I know that the English language has an expression, 'to know something by heart', that alludes to the heart but whose meaning is 'to know something from memory'.
I've discovered that this link between the heart and the memory was something that people believed at least in the 18th century and wa...
Let's say a company is developing a product and they call it somehow internally, but that name will change in the future if the product is released. The general word for that is temporal name, but I am looking for a more specific professional term.
For the last 5 years they have been working ...
@KannE I have watched all of Game of Thrones but I don't remember Frosty. What is Frosty? You mean the part where the enemy dragon destroys the wall at the end of 7th season?
I think you mean the melting of the snow, but I wonder when hmm
@Cerberus My mistake, I thought you were using 'DeepL' to refer to DL in general as opposed to the very recent company. GNMT (which came out in late 2016, and which I was referring to as made a big jump in quality) presumably uses DL of some kind but I don't know exactly what. DeepL, which came out last fall and supposedly does much better (by BLEU metrics), also presumably uses DL (it would be weird to call it 'DeepL' if it didn't use DL).
@KannE What neighborhood was that? Chicago is notorious for having 'borders', where conditions change rapidly across a couple blocks (I lived in Lakeview for a few years, oh also Oak Park where it was shocking how it went from green to gray crossing into Austin)
What's the word in English for the distance from the waterline to the top of the hull of a boat? In other words, the height of the boat when it is in the water excluding masts etc.
The distance from the waterline to the bottom of the boat is called the draught.
@bertieb The authors, in preparing that graphic, unfortunately left out of the graphic a key or legend or title or anything really (bad dataviz details; the dot pattern en masse is good dataviz, so it's not consistent)
But anyway to address the problem, it is understood that the 'date' of the data is 'the date of the research' or 'not too long before publication'.
Which is to say that the poor labeling led to your (understandable) confusion that the left right was a comparison of earlier vs later date. And that turns out is simply not the case.
that is, left shows blue is the vocab leans towards britishisms (like 'lorry' instead of 'truck') and the right shows blue if the spelling is more Britishy (like 'colour' instead of 'color')
@Izanawistaria Yes. But that, though it seems like a strange thing, is perfectly normal. Some people insist in using '-ise' (Br style) or -ize' (Am style) and some individuals bounce back and forth.
All I remember about Aussie English is that they use "mate" a lot and use "cunt" in a positive sense too! Like to refer to a buddy who is a close friend.
@Izanawistaria Same thing in Glasgow on the latter FWIW, except not solely in the friendly sense- just to refer to a person in general (think instead of 'one' as in 'anyone' with all the other prefixes)
@bertieb Oh yes good point. Amended. Grant title: "Vocabulary patterns among hotel and restaurant staff/patron interactions in urban French and Caribbean French"
@Izanawistaria I'll include tips in my grant proposal financial request. Wait...I think French waiters and such don't expect tips. I'll have to investigate that too.
@Izanawistaria it's a crash blossom for the financial request part of a grant proposal
@Færd nice
how are stackoverflow and Quora considered -social media-? They are informational databases. Sure everything on that graph has features of other things. But what is their primary focus? Info.
The one who bears all hatredness of others against him and within himself without telling them the real good reason behind his actions which he had done for their wellfare. i.e For example Itachi Uchiah,a character from Naruto anime/manga.
How can I name a boolean thing (yes/no data only) that should show that the all information is locked for changes for users, but admins can change it.
I have thought about: locked?, readonly?
Is there any better names?
As to privacy, I'm more of an "information wants to be free" guy.
And I find it hilarious how so many people who shout about freedom of information also shout about privacy and anonymity and encryption. Sometimes in the same breath.
Like "all information must be free; except mine". That's just funneh.
I'm trying to remember a word from a company name, it's about integrity/stringency/risk assessment and making sure that activities comply with regulations and health and safety.
The company do risk management for events but I can't remember what the company name is - it includes this word
@Cerberus it was a riddle posted on 4chan that led to another riddle to another riddle to a book to a location to a website to a book and so forth and it took people years to figure it out and everyone was speculating that it was like recruitment by the CIA or maybe Google.
When you solved every riddle and passed every test, they would send you a manifesto via email that you had to sign. It ended in three questions, one of them being "do you believe that information must be free". And it started with the line in all capitals "DO NOT SHARE THIS INFORMATION."
Lemme find it for you. It's like a 20-minute video, you can watch it later, it's quite fun.
People don't want anything to be absolute. Also, people don't even know what they want. And what they do know that they want, they actually don't want once they have it.
Anyway. If you want me to sign a manifesto how information must be free, don't use fucking PGP to send it to me.
And I only spoke about it because I believe that information must be free. Including mine. But since you believe in privacy, maybe I should shut up before disclosing my toothpaste brand.
Perhaps your ancestor was injected with a gene-altering virus 200 years ago, and now they are ready to use the trigger word to brainwash and reap their slave army?
TASbot is a software tool used for speedrunning games faster than any human could.
In this video, however, it is used to play this particular game in a much more artistic way than any human could.
This game is actually self-explanatory. On the left you see questions, like simple math problems and stuff, on the right you can normally use a stylus to write your answer, but the bot is just hooked up to the hardware directly to simulate the stylus.
And so it starts by writing like 9, 18, whatever, like a human would, but then very quickly gets very, um, creative, with his drawings. And yet always in such a way that his answer is still correct.
Watch like ten seconds starting from 16:49 and you'll immediately understand it and also fall in love with it.
Well, there's just a writing-recognition software implemented in the game. Nothing unusual. Many games do that these days, and most games on the Nintendo DS did that to some extent becaus that was the whole point of that console. That you had a stylus and a touch screen in addition to the usual buttons.
@Cerberus exactly. And the Japanese character means like "19" or whatever, which is the correct answer to that question, and the complex mathematical formula evaluates to like 4, which is the answer to that question.
Well, I've not looked into it, but you know, I believe that in some of these cases they just write whatever, and the system doesn't actually understand that, but then at the very end they write the correct answer, just three pixels wide, or on top of the already drawn pixels.
That'd be my theory anyway.
Of course for some of the answers I totally believe the system actually implements them. Like writing "eleven" in words, be it in English or in Japanese Kanjis, or by writing 10+3 instead of 13.
Would I or would a Japanese person do? Working 40 hours every day?
They have that kind of weird ethos going on in Japanese game development studios. If you listen to Americans that go there for internship they are constantly amazed how much everyone is obsessed with making their current game the best game yet created, and commit seppuku if it is not.
Well, according to Darwin that does weed out people who are unfit to write the best game yet created, so you are left with people who actually do write the best game yet created as a result.
It's a habit. Like buying smokes even though you're tired and they don't even taste anymore.
But alas, you bought Madden last year, and the year before that, and the twenty years before that, so you just go and buy the current one.
Oh, and in the recent incarnations they just pull off that shit with online play, where you can't even play Destiny anymore because it came out last year and Destiny 2 is out, so the servers are just deserted, if they haven't been shut down already.
The Western gaming industry took a note from the recording industry. You no longer buy a game, you just buy a temporary right to play it for a while until they come up with the next format change.
There's like three MMOs that have been running forever, WoW, LoL, and WoT, and two of them are shit, and the third one is not far behind. Or ahead, depending on how you look at it.
Anyway, I really gotta go pack the rest of my things and get me some sleep. I'll be on the road for some 14 hours tomorrow.
@Mitch Ha! Love it! Thanks for sharing the flea poem. Oh, and your question--it was San Antonio in the early 90's. We lived next door to a Major. It was nice--we had to buy an edger so the neighbors wouldn't complain about our sidewalk every weekend while we were mowing our yard. We lived a few streets over from our COL, so our kids could go to the same school as hers, but a few streets away on the other side--newish 3-BR homes covered with gang graffiti--"Purple Street"--no dry time.
So, there's taking credit for someone else's work, and then there's a kind of credit taking that is merged with ego in certain way, and I'm trying to find out if there's a word for this.
It's when, say, a team of people do 99% of the work to get something done. Then someone else comes along, dro...