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01:35
Ack, I messed up my phone.
@Cerberus The physics of that is amazing.
Absolutely!
02:06
I see Derf vomited all over chat also. Thankfully, that was just after I left.
02:34
Yeah.
 
2 hours later…
04:12
@Cerberus Er, no: metric is the foreign French imposition.
@tchrist Wasn't the Imperial system established by the Normans and their descendants?
It is of course partly based on older (and pan-European) systems, but...
Oh, I don’t know. It seems English now, and metrique seems French. That’s why the Americans are nonplussed on it.
All our science is in SI, but our street signs are not.
Well, that's what he meant.
@tchrist Gosh, I had noooo idea.
Thanks for informing me.
Honest, all scientists work only in SI here.
It’s considered the “scientific” system; it’s very like diglossia. But think of a corresponding term.
I had no idea. This is all new to me.
04:17
Are you facetious?
It really is like a home-language vs a common-language.
I think you’re pulling my tail.
Speaking of which, in my country, instead of SI, the basic unit of distance in science is the Average Penislength.
What language is this?
Spanish?
04:33
Yes, it is Spanish.
Pantalla is “screen”.
Right, I thought so.
Average penis-length. Who counts that up?
I’m going to be bed and leaving the computer in the hands of somebody else. If he chats you up for a date, it isn’t my fault.
Yay!
Who is it?
05:26
Okay, everybody stop.
HAMMERTIME!
Very nice.
Now which answer shall I down-vote, this one or that...
 
2 hours later…
07:15
@Robusto one idea for your revolution, make all politicians correspondence public. That could probably end some of the lobbyism bs. Not very realistic but very what you sow so shall you reap
Haha
Japan sucks at English
WORST in Asia
 
3 hours later…
09:53
@O0oO0oOO0ooO But also in the top 5 of the most rapidly improving.
Not to mention you don't want to see the figures for how much the US sucks at Japanese.
10:38
@JohanLarsson Lobbyists are required to report their activity. People just don't read it.
Heh, I guess that is true but I think Japanese think their language is superior to English so they are not interested in learning English more passionately
@KitFox ok already covered then
Well, there is something to be said for your idea.
But then they'd end up using gmail to avoid the official correspondence.
yes tchrist pretty much nailed it with 'There is no hope' I think.
 
1 hour later…
11:51
@O0oO0oOO0ooO Everybody thinks their mother tongue is superior to all others. Well, except for classical scholars and other outliers.
12:02
@O0oO0oOO0ooO Wait ... Is that North Korea that is almost as good as South Korea?
I think in North Korea, only selected people take those English exams, I assume it should be around 10 ~ 20 people, so their average score seems like not bad.
Don't forget, they have amazing scores. Kim Jong Un shot a 27 for 18 holes of golf, IIRC.
One wonders why he didn't shoot an 18.
Then it would seem bogus.
Or not bogey-ed
12:08
There is a rumour that Little Kim thought Denis Roddman was Barrack Obama
So the extra 9 strokes were an effort to add authenticity?
Yes. I imagine.
Nine extra strokes ought to get him there.
Speaking of, are you enjoying your new fridge?
Fridge over troubled water.
> The page cannot be displayed because an internal server error has occurred.
Uh, what?
I think they are telling you that the page cannot be displayed because an internal server error has occurred.
12:14
Oh. Fixed it.
I was a little overzealous with the Enabled="false".
I guess I wanted to make sure that sucker was shut off.
Yes, never use Enabled="false", always use SpecialNeeds="true".
SpEd="very"
Oh, now I feel evil and dirty.
That looks like the cover for Garbage Version 2.0. Except for the part where it says "VERY Pet Shop Boys."
You win this round of "spot the difference".
Now tell me how a dromedar is different from Radiator Springs.
12:22
Mornin.
@KitFox Just fine. Can't wait till the counters are installed so the plumber can hook up the water supply.
The other week a plumber hooked up the water supply in our apartment in Moscow such that two stories below us found themselves entirely underwater.
I guess that's how they do things in Moscow.
12:31
@KitFox Indeed, they turned the biggest cathedral into the biggest open-air swimming pool once.
Dime bags have always been popular in Boulder, but gosh!
@tchrist They were going to do that here too. Haven't yet though.
@RegDwighт St Peter's is in Moscow now?
Before.
After.
Hm.
They demolished a cathedral? Really? When? Which one? What was its name? Why?
12:33
Jun 14 at 11:07, by RegDwighт
user image
Jun 14 at 11:30, by RegDwighт
The Cathedral of Christ the Saviour (, Khram Khrista Spasitelya) is a cathedral in Moscow, Russia, on the northern bank of the Moskva River, a few blocks southwest of the Kremlin. With an overall height of , it is the tallest Orthodox Christian church in the world. Design When Napoleon Bonaparte retreated from Moscow, Emperor Alexander I signed a manifest, 25 December 1812, declaring his intention to build a cathedral in honor of Christ the Saviour "to signify Our gratitude to Divine Providence for saving Russia from the doom that overshadowed Her" and as a memorial to the sacrifices ...
Jez
Jez
Hi guys, wonder if you could help me think up some terminology.
Well, obviously they needed a pool more than God.
That is tragic.
Jez
Jez
12:35
I'm designing a system where there will be a live authoritative DB, and a kind of satellite DB which gets updated from the live one
But um, how could they have rebuilt it already?
Jez
Jez
however, between updates from live, the satellite DB will itself be updated
Doesn't it take like a century or more to build a cathedral?
Jez
Jez
when the satellite DB is to be updated from live, it is first restored to the last version of live it was updated to before any changes were made
i'm wondering what to call these snapshots. my best thoughts so far are "base" and "flux"
"flux" for the version with the changes made to the satellite DB before it's restored to the latest live, and "base" for the version it's rewound to before being synchronized with the latest live
Sounds like a daily incremental.
Jez
Jez
12:36
but i'm not sure about "flux"
No, don't use flux.
So you would lose all the changes in the satellite DB?
Jez
Jez
yes.
well
apart from this "flux" backup i make first
before blitzing and going back to live
What is the satellite for?
Jez
Jez
i guess you could call it "out of sync" but that makes it sound like an error; it's by design that it goes out of sync for a while
it's a computer we take around to places and carry out assessments with, offline. we can only do periodic updates from and to the live DB
assessments can also however be taken directly on live
thru the internet
12:38
Sagrada Família was begun in 1882 and still is not done yet.
But you erase the information? I guess that's not important for naming.
I think "base" is suitable for the restored version.
Jez
Jez
well some of the information (that which we need) is dumped to XML before the satellite DB is restored to live
but i want to keep backups of the whole pre-restored satellite DB around just in case
"Flux" is a nice word, but I don't think it adequately describes what it is.
Jez
Jez
i can't really think of a better word though
the directory structure would be like so:
You want something like "branch" or "spur."
Jez
Jez
12:40
...\DBsnapshots\datetime-base.bak
...\DBsnapshots\datetime-flux.bak
It includes the base and then some extra stuff.
Jez
Jez
yeah i thought of "branch"... sounds a bit too much like source control
Yeah, but it gets the point across.
Jez
Jez
i spose.
Flux sounds like it changes.
Jez
Jez
12:41
or has changed
Or might change.
Jez
Jez
delta? hmm.
Delta is good.
It tells you that it has changed. Sounds like it is just the changed parts though.
Jez
Jez
"the delta from the base DB that was around on this date"
I like that. I think it would work.
> Football 101 for Women
Hahaha.
Jez
Jez
12:43
so delta or branch?
I just got this in my inbox. A football appreciation class.
@Jez I think delta.
Jez
Jez
US or UK football?
US.
Jez
Jez
ah, that's to me like cricket is to you
It's the "for women" that's making me giggle.
Because men are expected to know it or have the decency to never admit that they don't.
Jez
Jez
12:44
i read an article online that said US football is really quite intellectual and complex. i'm not buying it
needlessly complex, maybe
It is interesting.
Jez
Jez
and yeah i'll admit that cricket is needlessly complex
Cricket is a total mystery to me.
Jez
Jez
it's not interesting. they have 5 seconds of play and then stand around for ages
and i'm guessing a ton of ads too on US TV
I used to feel that way until I understood the game better.
It's really boring if you don't get what's going on.
Same thing with baseball.
Jez
Jez
12:46
cricket isn't that hard to understand. 3 ways of getting runs: run to the other crease, hit the ball beyond the boundary, and hit the ball beyond the boundary without its touching the floor
What?
Jez
Jez
4 main ways to get out: caught, run out, bowled, or leg before wicket
what what?
None of that means anything to me.
Jez
Jez
why not?
it's english words
Because they aren't baseball words.
Jez
Jez
12:48
"ball" is
I don't know what the crease, the boundary, the floor, or any of those terms mean in that context.
The crease is a hockey term.
Jez
Jez
oh come on, the floor??
The ground?
Jez
Jez
yes
Why the floor?
Jez
Jez
12:48
coz i should've said the ground
Oh. Well.
Jez
Jez
the boundary is a circular area around the center, where the batters are, which is demarcated with a big white rope
But I've never so much as seen cricket played, so all I know is that you have flat bats and a ball and a three stick wicket or something.
The batters are in the center?
Jez
Jez
that's why i find that episode of family guy funny where the commentator goes "he's hit the ball out of the stadium. is that good? we don't know but it's what we do!"
anyone who knows anything about cricket knows full well it's good :-P
yes
I figure I'll learn about it someday.
When I move to the UK.
Jez
Jez
12:52
6 runs for hitting it beyond without touching the ground, 4 when it touches, and 1 run for a regular run (i'm guessing they called them runs at first and then figured out what to do when it went beyond the boundary later, but by that time they'd decided to call all points "runs")
maybe if you're looking for something to do on a hot afternoon in India
Jez
Jez
the thing about cricket isn't that it's hard to understand. it's just somewhat boring.
US football is both hard to understand and boring
What's hard to understand about football?
Jez
Jez
hence (i'm guessing) the cheerleaders, and the endless snacking food
US football? everything. like why the play for 5 seconds then stop
12:53
HAMMERTIME!
Jez
Jez
who is allowed to be in what position
who can pass to whom
I think bowling in cricket can be quite interesting. That's where the majority of tactics are
You have four tries to move the ball 10 yards.
Jez
Jez
how can an intercept happen?
@MattЭллен what, pace or spin. big wow.
You have to pass either laterally or forward, unless you are the quarterback.
Jez
Jez
12:54
@KitFox how is laterally judged?
yeah see, "unless you are the quarterback" is the kind of esoteric rule that makes it hard to understand
@Jez By the refs.
Jez
Jez
ok, that sounds similar to rugby
@Jez there are many ways to put pace and spin on the ball. Also, each successive bowl will affect the rest, because of how you are playing to the batter
@Jez How is that esoteric? The QB is the commander. Of course he's got special rules.
Jez
Jez
well i don't frigging know. and it's not obvious from his name. why should a "quarter back" be the commander?
why not the "main man" or something
12:56
I dunno. If you watch the game though, it's obvious.
quite. I assumed the QB was like the scrum half. shorter
QB receives the ball on the hike and calls the plays.
Jez
Jez
hike?
He's in control of the offensive plays.
Jez
Jez
play?
12:57
@Jez like MacBeth and Hamlet
Jez
Jez
more terminology there than cricket, already
Yeah. Each play starts with a hike (or a kick).
Where the somebody or other hikes (tosses) the ball from the line of scrimmage to the QB.
Jez
Jez
TBH i think what puts me off US football the most is the commercialization
ads, ads, fucking ads
Or sometimes they run it.
Jez
Jez
forget that
12:58
There is a lot of strategy in the game. You just need to know what you are looking at to understand it.
Jez
Jez
all sport is commercialized, but with US football they have an ad break opportunity every 5 seconds. at least with UK football, they HAVE to keep showing a solid 45 minutes :-)
@KitFox I can never tell who the quarterback is.
You've got to admit that hike is more transparent than silly mid off
"Obvious" and "American football" do not mix, sorry.
@RegDwighт He's the one wearing very little padding and holding the ball.
Jez
Jez
12:59
@MattЭллен silly mid off isn't needed to fundamentally understand the game
What is a silly mid off?
@KitFox come on. You know that the QB is not the only one holding the ball. In fact most of the time it is not the QB who's holding the ball.
And you don't need to know hike either.
@KitFox I do not know. Some fielding position
Jez
Jez
13:00
@KitFox the position a fielder stands very close to the batsman's off-side in order to try to catch the ball
@RegDwighт OK, well, he's the one throwing the ball.
Jez
Jez
it's silly because the ball might slam into his face
or other parts
What's the off-side?
@KitFox That would be the pitcher.
Jez
Jez
i believe it's the side of the bat that's kind of.... "not forward"
13:01
See. Even Americans don't get American football. And we haven't even touched on baseball yet.
@Jez That would be the catcher.
@Jez So behind him then?
Jez
Jez
so if you're trying to hit the ball forward and to the left, "off" is if the ball hits the side of the bat and goes to the right
Oh right. Batter is in the middle.
Jez
Jez
can't remember whether silly mid off is behind. i've got a feeling it's in front, that's why it's silly
13:02
That's the short stop.
HAMMERTIME!
@Caprica Chill, sweetie.
Anyway. American football is boring because it's three seconds of gameplay then three minutes of commercials, and baseball is boring because it's baseball.
Jez
Jez
@RegDwighт and because there's 3 seconds of gameplay then 3 mins of commercials :-)
Baseball isn't as bad as football for the commercial breaks.
Jez
Jez
13:03
@KitFox ooh i've got one: why it's called football.
@RegDwighт Football has 12 games per season; baseball has 162 games per season. Which one is the real game? No contest, mate.
Jez
Jez
dictionary example: WTF are you doing kicking that football?
Anyway, I like them both.
@tchrist I wish I had a nickel for every time a die-hard American baseball fan sheepishly admitted that baseball is only fun to watch when you're drunk in a company of drunk friends.
I would literally be buying up the LEGO company now.
@RegDwighт No, that's a strip-tease show.
13:07
@tchrist I dunno. I think it's true of all activities except reading. And even then, reading a Dan Brown book is much better with drunk friends.
Strip-tease is more fun when high.
@KitFox For which side?
Earlier today I overheard that Dan Brown wrote Dante's Inferno.
@tchrist Both.
13:08
@RegDwighт And did Inferno answer him?
@tchrist notes new advertising real estate
@MattЭллен no lol, he literally did that. A dumbed-down version for the masses. They will call it the prequel.
@RegDwighт He's also buried in Grant's Tomb
Inferno is a 2013 mystery thriller novel by American author Dan Brown and the fourth book in his Robert Langdon series, following Angels & Demons, The Da Vinci Code and The Lost Symbol. The book was released on May 14, 2013 by Doubleday. Plot Harvard University professor Robert Langdon wakes up in a hospital with a head wound and no memory of the last few days. His last memory is walking on the Harvard campus, but he quickly realizes that he is now in Florence. Sienna Brooks, one of the doctors tending to him, tells him he suffered a concussion from being grazed by a bullet, and had st...
Jez
Jez
@KitFox in that case you just as well just get high and find someone who actually wants to fuck
13:09
> he quickly realizes that he is now in Florence
Funniest sentence I read all day.
@RegDwighт I'd heard of Inferno. I didn't realise it was about Dante's Inferno
How the heck do you go about quickly realizing that you are now in Florence? That's a honest question.
It's a thing people can do.
Well, you look around.
When you notice her name tag
13:10
giggles
It says "Gunga Din"
Sienna Brooks. snerkle
Is that... a pun?
Jez
Jez
Matt/Reg can you think of good names for these snapshots I'm making in my system? scroll up a bit to see the info
13:14
You beat me by 43 seconds there @RegDwighт
@Jez I like delta, too
@Jez previous and current.
Jez
Jez
they wouldn't be accurate descriptions
They would be for the person who is familiar with them.
And for the person who's not familiar with the system, no descriptions would be accurate.
Jez
Jez
well so would foo and bar
Exactly.
Jez
Jez
13:16
some would be less perplexing than others
True, and I do think that "previous" and "current" are less perplexing than "foo" and "bar".
But no matter what you call them, you will have to leave an explanatory comment.
Even if it's just for the future you.
Jez
Jez
i wanna be able to get the word in a sentence
"base is the base snapshot which is updated to the latest version of live"
No objections to base or delta.
The daily WTF.
That's a former Vietcong and a former GI and medic who amputated the Vietcong's arm. 47 years later, they meet again, and the GI brings along the amputated arm as a present.
13:32
so he's had some other guy's arm (in a box?) for 47 years. Is that standard medical procedure?
oh, I see the amputee had the arm
Is that weird?
The way I read it, he just had that bag full of souvenirs from Vietnam, and he only opened it after 47 years.
it makes sense to keep your own arm
@MattЭллен no, the doc had the arm. He took it with him to the US.
Which part of "brings along" was confusing?
oh
" the GI brings along the amputated arm"
that part
13:34
I see. Thankfully, I added "as a present".
I assumed the GI was the amputee. So the picture has the GI who is an amputee sat on the left, and the medic on the right.
but now you mean the GI is the medic
@MattЭллен so it was the "former GI and medic" part.
@MattЭллен precisely, I even left out the second article for that exact reason.
"A former GI and medic" as opposed to "a former GI and a medic".
article ellipsis is a complicated thing
13:36
Not if you are Russian.
"The minister was a soldier and a medic in WW1"
see, makes little difference
Thankfully ministers never fight in wars. They only send others.
Okay I has fixed sentence.
Or just read it up on Fox News.
@RegDwighт thx. I am easily confused.
@RegDwighт fox ewws? I'd rather be confused.
13:40
That's the top and only link I get.
NSA hacked my Google to only return Fox News.
lol
funny because it's true
0
Q: The construction with 'need help' + verb+ing please help to define the type of construction

vixtor"I need help taking out an old hard drive" - is this a prepositional-gerundial construction?

I want to suggest how to improve this question, but I don't know how
Click on "add comment", type "I want to suggest how to improve this question.", then press Enter.
such wisdom. It's no wonder you are a giraffe
I am the giraffe.
Ask the Beatles.
only half of them are still alive
13:45
So their answer will still be 50% correct.
> Rick Santorum called our victories a "death knell" for marriage, and Gary Bauer warned that the "the militant homosexual movement" is leading America toward a "criminalization of Christianity."
Ah, but they are losing.
Hello
Do Americans use the word "football" correctly? Because in the rest of the world, football refers to what's known "soccer" in the states.
yes! another one for our team
Of course we use it correctly.
13:59
by that I mean: No. Americans are wrong :D
What a silly question.

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