yup :)
06:07
@sush Hi!
hi@Sawarnik
@sush have any questions for me :D
How is this set a directed set?
Is not one of the conditions that for every 2 elements of this set, there exists a value that is "greater" than them both?
Oh wait, if we consider $
$
$\lambda_{1}$ & $\lambda_{3}$, then I suppose $\lambda_{3}$ is greater than or equal to them both.
06:11
@Sawarnik, my internet is very slow, so that site doesn't open!
@Sush oh no!
@Sush whereabouts do you live? i'll mark it for you.
@usukidoll Someone changed your avatar.
it was me
06:18
@AlexanderGruber, in India.
@AlexanderGruber Kutch, Gujrat, India.
Haha, @Sawarnik knows more about me.
@Sush Infact, I might be coming there next month.
Oh, for which purpose?@Sawarnik?
06:22
@Sush Well, i am not sure.
Is that the tooth fairy @usukidoll?
no he he
@Sush I am marking you in the center of Kutch, is it ok? :)
hmm, ok!
06:24
@Sawarnik I already did.
@AlexanderGruber Oh, I see!
What's going on
Not much pal, how are you?
I got loads of homework to do
@Sush there ya go buddy
06:28
Haha! @AlexanderGruber, thank you. What will I have to do with that now?
Mark me in the black hole.
@Sush oh, nothing. it's pointless. :)
I am still the only Australian.
we're up to 36 pins on there
@eXtremiity there's plenty of australians on the site, too, i guess most of them just don't come to chat.
06:33
hey are you guys using your exact addresses
@Ethan I used the intersection nearest to me, but it's not necessary to get that detailed if you don't want to
@eXtremiity And still no African.
@AlexanderGruber Hawk's in the sea!
@Sawarnik heh, i didn't notice that. hope he fixes it.
helloooooooooooo
The Hunt Begins
2112v30u3s4a
1659v11u1s2a
@AwalGarg You should mark yourself in the map too!
06:44
@Sawarnik where? and you didn't go to school today?
@Ethan Hi Ethan, lol.
hey
@AwalGarg Early dispersal due to DM's order :P :P
@Ethan I might delete my account soon. Is your email ethanjgs at gmail dot com?
@Sawarnik really? how hot is it there?
06:45
@JasperLoy yea
@Ethan OK, we can still keep in touch after I delete my account, lol.
@AwalGarg Not much, but its well above 40 degrees. But the DM must have caught fever :D
@JasperLoy -_-
@Sawarnik cool. I had this too here. 9 days off... super fun
@JasperLoy why are you going to delete it though?
@AwalGarg 9 days off ... just off! WaT, this is unfair!
@Ethan He must be joking, as always -_-
06:47
@JasperLoy why not
@Ethan Well, I have deleted my account many times, but each time I am tempted to return. This time, I will try not to return, lol.
@Sawarnik it was just after the summer holidays, so double benefit :)
11
Q: When, why and how did Tom Riddle anagram his name?

Awal GargI am curious to know this. It must not have been easy. Did he use magic for this purpose? And why did he anagram it? Just keeping a new name would have been enough. Why did he need to maintain a link between the two names? Is such type of magic possible? What can be the limits to such things d...

@AwalGarg Arghh!! I will kill your DM!!
I haven't been using this much lately
@Sawarnik He is retired now.
06:48
@Ethan I told you my 9 holy books right? I will try to study them next year and also get completely well by the end of next year.
Grad school afterward?
@AwalGarg Good, although if he could be transferred here ...
@JasperLoy Do you understand Pali?
@Ethan Well, if I get well successfully and finish the books successfully, then yes, grad school.
@Sawarnik its very unlikely. anyways, I have some work. Bye!
if you have a unfair coin which 75% of time lands on tails. can you say that it is random?
06:49
@Sawarnik No, so I read the English translations.
@AwalGarg Bye.
:15229650 I got the English translations, lol.
@ethan So what is the latest news on your side for undergrad school?
OK I am leaving this chat, bye @ethan!
Still waitlisted at the University of Chicago lol
07:22
@Sab Hi.
Sab
Sab
@Sawarnik hI dude
Anyone doing physics here?
The physics stack seems dead most of the time :O
Got a question which is quite annoying
You can ask on Physics.SE main maybe someone could be there, or maybe Physics Forum.
Sab
Sab
Don't have time. Assignment due in 30 minutes. I woke up late llol
It's only 1 question left though
@Sab Why do you never accept answers on the main?
Sab
Sab
which one?
07:26
For all qs you have asked.
Sab
Sab
I don't know. I'll accept them later
I normally rate them I'm not sure why i dn't accept lol.
Is it that bad?
Yes, you should accept.
Plus you get 2 rep :D
Sab
Sab
Okay :D
I'll accept them lter today for now I'll go complete my physics work
brb
Ok :)
@robjohn Yeah
08:36
@Ethan Good luck then.
08:59
Mmm
$$
\int_0^\infty \frac{(\cos x)^2 \sin \frac{x}{2}}{x}\,\mathrm{d}x = \frac{1}{2}\int_0^\pi (\cos x)^2\mathrm{d}x
$$
is q^n-1 = q^n/q? $$q^{n-1} = \frac{q^n}{q}$$
09:38
@user3123545 yes (going with the latex version as the text version has precedence problems)
@Ethan any news from UCLA?
is random+random more random than random?
@Ethan sorry about that :-(
@AwalGarg it has a different distribution, but it shouldn't be any more random
@robjohn i hope you know I mean random+random means the concatenated number, like 50+30=5030 not 80
@AwalGarg ah... no I didn't
@robjohn ok, so given this condition, is it more random? I suspect something to do with Permutations...
09:46
@AwalGarg if the one has some non-random characteristic, the concatenation would still have that characteristic.
@robjohn I am sorry, I didn't got that right? Can you please elaborate
@AwalGarg well, first you have to define what you mean by "more random". Usually, that means less of a non-random characteristic like clumping or failing some other test of randomness. If the first random number has a non-random characteristic, then the concatenation would have that same characteristic.
@robjohn ok,
I get it, thank you very much
btw, I was salting password hashes, thats why I was asking.
@AwalGarg oh, if you're hashing then the output is as random as either part, so since the passwords are not really random, the randomness comes from the salt, which is somewhat random, and definitely better than the password itself. So salting a password hash is good.
@robjohn And why is that a yes? is there ex explanation on what actually happens? Like a proof?
10:03
@user3123545 a good hash function produces essentially random results from different arguments, even if they are close. So no matter where the randomness is in your salted password, the salted and hashed password picks up on the randomness of the salt when hashed.
10:36
@robjohn I see, thank you even though that's not what I asked for. I meant, is there a proof that tells why q^(n-1) = q^n / q ?
Nevermind, I see. 2^10 = 1024, 2^9 = 512. 2^10 / 2 = 512.
@user3123545 Why does that case convince you that it holds in general (particularly for negative $n$)?
11:13
@Sawarnik you were saying about AM-GM giving simple solution...
@user3123545 oh. it looked as if you were asking about the current question that AwalGarg was asking. You should link your comment to the comment you are talking about.
@user3123545 have you seen the rule $x^ax^b=x^{a+b}$? $x^a/x^b=x^{a-b}$?
@robjohn greetings!
@Hawk hello. how goes?
@robjohn fine...and you?
@robjohn I was intending to ask you this question: Let $1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,11,12,\ldots$ be the sequence of all positive integers which do not contain the digit zero. Write $\{a_n\}$ for this sequence. By comparing with a geometric series, show that $\sum\limits_{k=1}^n \dfrac{1}{a_k} < 90$. How would you do this?
Greetings
Some months ago I was challenged to compute this absolutely awesome series $$\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \log\left(1+\frac{1}{n}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1}{2n}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1‌​}{2n+1}\right) $$
It's one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen. This morning I also proposed the following mind-blowing question
11:21
mornin' ya'll
$$\int_0^{\infty} \log\left(1+\frac{1}{x}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1}{2x}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1‌​‌​}{2x+1}\right) \ dx$$
I'm so so happy and fulfilled for having the idea of creating this integral.
It's marvellous! Both questions are incredibly amazing! They both are honey for souls!
@meer2kat What is this, the south? :P
11:36
@KarlKronenfeld ya'll dunno nothin ;)
@KarlKronenfeld in all seriousness, hello
@Hawk Think of the sum in groups of powers of $10$: in the range $$\frac1{10^n}+\dots+\frac1{10^{n+1}-1}$$ there are $9\cdot10^n$ terms at most $\frac1{10^n}$ so the sum is at most $9$. However, only $\left(\frac9{10}\right)^n$ are counted because of the zeros. So the sum is at most $$9\left(1 +\frac9{10} +\left(\frac9{10}\right)^2 +\left(\frac9{10}\right)^3 +\dots\right)$$ which is $90$
@robjohn yes, great....the inequality part gets done by this...but what about the $\{a_n\}$ ?
@Hawk what do you mean?
@robjohn the recurrence relation for the sequence...
@Hawk what recurrence relation?
11:41
@robjohn the generalised form for $\{a_n\}$
@robjohn I guess, the questions asks for that too....am I wrong?
@Hawk why do you need that? you didn't ask for that
@robjohn There is a part in the question saying 'Write $\{a_n\}$ for this sequence'...doesn't that ask for the generalised form of the sequence?
@Hawk no, it is just so that you can write $\sum\limits_{n=1}^\infty\frac1{a_n}$ and make sense. Nowhere does it ask what $a_n$ is
@r9m don't miss my questions above. They are very rare gems.
@robjohn oh i see...I didn't realise that...okay...thank you for helping out...I have another question too...
@robjohn Let $f(x)=ax^2+bx+c$ where $a,b,c$ are real numbers. Suppose $f(-1),f(0),f(1) \in [-1,1]$. Prove that $|f(x)|\le \frac{3}{2}$ for all $x \in [-1,1]$.
r9m
r9m
11:48
@Chris'ssis :)
@Hawk break it into two cases .. the local extrema of $f$ is inside $[-1,1]$ or outside $[-1,1]$
@r9m I tried that all along...but I couldn't make much of it....
@r9m $$\int_{0}^{\infty} \log\left(1+\frac{1}{x}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1}{2x}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1‌​}{2x+1}\right) \ dx-\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \log\left(1+\frac{1}{n}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1}{2n}\right)\log\left(1+\frac{1‌​}{2n+1}\right)=\frac{7}{8} \zeta(3)$$
r9m
r9m
12:24
@Chris'ssis wow .. is it related to the inverse tangent integral you proposed before ?
@r9m I cannot say "No" because I didn't study the possibilty of relating the inverse tangent integral to my question, but I can say I had different things in mind when I created it.
r9m
r9m
@Chris'ssis i said that because of the $\frac78 \zeta(3)$ :)
@r9m Yeah, I guessed that. Maybe you can find a nice solution by using identities involving the inverse tangent integral ... :-)
@robjohn How are you doing?
@r9m I'm so glad these things exist.
r9m
r9m
@Chris'ssis I'm glad you exist ... :D
3
@r9m :-)))))))))) Thank you!
@r9m I strongly hope to receive these words at my next interview! It would be awesome! :D
r9m
r9m
12:34
@Chris'ssis Anyone who interacts with you is bound to come to the inescapable conclusion .. so its not a matter of hope .. but certainty :D :P
@r9m I just think you're too nice with me. ;)
quick question: in a partially ordered set, what's the name for the situation when $A \neq B \land A \not > B \land A \not < B$?
(feel free to tell me to go ask on the site instead)
(a quick look at the relevant wikipedia page did not yield answers)
@Chris'ssis May I ask you a question? How did you become so good at integration? Your skills are godlike :)
@badp I have seen references using "unrelated". However, I think another term may also be commonly used, I just can't remember it.
@badp, @KarlKronenfeld, incomparable, methinks.
12:56
@mirgee Thank you :-) Although I'm far away from having godlike skills, I can say that so far I've put very much work, love & passion in all things I did. With these things you can move the mountains.

« first day (1364 days earlier)      last day (3953 days later) »