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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

9:00 PM
@ACuriousMind You should leave that as a comment if not as an answer.
 
Just ignore 90% of what I say
 
ok... I guess that means no
bye then!
 
@0celo7 Huh? I already replied yesterday to your AssCreed question
 
@ACuriousMind Welp
uh
 
@ACuriousMind AssCreed, nice.
 
9:00 PM
AssCreed?
You couldn't find a better name :P
 
That is the natural abbreviation!
 
@ACuriousMind Well what about my Steam save question!?
You're my only hope, Google failed me
 
Why not AssAssCreed ;D
 
@0celo7 [no offense intended] Can you please stop talking about Steam-related stuff? :P
 
9:01 PM
He lives by the AssCreed
 
@0celo7 Ah, I forgot to reply to that. In general, every game saves where it likes. I think delete local content will mostly not delete saves. Best way to find the location of saves is googling the game name + "save location".
@Danu On it
 
@Danu No
I'm sure if Einstein were around he'd use Steam
Also Maxwell, Newton, etc.
@ACuriousMind Huh, first google hit for that gave me what I need, thanks
 
^fail
 
@Danu bully
 
Are we holding this conversation... again?
 
9:06 PM
Yes
 
@Danu: here you go. "Eine Krümmung der Lichtstrahlen kann nämlich nur dann eintreten, wenn die Ausbreitungsgeschwindigkeit des Lichtes mit dem Orte variiert."
 
What is "Ausbreitungsgeschwindigkeit"? I know what "geschwindigkeit" is and I think I know what the first part is, but what do they mean together
The spread of a null geodesic congruence?
 
@0celo7 It's "the speed with which something spreads"
 
Geschwindigkeit womit es sich ausbreitet
 
@Danu No shit
@ACuriousMind Ok, so exactly what I thought
 
9:09 PM
Something in this case being "light".
 
@0celo7 You said you didn't know the word.
 
@Danu I do know the words
Forget it
 
After understanding my sentence you should be able to understand the word.
If you knew the sentence, you should've known the word.
 
@Danu I did know the word!
 
"What is "Ausbreitungsgeschwindigkeit"?"
 
9:11 PM
@Danu It's the speed of spread of my ignorance
 
@0celo7 Hey, we don't deal with infinite things here ;)
 
@Danu I've tried to renormalize it
 
@0celo7 I'm afraid it's an essential singularity.
 
But Weinberg just confused me
 
In other news, there is a different Weinberg, who wrote a book on advanced QFT.
I feel bad for the guy.
 
9:12 PM
but you don't feel bad for me
wow
bully
 
A computer translation by Systrans yields "A curvature of the rays of light can enter only if the propagation speed of the light with that varies places.”
 
Hahaha, nice
 
Babylon gives you "A curvature of the light rays can only occur if the propagation velocity of light with the places varies."
 
what are you trying to prove
 
Google gives you "A curvature of rays of light can namely only occur if the velocity of propagation of light varies with the place".
 
9:18 PM
@TanMath You have a weird habit of mentioned problems that you have and saying things like "I have a question" rather than just *asking the $*^@( question. Just ask.
I know python, I understand something about open quantum systems.
If you just ask the question you might get an answer. If you keep saying "I wish someone knew something to help me..." you won't get anything useful.
2
This is a website for physics questions and answers. Just post your question and everything will be sparkles and butterflies.
 
If a scholarship app asks for my extracurricular activities should I withhold something if I think it is politically "not liked by many people"?
 
@DanielSank i have code...I have an article... the code describes the phenomena in the article. the code doesn't produce the right results. Can you revirw it? do you want a picture of the result?
here is the article:
 
I'm not going to read an article for you :)
That's way too much work.
If you want to ask a question about how to model something, then just do that.
 
@TanMath I think that perhaps you should try to be a bit more independent.
 
@DanielSank i already read it... I am wondering why the code does not work
 
9:21 PM
@Danu pls prove 1+1=3 pls
I need help :(
 
@TanMath You still haven't given us any conceivable way to help you.
 
@Danu I am already independent... This is a project I am doing all by myself no professors, no fellow classmates, nothing!
 
@0celo7 : that some people will claim something isn't mainstream even though it is. That's where this little conversation started. Some people will also do a runner when cornered.
 
@DanielSank I knew this was too much to ask from you... I guess the question would be, "can you look at the result and figure out where I might have gone wrong?
 
@JohnDuffield wait, who disagreed that the coordinate speed of light varies
 
9:26 PM
@DanielSank Did you see my reply?
 
@JohnDuffield how are you defining this speed in the first place
 
In any case, for a single qubit the normal gates are $X,Y,Z,H$ right? These form a universal gate set?
 
@Anthony Maybe. You need entangling gates too though.
 
What's the definition of an entangling gate?
 
Gate you always get your shoelaces stuck in
 
9:29 PM
@MikeMiller MIKE
 
@Anthony Do you know what an entangled state is?
If not I think you may need some more basic stuff before getting into generating cat states.
 
Just one that you can't write as a tensor product of two pure states, or something like this, right?
 
Yes.
 
TIL hot water freezes faster than cold water
 
@0celo7 : anna v for one, see the comments here. I'm sure I could dig up plenty of other people, but I have to go I'm afraid.
 
9:34 PM
@DanielSank ?
 
@0celo7 : I'm defining the speed like Einstein defined the speed. Go and follow the references. Now I really must go.
 
@DanielSank But so again, what is an entangling gate?
 
9:52 PM
@TanMath If you want a code review post it on the site or to the code review SE site.
@Anthony A gate that produces an entangled state.
I think if you're unfamiliar with this you may want to visit the basics before getting into cat states.
 
@DanielSank but I am not sure if it is appropiate with the level of physics involved and whether or not the problem is with the physics...
 
Stop pussyfutting around and try
 
@0celo7 Votes obey rules of mathematics found elsewhere only in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
 
@DanielSank what?????
 
Ah, topological hooey
 
9:56 PM
Best kind of hooey
 
10:17 PM
@HDE226868 What's that
@Slereah what is this
 
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a comedy science fiction series created by Douglas Adams. Originally a radio comedy broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1978, it was later adapted to other formats, and over several years it gradually became an international multi-media phenomenon. Adaptations have included stage shows, a "trilogy" of five books published between 1979 and 1992, a sixth novel penned by Eoin Colfer in 2009, a 1981 TV series, a 1984 computer game, and three series of three-part comic book adaptations of the first three novels published by DC Comics between 1993 and 1996. There were...
I'm referencing the good ship Bistromath.
 
It is from Sam and Max
 
Sort of.
 
@HDE226868 what
@Slereah why do people always reference these obscure things
 
The fictional universe of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series by Douglas Adams is a galaxy-spanning society of interacting extraterrestrial cultures. The technological level in the series is highly advanced, though often unreliable. Many technologies in the series are used to poke fun at modern life. == Sirius Cybernetics Corporation == Most of the technology mentioned in the series are products of the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation, a decidedly inept company which designs and manufactures a wide range of robots and labour-saving devices, such as lifts, automatic doors, ventilation systems...
 
10:20 PM
jesus
why do people write Wiki articles on things no one has ever heard of
 
People have heard of them. You simply haven't.
 
...under which rock do you live that you don't know the Hitchhiker's Guide?
 
Douglas Adams was the patron saint of science fiction parodies.
 
@ACuriousMind dunno
I think I've heard of it
didn't know it was a thing
@ACuriousMind but haven't we already established that I live under a rock
 
@0celo7 Its size never ceases to astound me :P
 
10:28 PM
I have never seen Lost
My parents have the box set around here somewhere...
 
Now that
is something people won't really be weirded about by :)
 
huh?
Lost was hugely popular back in the day, wasn't it?
 
@0celo7 Yes, but it is not something often quoted, mimicked, or otherwise referred to.
 
@ACuriousMind ok
what is?
i.e. what should I watch
 
While I can't imagine how many puzzling things you've heard about towels if you don't know Hitchhiker's Guide ;)
 
10:33 PM
Can't say I've ever heard of a puzzling towel before.
 
Now that someone besides 0celo7 is in the room, I'll re-ask my question from yesterday:
20 hours ago, by HDE 226868
Is anyone familiar with the "modulus of precision" of a Gaussian distribution?
It came up relating to a velocity distribution.
 
@HDE226868 Is that a strange way to speak about its standard deviation? :P
(that means: "No, I'm not familiar with that" ;) )
 
@HDE226868 see ACM doesn't know either
It's a made up term
 
@ACuriousMind I don't think so.
 
So what is the definition?
 
10:41 PM
No idea. It's just used in one of a series of papers as the name of one variable and is never explained again (although I'm only on the third of at least five).
 
@Slereah: I liked seasons 1 and 2 better.
 
> The velocity distribution of the other stars is taken to be isotropic and Gaussian, with modulus of precision $j$. The independent variable $x$ is a scaled velocity,$$x=jv$$
 
I believe your "modulus of precision" is just the inverse of the variance, i.e. $1/\sigma^2$, perhaps with some pre-factor.
Here's another Wiki article that has "precision" as the inverse of the variance.
 
I found it here
> MODULUS (in the Theory of Errors). In his first theory of least squares based on the normal distribution and presented in Gauss’s Theoria Motus Corporum Coelestium in Sectionibus Conicis Solem Ambientum (1809) Gauss used a measure of precision ("mensura praecisionis observationum" (p. 245) which he denoted by h: the reciprocal of h is √2σ, where σ is the standard deviation. Both h and its reciprocal have been called the modulus [...]
 
@Danu That's a reference to the "Precision" Wiki article.
 
10:51 PM
@ACuriousMind I know.
But this is the precise quote from the reference :P
 
@ACuriousMind I had looked there, but I didn't think it could be that simple.
@Danu I love that site!
Thanks, guys.
 
11:06 PM
@ACuriousMind What's your top 3 list of things a sub-rock-dweller should watch
@ACuriousMind $g_{ab,cd}=R_{abcd}\cdots$ cannot hold because the LHS is not a tensor but the RHS is
is this not a simpler explanation?
 
well
he says explicitly he doesn't care about what is in the dots
so it doesn't have to be a tensor
 
it has to be a Riemann tensor
or a Ricci tensor
 
I think the other agrument is better
 
@0celo7 Top 3 to get references or Top 3 to watch something good? Also, my tastes are probably a bit too SciFi/Fantasy-heavy
 
otherwise what ACM says is wrong
 
11:11 PM
Didn't he say it can be anything?
 
then ACM's is wrong
it could be $R_{abcd}+$something not involving curvature
 
@0celo7 Now that you say it, that is more straightforward, yes
@Danu Well, they accepted my answer, so I guess they really meant "a polynomial in components of $R$" by "anything" :P
 
yup
 
I added an answer
yolo
Now, one can do a normal coordinate expansion of $g_{ij}$ to all orders...and taking derivatives of this would give $g_{ij,kl}$ in terms of Riemann and friends
but its not a polynomial in R
 
@TanMath I mean just ask your question.
Post the code.
Give the people whose help you want some possible avenue of helping you.
 
11:19 PM
@ACuriousMind The first.
I already have a mega list of good stuff to watch
(still making my way through a 300 episode Skyrim lets play)
(yes, I am addicted to Skyrim)
 
@0celo7 Hmmm. Okay. Then one item on the list is everything by Monty Python ( not-so-obligatory early xkcd ).
 
I've watched one or two of those. They're OK.
 
I'm not really sure what to pick for the other two things...
 
@ACuriousMind I don't get that one.
First time I haven't understood an xkcd in a long time.
Holy Grail? I watched that.
But my memory is too poor to be able to remember quotes like that.
 
@0celo7 Well, apparently you know no people who have the irritating tendency to turn a conversation into a Monty Python quote-fest, then
 
11:24 PM
@ACuriousMind I can confirm this...
 
@ACuriousMind That happened in the Teachers' Lounge once, when everyone was pissed off at the folks in the C++ Lounge.
 
Are there people like that? Or is xkcd man making this up
 
@0celo7 There are people like that. Trust me.
 
Yeesh
 
If there's more than one of them at a party, the challenge is to get them into the same room, have everybody else leave, then close the door.
 
11:27 PM
Hey folks, here's a puzzle
Why does this user have 6 reputation?
Given that on the main site,
they have 1 rep?
 
That's very strange
 
Caching?
 
@HDE226868 Could be. Like an upvoted but deleted answer on main which has yet to propagate to the meta rep?
 
Probably one of @DanielSank 's puppets
He messed up the coding
 
@EmilioPisanty That's my bet (well, it would be a question, for +5).
 
11:29 PM
@HDE226868 Yeah, it makes sense, good catch.
No firm evidence for it unless a mod can confirm the deleted question, but if the meta user drops down to 1 after a day or so then that'll tell what's going on.
 
(nudge, nudge, @mods)
 
@ACuriousMind Nice paint circle
 
@EmilioPisanty Caching is always the answer.
 
@HDE226868 Indeed it seems to be
 
11:34 PM
@HDE226868 why does AC4 run so slow on my laptop
 
@HDE226868 AssCreed 4 Black Flag
 
Yeah, no idea what that is.
 
remove the last "l" and the title is a whole lot more fun
 
@DanielSank i will write a code review post...
 
11:36 PM
@HDE226868 oh, so caching is not the answer
wait
you're a teenage male American and you don't know what Assassin's Creed is?
We played that in middle school for Pete's sake
in a small German village!
 
And people wonder why the juvenile delinquent system is so full. . .
 
???
 
Nothing quite like showing a bunch of kids how to shoot stuff in a game.
 
Oh jesus
 
@0celo7 I'm very proud of that, thanks!
 
11:37 PM
You STAB people
 
It's a big difference.
 
it's a game about STABBING and SLICING fools
although in later installments there are guns and crossbows
 
In case you didn't know, freehand circles are a tradition for meta posts.
 
@ACuriousMind Does any Lie group admit a canonical Riem. metric by using the Killing form of the Lie algebra
 
@0celo7 Only if the Killing form is non-degenerate, i.e. only for semisimple Lie groups.
 
11:47 PM
@ACuriousMind tries to remember Uh, are those the "standard" ones?
 
@ACuriousMind if $G,H$ are Lie groups, is $G\rtimes H$ also a Lie group
@ACuriousMind Well, let's try $G\times H$ first. I know it's true in that case.
(call this one $K$) Is it possible to write the canonical metric on $K$ in terms of those on $G,H$
 
@0celo7 Yes, iff the twisting map (or whatever you call the $G\to \mathrm{Aut}(H)$ belonging to the semidirect product) is a Lie group homomorphism.
 
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