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Why the heck do I keep misspelling LEGO today.
@terdon Assuming we are talking about your garden variety Christian, beliefs about hell is typically a great place to start.
@MrHen Ah, internal inconsistencies, yes, always a good one :)
My son is a bit hard to keep focused (he's 5 and has a few learning disabilities - nothing major). I'm trying to get his twin sister interested, too. But, she doesn't like the small pieces. I think it would be good for her fine motor control, though.
So anyway. They have those sets out every year, "my first harbor" or "my first fire station" or "my first castle" or "my first princess farm" or what have you. Plus the Creator 3-in-1 thingamajigs. These are always an excellent choice and very modestly priced, too.
21:01
I also like talking about Age of the Earth from the perspective of why scientists should be allowed to make claims about how old the earth is.
@terdon Mostly due to the fact that their scripture says almost nothing about hell.
@RegDwigнt Many thanks!
I'll hop on Amazon later!
Most mainstream beliefs about hell are from fiction and a surprising number of Christians don't realize that.
OK, speaking of those kids. Gotta go.
See everyone later.
21:02
@RegDwigнt I can't say enough nice things about Creator. But for 5-year-olds they are a bit challenging.
(Obviously, aside from the obvious jab of the Bible being fiction.)
@DavidM Get a box of basic bricks then.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 He did about 1/2 the work on the eagle.
But the other nice trick about discussing hell is that you can get 5 different opinions from a group of 3 people. So you don't even need to do much arguing; they'll do it for you.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 She has duplo, but I want her to handle the small bits to get her coordination to improve.
21:03
!!lego 31004
@MrHen And then sit back and chuckle? Good one.
@DavidM that eagle?
That's a pretty straightforward build and stunningly gorgeous.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Yes! It was awesome.
21:04
@terdon I'll interject and just ask them why they believe what they do and let the others tell them why that isn't a good enough reason.
My son got a lot of it. More than I expected.
Though I finally dethroned it from atop my Tower Bridge.
It's kind of amusing.
He had trouble with the non-articulating bits like the white round circles.
if he can handle that, then most creator kits should be fine, and city, super heroes, etc, should be fine too.
21:04
Yeah.
But there's always those five-buck minisets, too.
But you can't go wrong with basic bricks either.
!!lego 31015
Thanks guys! I think I'm going to spend a crapload on legos this evening.
@RegDwigнt That's really cool!
OK, going for real this time.
21:06
@DavidM no problem. as you can tell from our tame bot, we talk about lego a lot here.
cya
And it's 60 pieces for five bucks, probably only three or four on amazon, and it's a 3-in-1, too.
OK, see everyone around.
Actually I should be going, too.
Off to the showermobile, lol.
Got but two hours worth of sleep last night and been meaning to go to bed pronto the whole day long.
posted on March 26, 2014 by sgdi

A mouse who had scampered down stairs Took the owner unawares They made a shrill scream Departed the scene And the mouse scampered on without cares

@StackExchange Who coded the limerick machine?
21:08
@RegDwigнt Any news?
Apart from new 2048 scores.
@terdon The limerick machine is @MattЭллен, and his limeric blog is one of this room's RSS feeds
@Cerberus So... getting 2048 seems common enough. Are people just comparing the actual scores in the game?
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Thanks. Good work @MattЭллен some of the ones I've read actually made me laugh out loud.
Aw, someone dovnvoted my 'nu-' question and voted to close as opinion based.
Perhaps I wasn't being clear...
@MrHen link?
21:22
0
Q: Origin and usage of "nu-" (e.g. nu-metal)

MrHenNot every dictionary I checked has "nu-" but here are a few examples: nu- dictionary.com — indicating an updated or modern version of something: nu-metal music Bing — new: new, or modern Google — respelling of ‘new,’ used esp. in names of new or revived genres of popular music....

@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 It's not that far. No visa payment. Is it just the cost of driving and meals?
@Mitch Driving to the US form here is at least 200km. Not worth it to save $15 on a box of Lego.
@Mitch I'm not sure I understand your comment. Isn't that more or less how all language works?
@MrHen Yes, I believe they are.
I have only played the game once myself.
@Cerberus Ah, okay
21:26
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 But Niagara Falls, the casinos, the lack of Tim Hortons's
Someone introduced me to CookieClicker which was... interesting.
What's that?
@Cerberus you don't want to know...
It's another time waster game.
21:28
You guys recommend it?
It's basically an optimized builder/upgrade game.
@Cerberus You'll "get" it within a few minutes and decide if you care
But it isn't hard or challenging. It's just time consuming.
Is it fun?
I found it more interesting to solve the math of the game, actually
@Cerberus For some people, yes. I don't know if you'd find it fun.
It wasn't my cup of tea.
But I appreciated what it was doing.
And how well it did it.
Hmm...
@Cerberus Some people get strangely addicted to it. :/
21:30
Yeah, it was fun for the first few minutes but after a while there was not much to do
@MrHen I think names are part of a language. In English it is Mary, but in Irish Moira, and Arabic Maryam. For the post in question, he's not asking about something like that, he's asking about a cultural artifact that is consciously chosen (hyphenating names), where there is no language specific process going on.
@terdon Right. I found it more entertaining to write a script to autoclick and autobuy
@Mitch I was talking about your comment on the 'nu-' question.
@terdon Oh, God. This is like the opposite of everything I ever liked in games.
I cannot play this, sorry!
Never said you should :) I don't find it particularly entertaining either.
@MrHen Oh.
21:33
@Cerberus Haha, funny. Like I said, it was... interesting.
@Mitch Er, your first comment. Not the Yiddish one.
I quit before seeing anything I would describe as "interesting".
@Cerberus The building/upgrade mechanics are more interesting. You don't have to keep clicking after a bit.
@terdon Good. Have you ever played the hyped frog game?
lalalalala, don't want to know about it lalalla
I do not recommend it.
21:34
Please, I waste too much time already :) I'm a sucker for these things.
It is like this cookie game, I think.
@Cerberus But I find it more interesting from the game design aspect. Some people really get into it so it has something behind it worth studying.
'nu-' is a thing because people make up stuff and other people copy them. — Mitch 11 mins ago
@Mitch Yeah, that one. Isn't that how language in general works?
A kind of old-school action game that supposedly acquires some depth after a while. But the basic mechanics were just too boring for me, timed clicking on things.
21:35
strongly resisting the urge to play more 2048
No, people hardly ever make stuff up on purpose. They just speak quickly slur, over generalize, elide unstressed things etc.
2048=addiction
It's the same error as thinking that spelling is language.
@Mitch Right; but in terms of neologisms... you are saying they are just made up?
@Mitch What is the same error?
@MrHen well, by definition yes. 'iPhone' is just made up. that's not language creation, it's just culture. (also, to kill two birds with one stone, the lower case thing is just spelling, not a language thing). And people copying that, calling a coffee make with a computer screen an 'iBarrista' is just copying that culture. If we were to start using 'i-' as a prefix for any fancy hitech device, then maybe it'd be natural language.
21:46
Doesn't this "i" stand for some kind of meaning?
@Mitch Right. So "nu-" has made its way into a few dictionaries. I was curious about its origin.
@skullpatrol internet, presumably
I'm not sure if that was ever confirmed.
> Ken says that the "i" stands for "Internet".
The iMac is a range of all-in-one Macintosh desktop computers designed and built by Apple Inc. It has been the primary part of Apple's consumer desktop offerings since its introduction in 1998-08 (shipped; intro 1998-05), and has evolved through six distinct forms. In its original form, the iMac G3 had a gum-drop or egg-shaped look, with a CRT monitor, mainly enclosed by a colored, translucent plastic case, which was refreshed early on with a sleeker design notable for its slot-loaded optical drive. The second major revision, the iMac G4, moved the design to a hemispherical base con...
!!google iBarrista
@skullpatrol The Gods of Wikipedia did not bless us
@Mitch I think this distinction between natural and unnatural language is ultimately artificial.
21:52
And we have had things starting with i since forever.
But artificial means unnatural, so you're saying unnatural is unnatural @cerb
@skullpatrol Yeah the pun was supposed to confuse Mitch for a while.
Nice try :D
Try?
I don't see him typing!
He is hopelessly entangled.
How do you see someone typing?
"Last seen"? @cerb
22:03
@Cerberus It's still working.
@skullpatrol He's seeing me not typing.
@skullpatrol One normally sees chat lines appear in chat when Mitch is typing, eventually. Like now.
Crap, Now he can't do that.
Yeah.
I see who is typing with my X-ray eyes.
@Cerberus I'm still trying to figure that out.
I think you're a robot.
22:05
We're all robots controlled by destiny, lol.
One with a clever artificial intelligence, then.
If everything is predetermined, where art free will?
Art is the thou form.
Nothing is for free
I was trying to show off my English, lol.
22:06
Nice try.
@MrHen I think there are native organic things, and in distinction I think there are made-up things (and also legitimate errors) that some people repeat often enough to catch on to become real things. And also random uninformed people add things to wiktionary et al. There is some room for authority.
@JasperLoy modestly covers hands with a lead apron
@Mitch Geezis, what are you doing with your hands? LOL.
@JasperLoy hiding them from all the X-rays shooting out of your head!
@Mitch Did you see my question on math meta?
22:10
looking now. the one about downvoting?
@Mitch Yes. It got 8 downvotes, lol.
This obsession with the principle of reputation @Jasper you are showing is not healthy and can only hurt your chances of getting well soon my friend.
@skullpatrol No, I am not obsessed with it. Don't worry.
@Mitch That's why I quoted three different dictionaries. :P
But I guess I see your point.
@JasperLoy yep, I agree, way too few downvotes to be considered serial. I think the downvotes for the meta question are for making a big deal (a meta question about your own account) out of something that is probably not the case and doesn't affect anybody else.
22:13
@Mitch Hmm OK.
Listen to mitch
I have an interesting habit I will now describe.
I drink lots of water one hour before sleeping, and then don't drink anymore, and then go and pee just before sleeping, lol.
Sorting out good advice from bad can help you out a lot @Jasper
@skullpatrol OK OK.
@MrHen Collins (I think the only real source I could find for google or Bing) is somewhat trustworthy, but wiktionary, no.
22:17
@Mitch By the way, I have no idea who write wiktionary.
MW Collegiate doesn't use IPA, but MW learners does.
I killed a lizard yesterday.
I try to deal a quick blow so they don't feel pain.
Like you just did to me? @Jasper
@skullpatrol I said OK OK, what's wrong with that?
Haha.
Why did you kill it?
Was it bothering you?
@Cerberus I usually kill lizards in the house, but not spiders. Lizards are too big and they crawl around too much.
Don't worry I will not bother you anymore @jasper
22:24
@skullpatrol Aww, come on.
@JasperLoy Do they poop in the house?
@Cerberus Yes.
0
A: Is the history/etymology of names appropriate?

Bradd SzonyeEnglish proper names follow most of the same rules and customs as other English words, and they're subject to the same evolutionary forces. They’re clearly different from names in other languages: John Paul II is distinctly English whereas Ioannes Paulus II and Jan Paweł II are not. They follow E...

I posted a dissenting opinion on the proper names meta post, in case anyone wants to (dis)agree with me.
I also voted to reopen the questions that KitFox closed, because even if they are ultimately off-topic, I think it was hasty to close them before reaching a consensus on the meta question.
And I edited this one to make it a little better (because it was kind of a crap question besides being about proper names):
3
Q: Etymology of the name "Stimpson"

Terry StimpsonAn Irish-Canadian poet told me that my last name, Stimpson, comes from glimpse. What is the actual etymology of the proper name and the common noun? Are they related? When did they first appear in the English language?

This one I think is just a cool question that deserves a better answer:
8
Q: What is the origin of surnames based on color?

somehumeI understand the background of names such as Baker, Carver and Hammer but, what are the origins of names such as Black, Blue, Brown, Green and White? Are they based on some common structure or do they each have their own twisted tale?

@JasperLoy OK that's a good reason.
@BraddSzonye +1
Thanks!
I'll be mildly disappointed if the consensus is that names don't belong, although I understand if people go that way.
22:29
@BraddSzonye On the other hand, I have to say the question in question is more at home on Genealogy.se.
Because it's true that names have some of their own finicky rules, and we could reasonably argue that they belong on Genealogy.
Surnames, anyway – given names are even more distinctly English.
Yeah names can be on topic on either site, I'd say.
As long as they aren't closed, I don't care where they go, to be honest.
Mainly I wanted to raise the visibility of the subject so that we have a better chance of getting actual consensus (or divergence) rather than having a few early responders influence policy further.
Good.
23:11
@DavidM I would not say pi has an infinite number of digits -- instead I would say you'll need an infinitely long string of digits if you want to represent it as a string of digits. In and of itself pi doesn't have digits.
I prefer pie with fruit and/or cream filling
Unless you feel you could meaningfully say 2 has an infinite number of digits -- 2.0000000000000000 ... ∞
Which, in the right context, makes perfect sense.
@BraddSzonye pi r square
runs
@MετάEd You'll need an infinite number of digits to represent 2 as 1.99̄
How do you express "barely openable eyes" in a poetic way?
like you are tired.
@username901345 Depends on what you mean by it – aha.
23:18
like you can barely open your eyes after a hard day's work
one adjective
Weary? Heavy?
oh heavy!!
heavy eyelids.
What about...
Hazy eyes.
Heavy lidded
@username901345 No, hazy means unclear, nebulous
as a result of a hard day's work your eyes are hazy.
can't see clearly
23:33
@MετάEd That's a "π over π"! -- π over π is a transcendental number, I think.
23:48
@MετάEd That was vaguely the point I was making. That numbers are mere representations of concepts.
@username901345 Take terdon's advice. Heavy-lidded is perfect. It means one's eyes are closing involuntarily because of fatigue.
bleary.
Bleary-eyed.
Not hazy.
That's more to do with vision than fatigue.
@BraddSzonye Thank you.
Also, bleary describes the outward appearance of someone, and could mean they looked drunk or dazed or some other not-tired state.
23:52
Yes. I was meaning that bleary is how to describe hazy-eyed, not hazy.
Now I think I'll go play Bioshock.
Original or Infinite?
Infinite.
I can't remember where I left off.
Somewhere close to the end.
I just played through Original again because it's such a good game.
Oh, but first, booze.
I did ten hours today, so I earned it.
People used to be worth their salt. Now they're worth their booze.
23:54
Absolut-ly,
except I don't much like vodka.
Don't tell Reg that though.
I would drink vodka with him.
I don't care for it much either.
But it is the alcohol to use if you have to mix drinks, I suppose.
Rum and coke is my old standby.
Although I last had a raspberry gimlet.
It was tasty.
0
Q: Origin of pars/partis

pablitoMight the Latin source of "part" (participate, party, etc.), --pars, partis-- have originate in early Rome's traumatic encounter with Parthian archers?

Fairly off topic, I think
I wouldn't have, but there is a certain protocol to cozening up to bartenders that needs to be followed.
The only mixed drink I favor is bourbon with chai tea latte. But that's rare.
Chicks don't have to cozy up to bartenders.
23:57
Sure they do.
Because?
@Robusto They do, the bartenders are just more responsive to it.
For many reasons. All the same reasons men should do so.
@KitFox My pleasure! I love dissenting, I'm a provocateur. ;)
So she doesn't water down your drink, so she gives you the good stuff, so she doesn't spit on your olives, so she warns you off the bad regulars, so she doesn't call the cops when you forget to settle your tab at the end of the night.
23:59
I find a bluff, hearty manner and a good tip are all I need. And, really, I could leave the manner at home.
&c.
@BraddSzonye You're like the tamest provocateur ever . . .
Way too polite!

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