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00:00
Oops, there go my 6 minutes :-)
It's a new day on MSE.
Nah, I think it's more me than you guys... :)
I added the Conclusion so that it would be more obvious that I was answering the question, but that didn't seem to help.
@J.M.: you back from work?
I'm trying to remember everyone's timezone, but failing I think.
You are 12 hours different so your Saturday morning is just starting, right?
No, I just woke up. :)
Right, it's Saturday morning here.
8:05
Yeah.
00:05
15 hours actually
I wonder if there is a clock app in which I can put names under a series of clocks, one for each regular chat member.
Make it like those things they use for newscasts... :D
Yeah or have in airports.
I have to run some errands and take the dog for a walk before dinner. I will be back after dinner.
See you.
 
4 hours later…
04:06
 
4 hours later…
A T
A T
08:04
maths is raging me
08:15
Mind elaborating?
08:41
I guess no elaboration
 
1 hour later…
10:06
@robjohn send me the link if you find it
10:46
@Gortaur what link?
on clocks )
 
2 hours later…
12:22
@Gortaur: The clock widget for the Mac allows multiple instances. I just made one for Jeruusalem, Amsterdam, and Manila. I will add more as the need arises.
Add one for Zurich. ;)
who's in Zurich?
t.b.
Ah
didn't know
And Zurich :-)
Zurich is the same timezone and Daylight Savings settings as Amsterdam
Ah... that's my fault for not looking at a map... :D
12:35
I had to look on the web to find out they were the same
13:11
Hey guys, greetings from Zurich! Yes, there is only one time zone in most of continental Europe (except Portugal and some countries far in the east). However, @JM, Switzerland is an exception in that we don't have Euros, but still Swiss Francs (see the nice little island in grey at the heart of Europe, that's us separatists :))
Just like the Brits... okay. :)
We're different, we don't even pretend to participate in the European Union...
The neutrality does look to be a long-standing tradition...
Yeah, that's what the right wingers try to sell us... However, looking more closely, the "neutrality" would more appropriately be called "opportunism": call yourself neutral and collaborate with the evil powers as far as they need you to and they'll pardon your quirks and even let you call yourself neutral...
Anyway, that's my impression
Ah, reminds me of the story of the bat...
13:20
exactly, we certainly do have teeth...
13:50
@tb more about russian emoticons. Schrodonger one is :):
I'd call that the bipolar smiley...
JJust saw it on bashorg
Man, I wasted days on that site years ago... :D
I just called JDH's question "The Ultrafinitists Nightmare" :-)
@Asaf: I just *knew* it'd be a "Nice Question" in a few hours...
13:57
@JM: Do you have a good bread recipe?
This time I have prepared yeasts :-)
Oh, with yeast? Hmm...
You want something spiced up, or would something plain do?
Well, I'm gonna add olives, tomatoes, onion...
But that can be added to pretty much any given bread.
Hmm, hmm... the notebook for my recipes is in another house, but let me check if there's anything on the Internet that's similar...
I think this is the nearest to mine, except I don't use olive oil... the prices for that are sort of steep here.
14:08
I wouldn't use any other oil for something like bread, actually :-)
Well, you can afford olive oil, so by all means use olive oil! :D
No need to shackle yourself with the limitations I have...
(my dirty secret: I use clarified butter in place of olive oil.)
This is a dirty secret indeed! :-)
At least it is still tasty. I would imagine using olive oil would make for better bread... but all I can do is imagine.
Take a trip to Israel once.
Maybe some day. :)
14:14
Yuck.
Multigrain?! Whole wheat?!
That's for those who feel they don't have sufficient fiber...
I use wheat.
not the multigrain. I'm not dieting... :P
Well, this is the same recipe I found in Hebrew, modulo garlic, tomatoes and that stuff. Which I was gonna add anyway.
I'll let you know how it went.
If you can, take a picture.
...on another note: at last, everybody on the first page of the Users page is 10k+...
14:40
Hm.
I just realized it.
Tomorrow we're going to visit my girlfriend's parents. No use baking a loaf of bread.
@Gortaur: This strikes me as a schizophrenic smiley :)
There are so many lazy questions here recently. Many of them are simply answered by entering the title into Google...
Hello
I am glad I could join this room
14:55
I'm not sure people have a good realization of "effort typing into Google" versus "effort typing into m.SE"...
@JM: What sort of yeast-to-flour ratio I should use?
O hai.
@Asaf: How puffy do you need it to be?
Hardly, but not completely dry.
You're baking mathematical bread?
15:02
I'm gonna use about 1 cup of flour, and fresh yeast.
Make a bread with genus 3.
What sort of yeast do you have again?
Fresh. They come in this cube of yeast...
@Calle: three-hole doughnuts have been done a lot of times...
Make a loaf with genus infinity then!
15:03
Wait, what? Cube? Not something powdery?
We have cube yeast here.
It's a cube of fresh yeasts. Powdery, but not too dry I think.
Hmm, okay. A teaspoon or so to three cups of flour should be fine.
So... if I'm gonna go with one cup of flour, about a third of a teaspoon?
Or is there an amount which is "too little" for the yeasts to start ferment?
If you use too little, it'll take a while to rise...
15:07
Or how about bread with the shape of a Julia set?
Okay, I found the ratio. 50g fresh yeasts (which is what I have) is about 25-30g dry yeast.
Oh! Apparently I didn't see you type "fresh". No wonder I was confused.
So with that conversion... you need about two teaspoons for three cups.
Right.
cracks his knuckles. It's bakery time!
15:11
:D
Oh wait.
Before I start with that...
How much sugar/yeast?
Ah, what sort of sugar are you using?
White, usual, whatelse sugar.
Although I have brown sugar as well.
Something I should've asked first: have you proofed your yeast already?
Proofed? No. I handwaved them :P
15:17
Proof by yeast.
:D I mean you need to test your yeast first.
I figured that.
How do I do that?
You mix up a teaspoon of sugar and two teaspoons of yeast into warm water.
If it's new yeast it's not really necessary.
wait a bit, and check for bubbles.
@Calle: you never know... ;)
15:19
k.
@Calle How much butter would you need for bread in the shape of a Julia set?
Sorry, was on the phone. Anyway, usually, you don't have to add sugar anymore; the yeast can feed on the carbohydrates in the other ingredients.
You just need to knead really well.
@rob: I'm not even sure the shape would stay nicely with oven heat... :)
@robjohn: Dunno, I have not tried it.
@J.M.: I some Julia sets are connected. I wouldn't think you would want bread in the shape of Julia dust.
I think ducks would like it.
15:29
but yeah, with rising the gaps wouldn't survive.
You have to plan ahead. It should look like Julia set after you take it out of the oven.
@calle it would work great for bread crumbs
I think I used too much water in this proof.
There's a little bubble in the middle, but that's about that.
That's right, its called Fatou dust when the Julia set is for a point outside the Mandelbrot set.
Just a cup of warm water... ;)
15:36
Well.
What do I do? Are the yeast proofed or do I need to run another test, or what?
Aha! The yeasts are fine. The water bubble up slowly.
Ah, there you go.
So now I take a teaspoon, about a 1/3rd cup of water and a teaspoon of sugar, mix it, prepare the flour with some salt, and then pour the water on the flour?
Nono, you can skip the sugar...
and, don't mix the salt with the yeast at once
15:44
I know I know.
Mix the salt with the flour first.
Okay, I think you've got it down... :)
I will be back.
15:56
So I put the yeast in the water, and added water into the salt/soda carbonate/flour.
Do I wait 10 minutes, or do I mix it right away?
Ah, hmm... shouldn't need that long a wait...
hoho, I found baharat
this arabic shop is really cool, they have also rice for piloff
only about the time it took to proof your yeast...
Took me about 15 minutes before they started bubbling.
15:59
wait, what?
really, 15?
Well, it could have been that I used too warm water, or something. Not sure really.
It's the kind of "warm" that you can dip your fingers into...
Yeah, I used that kind of warm for this batch.
@Gortaur: you've been looking for baharat for a while now. I'm glad you've found it.
Is it the kind you like?
16:04
@Asaf: Anyway... you did say you have fresh yeast; ideally you only need to have the yeast sit for five or so minutes before kneading.
I used it in Russia in fact
we call it chmeli-suneli
I would understand ten if like me you use dry yeast...
@Gortaur: I will keep my eyes open to see if they have any here.
My eyes are drooping already, so... see you guys.
@robjohn what's more cool - they have carnation
16:14
@Gortaur Carnation baharat?
or just Carnation products in general?
google translate betrayed me
Cloves (Syzygium aromaticum) are the aromatic dried flower buds of a tree in the family Myrtaceae. Cloves are native to the Maluku islands in Indonesia and used as a spice in cuisines all over the world. Cloves are harvested primarily in Indonesia, India, Madagascar, Zanzibar, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. The clove tree is an evergreen that grows to a height ranging from 8–12 m, having large square leaves and sanguine flowers in numerous groups of terminal clusters. The flower buds are at first of a pale color and gradually become green, after which they develop into a bright red, whe...
Ah, clove. :-) We have a good supply of that, we overbought last winter when we made a lot of mulled cider.
I will have to pull up our recipe. It's getting time to start making more.
We make a very tasty mulled cider.
1 gallon cider
1/2 c. firmly packed brown sugar
4 to 5 whole cinnamon sticks, break into pieces
10 to 15 whole allspice
20 to 25 whole cloves
1 sliced lemon

In covered 6 quart kettle, bring cider, brown sugar, and spices to a boil;
add sliced lemon. Uncover and simmer on low heat for 1/2 hour.
We sometimes use orange and lemon
16:29
1/2 c in gramms how much is it?
that's a volume: 1 cup. let me look up the conversion to cc
1 US cup = 236.588237 ml
approximately ;-)
))) like in europe
who is allspice
1 gallon = 3.78541178 liters
allspice was mentioned in the recipe I found for baharat I think
Allspice, also called Jamaica pepper, pepper, myrtle pepper, pimenta, or newspice, is a spice that is the dried unripe fruit ("berries") of Pimenta dioica , a mid-canopy tree native to the Greater Antilles, southern Mexico and Central America, now cultivated in many warm parts of the world. The name "allspice" was coined as early as 1621 by the English, who thought it combined the flavour of cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves. Several unrelated fragrant shrubs are called "Carolina allspice" (Calycanthus floridus), "Japanese allspice" (Chimonanthus praecox) or "wild allspice" (Lindera benzoin...
I guess it wasn't in the recipe for baharat. I was thinking of the nutmeg I think
17:08
@Gortaur: thanks for the upvote (I assume it was you).
17:58
@robjohn: thank you as well. I liked your answer so much that I would put a bounty on it - but I don't know if it allowed here to put bounty a posteriori to a particular answer
with regards to allspice - we just call it 'fragrant pepper'
18:44
@Gortaur: From the name, I never knew that allspice wasn't a mixture of other spices until I looked it up a couple years ago. :-)
but you can see that it is just one kind of spice when you look at it, right?
when it is not ground, yes
I think when I was a kid, I only saw ground allspice.
Then I don't think I used it myself, unground, in anything until the mulled cider
how? you eat soups without it?
without allspice?
sure
though since you usually saw it grounded
18:54
when I have actually used it it was ground
from my childhood I usually found 5-6 pieces of allspice in my plate of soup
until we used the whole allspice in the cider
and eat couple of them like my father did :-D
that is like crunching on a peppercorn
clears the sinuses
I had sinusit wen I was young and I know now that you meant the part of the nose
rather then math function
I never clear math function I mean )
18:57
:-)
when something is really spicy or intensely aromatic, we say it clears the sinuses
perhaps the idiom is not worldwide :-)
but the effect is
though I don't know if you ever tried true mustard
I do not know how can we compare
sareptian one
I know we have fields of mustard here, but there are probably different kinds.
that is my fear
that is what I am afraid of
that are my nightmares
19:03
gonna go get lunch with my wife. see you later.
bon appetit
with regards to mustard, we have one sort there called thermonuclear. That clear sinuses for sure without and idiomatic meaning
 
3 hours later…
22:05
quiet time.
22:22
yeah
hi folks
hi @Gortaur
is there any chance any of you feel like helping me check some very simple arithmetic.... it's driving me nuts, and there is noone here in the lab besides me...
let's try
basically, i derived an expression, getting rid of an integral, but evaluating the integral numerically in MATLAB gives a different result from the expression i derived...
thanks...
so, this is a very simple lower bound for a mixture of two normal distributions...
for entropy of a mixture of two normal distributions...
differential entropy is $-\int f(x)\log f(x)dx$
wth does the chatroom not display math?
22:31
Yeah, there's no mathjax for the chat.
Jeff said that they are not planning on that feature anytime soon too.
oh no... hmmm is there some kind of workaround you guys use?
Yes.
We discuss cooking and alcohol most of the time.
These things don't really require mathjax active.
the i guess my subject is not appropriate here...
22:34
Especially if you don't have any choice. :P
@AsafKaragila +1 we should remember it
i know nothing about cooking besides taking stuff that my girlfriend made for me during the weekend and putting it into microwave.... i do like beer though
allright, thanks guys -- then i'll continue
I baked bread for today's dinner.
I'll do my best to keep formulas readable...
so entropy formula has a log(x) inside it... which i bound by taking (x-1) instead.
this yields the following lower bound for entropy: -int (p(x)*(p(x)-1)dx
this then simplifies to 1-int (p(x))^2 dx, because integral over the entire domain of a p.d.f is 1
so far so good..... now, my p(x) is a mixture of two Gaussians, both with zero mean but different variances....
@Bullmoose: ask it as a question, it would be more simple
22:41
well, when i work everything out i get the following formula:
1 - (1-e)^2/(2*sqrt(pi*s1))-2*e*(1-e)/sqrt(2*pi*(sigma1+sigma2)) - e^2/(2*sqrt(pi*sigma2))
where the variances of the Gaussians are s1 and s2, the the weights for each are 1-e and e...
+1 on Gortaur's suggestion.
when i plus this into MATLAB with s1=1, s2=2, and e=0.2, I get 0.7378
when i use numerical integration of the original lower bound (containing integral), I get 0.7567
I think that I have baked this loaf on too high of a temperature at first, but then I cut it to pieces and toasted the slices (as I intended to do anyway) so it worked out great.
I minced tomatoes and olives into the dough as well.
Then I cut cucumbers, tomatoes, more olives, and salty cheese, we had pesto and some dried tomato paste, and some other fitting cheese... it was great.
Oh snap, I'm about to get a silver tag badge.
i did try different numerical integration routines, and i did "slice" up the integration.... still the same result.... i guess my question is where did i go wrong in my derivation... i'm pretty sure i did all my steps correctly, and i re-did them thrice.
23:03
That came out pretty small.
insert "that's what she said joke" here
still readable.... and that's precisely what i got as well
ok, so i am not crazy
MATLAB is
@Bullmoose I tried to copy what you wrote above
I don't know where it came from, so I just copied.
23:06
I sure hope there won't be many questions in the next three days.
We're going to my girlfriend's parents, and they don't have wifi and the keyboard on her brother's computer just suck. Not to mention a CRT monitor. Yes, you read it right - CRT.
@Asaf: at least you could all huddle around the monitor and keep warm.
@AsafKaragila ?
and perhaps see images of your skeletons.
I can look at the mirror and see my skeleton... BMI 18 for the win.
@Gortaur: he was referencing my comment about the imported image.
That came out pretty small.
@Gortaur: I responded to a question you asked in August. It might be just the sort of answer you didn't want. :-)
23:13
my problem got solved.. thanks @j.m for the suggestion
I will take credit on his behalf, since he is not here and I am the Koenig.
@yayu: what question?
i had asked here what to do about some serial downvotes
what did you do?
@robjohn ^
23:17
I prefer the older interface of parallel downvotes.
i mailed the team
as the script had failed to detet it
It had bigger cables, even if the capacity was smaller.
@Asaf: but that messes up the capacitance.
or the resistance, or both.
I'm a set theorist, I don't have to care.
parallel downvotes, hmm.. a single downvote for multiple questions?
23:19
No. It's downvotes in parallel universes.
or downvotes that never affect the same question.
Or just downvotes from users that never met and never will meet.
o|` turn those downvotes upside down o|`
those notes came out badly
or casts a vote and assigns a probability...
then server computes the expectation value
Hey, that could be an interesting test. The server tries to compute the probability for you to upvote a post.
Based on your votes history and some other nonsense.
23:22
meanwhile the question would remain in a state of -1 and +0 at the same time
acceptances without upvotes. The answer is correct, but not very good?
what does it signify? :-o
Some users are not aware that it is polite to upvote useful answers, in particular the accepted one.
And many times these users ask questions that hardly anyone looks at.
And when people do look at it, they are usually too lazy or unfamiliar with the subject to judge the quality of the content of the question and the answers.
Thus, you have questions with answers, and an accepted answer, and all those have zero votes.
i have done this sometimes
I have seen some answers with votes, but the accepted answer with no votes.
for example.. this question
the answer cited references which dealt with the problem
but either did not have the access to or background to understadn the reference
but from the abstracts i could tell that they dealt with the problem.. so it was a correct answer
23:29
The only reason I did not vote for an answer to a question I'd asked is that it was completely not useful.
what is the number (6358) below my gravatar
I answered a similar problem in a summer course where the instructor gave it as a counter intuitive induction problem. The answer was 1,2,4,8,16, then 31. I computed the actual answer, but he simply ignored it thinking I couldn't have solved it.
@yayu: your reputation
my reputation is less than a third of that
23:31
It's your overall SE reputation.
I think it was the number of regions a disk is divided into when connecting n points on its boundary.
1->1, 2->2,3->4, etc
your rep there is 6K+
Hey, my rep is bigger than the one below my gravatar
yeah .. a result of linking too many SE sites and getting +101 on each by default
My gravatar says 5736, but I am at 6092.
i see the number as 6092
strange
Hmm. I see 5736 beneath my gravatar. Odd.
I see 6400 beneath yayu's gravatar.
and you said you see 6358
23:36
i see 6358
weird.
yes
perhaps we are in parallel universes.
well, you're about to gain 250 in rep
You should refresh.
The chat server does not fetch the reputation continuously.
23:41
Wow. I just went up to 6092 when I refreshed. Thanks Asaf! :-)
Yeah, I had a similar jump from 14.9 to 15.2 a few days ago :-)
can anyone tell me where i can find an accessible proof of schur's lemma
Do you read Hebrew?
no.. though ive been in israel :)
Well, I could have pointed you to some great representation theory lecture notes if you'd read Hebrew.
23:51
is there literature which treats rep theory assuming a background of only linear algebra and groups
I have no idea. I studied it in a course, I think that we used Serre or Lang or possibly Folland.
ok.. can someone help me with a linear algebra concept?
what is the relation between the kernel of a linear map and its invertibility
A linear map is invertible if and only if its kernel is trivial.
23:54
If the kernel is {0}, then it is invertible
what he said :-)
yes.. if there is a no trivial kernel then the map is invertible...
how do i prove this
Well, if the map is invertible then it is 1-1.
If there is a non-trivial kernel, it is not invertible
Just show that a linear function is 1-1 if and only if its kernel is trivial.
Assume Tx=Ty, then T(x-y)=0.
Therefore x-y in Ker(T)
ahh
get it

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