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19:02
@Mitch Haha nice logic.
@Færd Possibly. But also a recognition of the need for skepticism, that what you accept on faith may actually have a deterministic explanation. Or the other direction, see a cargo cult for what it is,not based on evidence.
Conway's law: organizations which design systems ... are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations.
Comes right after Grey's in that chain I think
Hmm.
What kind of design should I be thinking of?
@Mitch A true skeptic would also cast a doubtful look at scientific endeavors to reduce everything to physical determinism.
19:20
@Færd that's at a much more abstract level of skepticism
In the eyes of those who are too used to their level of credulousness?
@Cerberus I've always heard of websites as the primary examples. If there's lots of advertising, then marketing controls things. If there are lots of demos .. um... then some group that does demos?
@Cerberus I've also heard that remote control UI design is an example, but usually that should mean that the org structure is chaotic , but I don't think that follows (other things surely follow but not org tree)
@Mitch Ah, okay. So lots of demos is (an important part of) a "communication structure"?
@Mitch Those are indeed chaotic.
Johan said "communication structures", and now it's "organisation structure"?
Is it simply that chaotic organisations produce chaotic designs, and organisations that have lots of marketeers produce products with lots of advertising?
That is quite a bit...easier to follow.
19:35
Conway's law is an adage named after computer programmer Melvin Conway, who introduced the idea in 1967. It was first dubbed Conway's law by participants at the 1968 National Symposium on Modular Programming. It states that "organizations which design systems ... are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations." The law is based on the reasoning that in order for a software module to function, multiple authors must communicate frequently with each other. Therefore, the software interface structure of a system will reflect the soci...
I copy pasted from there
felt right when I did it
@Cerberus Oh. I missed that. maybe the observation is something simpler like 'You can tell something about an organization something something how something something"
@JohanLarsson hm...yes, communication structure.
I think it's a law that works when it does, and doesn't when it doesn't.
:)
I think it is a decent observation
> Organisations often produce web sites with a content and structure which mirrors the internal concerns of the organisation rather than the needs of the users of the site.
same law?
@JohanLarsson Ah, I see, so it is kind of about communication between software parts.
19:41
so sometimes "concerns" sometimes "communication structures" sometimes org struct?
Yeah the design
But not surprising if it is visible in the end result
> distributed teams tend to develop more modular products
> mirrors the internal concerns of the organisation rather than the needs of
@Mitch Ah, that is quite the variation.
Like al the others, I think it works best as a proverb than an actual law
19:43
do you write ahk that way cerb?
So companies create things that they like to create, rather than what potential customers would want.
@JohanLarsson Yes, all my code has three heads.
:)
did you ever have a hydra bug?
@JohanLarsson right...there's an xkcd for that
I only use objects with three values.
Thank goodness, no!
Then my computer would have exploded.
19:44
Maybe I should look into that Hercules patcher.
@Cerberus except for McDonalds. They create things scientifically proven to be what customers desire rather than what's good for them
@Mitch Haha, I remember that one.
We don't have campi here, and the sites are usually not that bad, but its spirit stands.
@Mitch Hmm.
But only short-term desire is taken into account, not long time.
@Cerberus Oh. Mostly a collection of random older buildings scattered in the middle of a city?
Yes, like most universities, I believe.
I think Anglo-Saxon countries are more likely to have campi away from towns?
Some of the new Dutch universities are trying to ape English campi, though.
The US really does have campusses generally a set aside bounded area devoted entirely to the university. Even within a city.
19:48
Some buildings may have courtyards.
But they're in the inner city.
In general. of course exceptions. eg NYU, uh... I'm struggling to think of others.
Well, there may be some new buildings far away.
And certainly nobody lives in university buildings.
And I think the "campus police" is uniquely American?
That is, I cannot imagine such a thing in England.
@Cerberus I think many public universities in the US were explicitly land-grant created meaning 'here is the land for you to build up a uni. Now go do it from scratch'
rather than the cambridge style, buiild a monastery, add some apartments for boarding teenagers, build another church, some more apartments, etc, etc
@JohanLarsson Nice. Tum titty tum titty tum titty tum!
19:52
haha
@Cerberus I just saw a thing about open carry gun laws in Texas which is also unthinkable in the US, but there it is.
@JohanLarsson haha. they do a little more
he does it alone
warmed up around six minutes
@Cerberus OMG American exceptionalism at just the universities? Fraternities, drinking, sports, keep going
@JohanLarsson I'VE GOT BLISTERS ON MY EARDRUMS!
I don't listen to metal but that song stuck for some reason
@Mitch I suppose, if you get land for free...!
Zoomed in.
19:59
@JohanLarsson Yes, like boiling hot ingots of steel
You could say this is a kind of mini-campus, lots of uni buildings adjacent.
can steel boil?
that's how hot it is!
gaseous metal
not a very good band name
@Mitch name your band penisberserk
20:03
"Honey, I'm going out with my pals to see 'Gaseous Metal', back whenever"
"OK Honey, maybe you should pick up some Depends on the way just in case"
> Anders Borg gick penisbärsärk på familjefest i skärgården.
@JohanLarsson haha NOU
Swedish ex politician did it last week
Or, not sure what he did but that was the headline.
Penisbärsärk?
What could that be?
He showed his dikk
And screamed profanity.
I think, I don't consume news.
20:05
@Cerberus That doesn't seem so werid given that there is a somewhat walled off campus separate from a city, so it's quicker for the university administration to support their personal 'security' personnel, rather than rely on a municipality, of course with lots of cooperation, and handing over for more serious crimes.
@JohanLarsson I can see why now.
Or rather, I don't need to see why.
Yes, all news are not gonna be as good as that gem.
I'm trying to stop writing yeah, looks nasty
Yes is shorter & nicer.
@JohanLarsson How novel!
@Mitch It makes kind of sense when the university is in deserted territory, sure.
If there is really no sensible local authority nearby that could manage crime.
And, as the land gets settled, I imagine such traditions stay.
You may have noticed if you listened to the news during the Boston Marathon bombing, that one of the subsequent events was that an MIT campus police officer was shot. MIT is a totally integrated part of the urban area. I think of it as extra protection for the students rather than policing the students themselves.
also, sometimes for oversight of students who can get out of hand with drinking and sex crimes.
But...why do students need extra protection or oversight? Why can't the normal police do that, except because it's tradition?
We have very little crime related to students here.
20:29
@Cerberus The problem with that reasoning is that you can't know if that's because there is extra protection or not. Unless there is some other compelling reason, people might not think dropping it is worthwhile. This is especially so since many of the students are still dependent upon their parents' college fund, and are hence arguably still children (despite being adults to most of the world).
@Tonepoet I'm not sure I understand.
We, like almost all countries (I imagine), do not have a special police force for students.
And we have no problems with students: on the contrary.
They are mostly well behaved citizens, because they are in educated circles.
Except maybe they're sometimes noisy.
Because they don't live by office hours.
And they do not need any more protection than other citizens, also because there is little crime.
@Cerberus Yeah, not sure why. Like all culture it's weird for everybody the first time, but if you live there it immediately becomes not special (not normal or invisible, just accepted). I remember first time seeing it having the same reaction as you, but your mentioning it just now I had to stop and think what the big deal is, why you would think that is weird. But for me, it's 'why not'.
I see.
@Cerberus That's probably a reasonable assumption, but not a certain one in my opinion, and even if it is true, that does not change the world around them. What of the villains outside of campus, who avoid it because it has extra security?
@Mari-LouA To me, the graphs don't really show that much. For example, how much is considered 'gentle'? Moreover, the asker is really looking for a sentence to use in his IELTS writing. Sometimes, the simplest answers are the best to me, and there is no need to use more impressive words. And sometimes, certain technical words may not even really describe the situation the asker is talking about. ELU has a lot of answers related to math using technical words that actually don't describe the situation! — Jasper Loy 5 mins ago
20:40
@Tonepoet It is a fact that students commit very few serious crimes.
What do you guys think about my comment? Do you agree?
what's the question link?
@Tonepoet Those policemen could also go police some poor neighbourhood with high crime. Why do students deserve extra protection over other (young) people? Poor neighbourhoods also have many young people comparatively, even children.
@marcellothearcane If you follow the comment link, you get the question.
@JasperLoy okay
@Cerberus what's going on?
20:43
@marcellothearcane There are many things about SE you will learn only as time goes by, like what I just told you about, lol.
@Cerberus College is partially based on private funds though, the private funds of relatively rich people who can afford the extra security as a luxury if they want it, e.g. mommy and daddy dearest.
@Tonepoet College in America is so expensive. Is it really worth that much? I dunno.
It seems that Ghalib's chat account used yesterday or so is gone, gone. What happened?
There are a few jobs I wouldn't want done by somebody without years specialized training
I am just comparing the quality of education I got in college to the fees I paid. I didn't study in America though.
I think a lot of professors only care about research and not about teaching, which is why teaching sucks at so many places.
@JasperLoy My understanding of the situation is that "Ghalib" was really Arrowfar, and Arrowfar is banned for ten years for reasons unbeknownst to me.
20:48
@Tonepoet Yes, I know that, and I didn't even want to bring it up but he already wrote a lot of stuff and then deleted them, so it's not really a secret anymore.
@Tonepoet Then that is a whole 'nother line of argumentation. Everybody would like to hire private guards. But that doesn't mean it's good or reasonable for society.
@Tonepoet Is the ban only for chat, or for the main sites as well?
@JasperLoy I do not know. It stands to reason that if somebody circumventing a ban is caught that they would be banned again though.
Hmm too bad.
Also, a ten year network wide ban is not done for light and transient reasons, or at least I would hope not.
20:52
@Cerberus Maybe that's another American Exception
Nah.
It's fairly universal.
@Tonepoet I know he did some things in chat, but I think they are not very serious, and I don't even want to mention them. I don't know all the details though.
@JasperLoy That is a big problem. Another American Exception.
@Tonepoet That's true. But he was being nice and mature, at least here, so I would not have expected that.
@Tonepoet Ron Maimon, the mad physics genius, is banned SE-wide for a decade.
20:54
Haha.
But I claim that for all these American Exceptions, other countries are trying to catch up
Ron was pretty mad indeed. Narcissism, amongst other things, a pseudo-psychiatrist would say.
What about me? Is my behaviour OK to you?
@Mitch No offence, but this may not be an exception if you add poor countries to the comparison, or countries like Saudi Arabia: they, too, have compounds with special guards for rich people.
@JasperLoy Only if you send me €100 every month.
2
@Cerberus I will send you some Monopoly currency.
20:56
Hmm but €100 is the smallest note.
At least in the version we have here.
€50.000 being the biggest.
I think I will buy some lottery. I hope I can win a million dollars.
Although the money won't solve my mental problems, it will make me happier.
Would you say smalllest/biggest bank note?
I think lowest/highest is probably more standard.
Yes, I would say smallest and biggest.
Hmm OK.
That is just an intuitive answer to your question. Personally, I never said any of the four above.
20:59
If one was more literal than the other, I would care more but both are tropic and smallest/biggest makes a little more sense to me to be honest.
I really use only very few words in my writing and talking.
@JasperLoy There is a difference between a research institution and one geared towards teaching.
I have an extremely small vocabulary in theory and practice.
@Tonepoet Right!
@Mitch Oh well, one should be good at what one does, if it is to be done at all, no excuses.
21:00
I suppose a big note also sounds slightly more colloquial?
@Cerberus a lot of rich schools in much poorer countries have private security
@Mitch Exactly.
A big note also sounds fine to my ears.
@Cerberus Oh...jinx
@Cerberus I think high/low is of a higher register in conjunction with numbers.
21:02
So, recently, I liked a Maria, but it seems she doesn't like me, so I am going to forget about her, that's all I want to share.
I think it's also more common in video game contexts at the least. You want to deal the highest D.P.S. possible, for instance. I wouldn't say biggest there.
@JasperLoy I fewer words
@JasperLoy but that's the point, those at research universities are hired to to do research well, with teaching a close but secondary goal.
@Tonepoet What does that image say?
21:04
@Mitch Yay!
Okay, there we go!
@Mitch They should be equally important, my point.
@Tonepoet Right! Then it appears we more or less agree.
@Cerberus I wouldn't have taken offense, but only because you mention it am I inclined.
@Tonepoet Exactly, what does it mean?
21:05
@Tonepoet Yes, absolutely not with D. P. S.
But it doesn't seem like that. Maybe it does? Maybe college administrators are afraid of crime by townies in the neighborhood, so they need extra security?
A big number sounds quite colloquial; a high number standard.
Oh @Cerberus I talked to an ice cream seller from your country. He married someone here and he says he loves this place, lol.
But it's slightly less clear with a high bank note, at least to me.
@Mitch A smart attitude in life.
@JasperLoy Those are characters from Sonic Adventure 2. Maria Robotnik is pictured on the left, and Shadow the Hedgehog is pictured on the right.
21:06
@JasperLoy Oh, really! That's nice.
How was his ice?
@Tonepoet I see, so that is Maria.
But the 3rd world places have guys with machine guns hanging out at every iron gate. In the US the campuses aren't walled. It is definitely weird when a cop car goes by and it turns out it is university police. like they're play acting at being a real cop
@Cerberus I never bought any from him, lol.
@Cerberus I would never say a 'high number'. big or large (large more formal)
I think any elementary school kid can understand every single word I ever use in my writing.
21:08
@JasperLoy I've heard that Dutch ice is pretty good. It's the process but also the care they take in producing it.
@JasperLoy what does 'elementary' mean?
@Mitch He's actually selling Italian ice cream here, lol.
@Mitch It means around 7-12 years old.
'elementary' is heterological
1
Q: When someone says they are peckish does it meany they are hungry or feel like a chicken?

SchellingThe word peck is describing a bird eat. so is the word peckish exclusively for birds? Can you say peckish for a person being hungry as well?

@JasperLoy a 7-12 year old probably doesn't know that and just thinks it means 'my school'
@Mitch Oh, sorry then I underestimated the difficulty of my words.
21:10
@JasperLoy (he's really selling Dutch ice cream but people think Italian sounds fancier)
@JasperLoy what is 'underestimated'?
haha maybe I'm undereetimating the youth of today.
My birthday is next next Wed.
@terdon @Mitch Phonemically, Santander is simply /santanˈder/ in Spanish because Spanish is a WYSIWYG language. Phonetically, it’s [s̺ä̃n̪t̪ä̃n̪ˈd̪e̞ɾ] when said by natives of that region, where every single silly little diddlymark adds some nuance telling you that that sound is NOT pronounced as you might think to pronounce it in English: apical s, dental t&d, nasalized vowels, centralized vowels.
Next Wed is Debian's birthday.
@JasperLoy not this next Wed?
@Mitch Two more weeks, so next next. I am thinking, maybe a miracle will happen then...
21:15
And since there is no phonemic distinction of the rhotic phonemes in the syllable coda, that could be [r] with a full coronal trill or just [ɾ] with a simple flap, depending on the utterance and speaker and passion. :)
@tchrist That's what I expect, but I would also expect an English speaking non-Spanish speaking person to say it totally Anglo. And yet I hear such English speakers putting stress at the end. And it really bothers me that people are at least doing that right.
How dare people get things right sometimes!
@tchrist oh. what is the standard word final 'r' like then, the trill or the flap?
Yep.
argh. why can't people just do it one way!
you mean in free variation even like say within a variety?
The English r is actually an inverted r in IPA, but often written as an upright r for simplicity.
Give 'er hell there boy.
21:18
let's say in standard Mexican?
It doesn't matter.
Both occur.
Depends how excited somebody is. :)
intervocalic single spelled 'r' is the flap usually, right?
Right.
The upright r is actually the symbol for the Italian rolled r.
pero vs perro
21:19
So the phonologic environment says whether it's truly final.
> Beber es vivir.
The first one has to be a flap.
so I would expect word final to be like intervocalic (other things being equal)
The last one doesn't matter.
OK
yeah sure, following vowel
It kind of depends how the speaker feels like finishing up what he's saying.
trilling takes a lot of energy
21:20
Yep.
Well, more than not doing so.
@Mitch Hmm that's funny.
Much harder for English speakers because they don't hold their mouths right.
It's like getting an engine started
@Mitch We normally only eat Italian ice here, so...
I try not to hold my mouth.
21:21
Probably here it's a short multiple that trails off in many cases.
@Cerberus yeah, the grass is always greener. In Italy they're always saying how great Dutch ice cream is.
Surely not!
@tchrist I was just hearing something the other day and the guy had this pronounced word final r trill...
We do not have an ice-cream tradition here.
Listen to his first sentence: he says "...en el que vamos a analizar" (in which we're going to analyse) with a full trill:
21:24
@tchrist I was told that was wrong.
But it's probably some kind of emphasis.
@Cerberus Oh yeah, totally. They couldn't stop saying how great it was. The best Dutch opera. The best Dutch wine (like chianti but drier). And the climate, the fresh breeze and late sun in the summer.
He's talking with more force.
It's not wrong.
Like I said, it's about how excited somebody is.
@Mitch Umm wine is pretty bs.
Italian wines are infinitely better.
In his more relaxed things he doesn't do it so much as there.
We barely have any, too cold.
21:25
@Cerberus what?
Maybe it was Belgium
Ah, Belgium is quite different! They have good food.
Although I've not heard of ice-cream.
Which is primarily an Italian food.
I was totally taking the piss about most of that.
He's excited, very animated, almost yelling. So everything is very emphatic.
But ice cream?
You gotta do something with all those cows and milk and stuff
@tchrist Yeah OK.
But this Spaniard claimed to not understand me at all when I said Navara instead of Navarra.
21:27
Wait, that's phonemic.
@tchrist I thought I.P.A. was the only What You See is What You Get language. =P
@tchrist OK, the guy I heard I think was Indian, so entirely different 'r' situation. BUt yes, now I understand more of the Spanish 'r'
Intervocalically there is a difference between Navarra and Navara: those are different words where the second does not exist.
So he would not understand you.
@Mitch Which is...make cheese and milk.
I'm talking a syllable-final /r/.
21:28
@Cerberus and ice cream
The two phonemes only contrast between vowels.
Besides, most traditional Italian ice doesn't contain milk, I believe.
ice cream is what you could do with milk instead of cheese and actually make it taste better
@tchrist Ah, OK.
cheese is just a questionable preservation method
21:29
It's like word-initially it can NEVER be a flap, only a trill.
saying you like cheese is like saying you prefer embalming rather than cremation
Gelato (Italian pronunciation: [dʒeˈlaːto]; plural: gelati [dʒeˈlaːti], from the Italian word gelato meaning "frozen") is Italian ice cream. Gelato is made with a base of milk, cream, and sugar, and flavored with fruit and nut purees and other flavourings. It is generally lower in fat, but higher in sugar, than other styles of ice cream. Gelato typically contains less air and more flavoring than other kinds of frozen desserts, giving it a density and richness that distinguishes it from other ice creams. In Italy, by law, gelato must have at least 3.5% butterfat. In the United States, there is no...
That's why they double the "r" when making compound words: el rey > el virrey for the viceroy
saying you like cheese is like saying I'd rather have dry bread instead of cake
@Tonepoet Looks lactic to me.
21:30
@tchrist I never wrote that it wasn't.
saying you like cheese is like saying you like sitting near the back of the bus where the toilet is because you're more likely to get a free seat
@Mitch !
You don't like coagulated cow sweat?
saying you like cheese is like saying you like ...
ew... shiver can't say that one.
Is now a bad time to bring up that I like cheese? Esp. moldy blue cheese?
21:35
Yay!
I like medium-old blue cheeses, like creamy Castello.
Roquefort and Stilton are a bit too strong for me.
Pepperjack, gouda, smoked chedder, cheesecake...
@Cerberus Do not look to closely at any of those... you can see the alien life form growing
@Tonepoet Those are very different kinds?
Like toe cheese. It is literally where cheese came from.
@Cerberus Maybe not so much, depending on how "sharp" the cheddar is, except of course the cheesecake.
Also @Mitch if you don't like cheese, how do you eat pizza?
21:42
Scientific studies have been done
@Mitch I mean pizza is like, 50% cheese.
@Cerberus Those are pretty different. Stilton is milder.
@Mitch That's needed to make wine.
@Mitch So the rumors are true. You are an undercover Ninja Turtle!
@Tonepoet I only know 'gouda', which we simply call "cheese" here, and isn't 'cheesecake' with cream cheese, which is barely cheese?
@tchrist The ones I have tasted were all pretty strong.
21:47
@Cerberus Yeah.
Cheese is the example I trot out whenever someone breathlessly reports some or other apparent horror in some or other cuisine. Chicken embryos! Rotten shark! Whale!
It's milk curdled it in the stomach of a calf, then allowed to rot before being molded into a wheel.
@choster Well yes, traditionally speaking but you can use vegetable rennet for some varieties
Don't get me wrong, I rather like cheese. I just hate people who are blind to their own cultural prejudices
Like eating grass seeds. That's nasty
Welsh rarebit
The pinnacle of civilization
You need to make cheese out of milk.
Flour out of grain, and using yeast make bread
If you do it right you need bacon, which you need the pig and kill the poor thing and the. Age and smoke the meat, then cook the bacon
Mitch, you eat your roast beef sandwiches without cheese and use slices of cake as a substitute for bread.
21:57
THEN you put all of them together and cook one more time.
Next topic. Pickles
Chocolate dipped pickles Mitch, really? =P
@choster Haha, good point.
But in the stomach of a calf?
Well, not in it necessary (though that is probably how the first cheese makers however many generations ago discovered the process), but the traditional place to get rennet was indeed the stomach of a young calf
*necessarily
When the zombie apocalypse comes I will be pretty useless, but I might be able to buy some time by sharing tidbits of home preparations gleaned from Laura Ingalls Wilder books
Hi all. "Give a damn". There was a movie (not Gone with the Wind) that talked about this phrase. The context was that since "damn" is a curse word, if someone gives a damn about you, that means they care more about you than they do religion. The phrase "We can only hope that when we die, somebody gives a damn", as in, they say "damn", comes to mind. Anybody know this movie?
@choster Hmm I thought the stuff was acquired after slaughtering a cow or calf. But I suppose that's less likely in prehistoric times, for you'd have to kill the animal and lose its production.
@Carl Sorry, no idea!
But interesting theory.
22:10
Maybe I'll ask the movie people. Are we talking about how to procure rennet in the case of zombies?
If the electrical grid goes down, we won't have refrigeration, so I imagine we'd regain an appreciation for hard cheeses
mmm, yes.
22:30
Yay!
But...don't we already have this appreciation?
dairyinfo.gc.ca/… doesn't break it down by type of cheese, but I do find it interesting that for all the dairy I saw being produced in New Zealand, they consume so little of it
OTOH Iceland is not a country I associate with dairy, but they're up there with France and Luxembourg
22:45
Hmm interesting.
So Spaniards don't eat much cheese.
Choster, a rare chat visitor...
But an honourable one.
And me? A mysterious chat visitor...
I only seem to sign on when no one else is around
I am therefore assuming that all of you are ghosts
Hello @choster, welcome to this chat.
22:52
grazie
Hi. Could someone give some intuition on why using a comma before "i.e." is correct? For instance, "Let the sample be big, i.e., N>>0.". What I have been using so far is "Let the sample be big; i.e., N>>0." or "Let the sample be big. That is, N>>0.". It feels like some stronger separation is needed than just a comma.
@Julius Well, one style guide I have seen recommends the semicolon, but punctuation guides will tell you different things depending on which guide you read. I wanted to sugges you post on the main site, but from my experience the main site answers on punctuation sucks big time, so I suggest you check out several punctuation guides and decide the matter for youself.
@Julius I understand your intuition, but I believe it is normally only preceded by a comma.
Fowler's (3rd ed.) also recommends a mere preceding comma.
No comma after i.e., though.
See? Different guides say different things...
So I wouldn't use a comma.
Besides, are you sure the i.e. in your example introduces an explanation, and not an example?
If it is more like an example, use e.g.
22:58
I see. And yes, that would be a silly explanation for the case where the same size is already denoted by N. Thanks
Good luck!
Thanks for the good luck, lol
23:35
0
Q: Word for person who systematically 'bites more than they can chew'

Sara CostaWhat do you call a person who systematically gets involved in (or creates) projects that are too big and too detailed? For example, if such a person decides to create a photo-album of their holiday, they end up taking photos of everything and then, when putting together the album, they take so l...

0
Q: 'Alright' or 'All right' in a quote (tattoo)

Runneri am about to get a tattoo of a quote which means a lot to me. English is not my mother tongue, but I just love the language, so I decided to get it tattooed in english. Now I am unsure about one word. The quote is: "Everything will be all right in the end. If it's not all right, it's not the end...

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