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15:11
Hm. A whopping two interesting questions this morning. Can't remember when that last happened.
Where?
2
Q: Why are identical rhymes inferior in English poetry?

Bradd SzonyeFrom “War Pigs” by Black Sabbath: Generals gathered in their masses Just like witches at black masses In English poetry, a perfect rhyme has identical vowels but different onsets, like come and sum. An identical rhyme has identical vowel and onset, like come and become. Pairs of homonyms ...

0
Q: in a while or for a while

msgmaximI recently got a message that says "Haven't hear anything from you in a while" . I always thought that the right way to say this would be to use for insdead of in. Are both versions correct? Would there be a difference in meaning?

@RegDwighт I'll give you this one.
I find the other one more interesting.
The first one doesn't even necessarily have an answer. "That's just how it works."
About the second one, I have been thinking for a full hour now.
Haha.
15:18
Still waters run deep.
Apparently.
Not haha, it's really interesting.
Uhuh.
How in the past, "for a while" is a closed interval while "in a while" only has one end, but when you're talking about the future it's the other way round.
Well, not the other way round, but it's for that's open, and in doesn't even exist.
And then, of course, there's "every once in a while", which is different still, because it's a different in.
It is quite interesting.
This isn't about the word while, is it?
15:21
Nah, the while is the same in all cases. Just some noun. Could be Jabberwocky instead, if you ask me. Wouldn't change anything.
Is it related to for loops?
It's all about in vs. for, past vs. future, and idioms vs. non-idioms.
@Cerberus that's a good question, but if anything, it's the for loops that are related to this one, not the other way round.
These expressions predate programming languages.
That's...loopy.
No, this is.
Funny how Fruit Loops are neither fruit nor loops. Kind of like the Federal Reserve.
@slowdown ^
And we've come full loop!
You could say in defines mainly the boundaries of a period, like being in an (otherwise empty) box, whereas for indicates that something occupies every point within the box.
For applies to the entire space within the box.
15:27
True, but I am not sure how much that applies in this case. I mean, "in a while" is a single unit. It's not "somewhere inside the while".
But it is.
Or perhaps originally it is.
Or still is.
Now you're confusing me.
"It is not so that I have seen you somewhere inside the while."
The not is confusing you.
@Cerberus I guess what I'm saying is, in a box is somewhere inside the box. It's not "it fills the entire box out".
In a while, though, does fill out the entire while, start to finish.
"For the entire inside of the while, it is so that I haven't seen you."
@RegDwighт That's just because the meanings converge due to the negation.
15:30
I mean, ultimately it's clear how you would get from here to there. I haven't seen you in this point inside the while, and in this point, and in this, and when summed up you get the entire while.
But...that's not what it says.
@Cerberus right. The negation is not to be forgotten.
We don't say I have seen you in a while because it is a bit redundant, useless.
@Cerberus I think I will take a break for some soup and then resume with a fresh mind.
A break for some soup, or in some soup?
15:32
Like, when I can say, I haven't seen an idea anywhere in this mind.
Yes, like that.
And you can also say, it is true for his entire mind that I haven't seen an idea there.
Also we're just the two of us. I'm sure my answer will solicit comments if you let it rest for a while.
@Cerberus I could say that, but it would be untrue.
I'll let it rest in a while.
I'll let it rest in a peace.
Soup!
@RegDwighт But it means the same thing as what you said!
Bai.
15:33
Stop pinging me, I am in a soup.
damn, I need to tell my teacher tomorrow what's my final project is going to be
World domination.
I was going to read up HTTP specification because I have planned to build a PHP web server
Sorry, but that fails just a tad short of world domination.
Do you reckon a person can read the whole HTTP specification in few hours?
15:35
Why would a person do that in the first place?
You only need to read the bits you need.
@RegDwighт just for fun
I think the preamble alone is like 42 pages.
@RegDwighт Probably yes, I think I'm just going to read the handshake part in detail
and read the rest while developing
Then 42 pages of how the preamble relates to the introduction. Then 42 pages of introduction. Then 42 pages of tables of contents. Then a foreword by Tim Berners-Lee on how he hasn't read any of this shit.
@RegDwighт Why are you still for here? I will have to continue pinging you now.
15:37
@Cerberus not if I ban you for that!
Or if I ban you in that!
@TemporaryNickName I'm just saying, world domination is fun, too. And you don't have to read anything.
Nooo...
@RegDwighт Fruity loops is also a pretty nice program for programming beats.
Just $99?
Is that what you need these days to "compose, arrange, record, edit, mix and master professional quality music"?
dunno, did not see a price, sounds cheap
No wonder professional quality music is shit.
15:40
@RegDwighт I think TBL pretty much remembers every single details about HTTP
I think pros use Cubase or something else, played a little with FL when younger and it was fun
@TemporaryNickName how is that a contradiction to him not reading the specs? If anything it means he doesn't need to read them.
maybe he does not read them
16:02
@Cerberus the transcript from tonight was awesome, I laughed a lot, also interesting :D
16:13
@JohanLarsson Wow, that must have taken you some time!
I think the Troy ounce is outdated. What everyone is using these days is the Troll ounce.
@RegDwighт You will love this.
Live map of Wikipedia edits.
Yes, a map. With locations based on IP addresses, probably.
I'd expect the activity to be way higher.
Yeah, so did I.
Sunday.
16:27
Yeah, Sunday should be busy.
Then again, Murkins and Asians are asleep.
Or should be.
Oh I actually meant I could imagine Sundays being slow.
!
But Sunday afternoon/evening is prime Internet time!
That's why everyone and their mother lets Ebay auctions end on Sunday around 8.
Or at least on Sunday.
a) not sure about that, and b) prime Internet time != prime editing Wikipedia time.
A.) Trust me. B.) Why ! ?
Yes, eBay. When you're busy bidding on eBay, you're not busy editing Wikipedia.
16:30
> Not all recent changes are counted, however. Actually, the website only maps the contributions made by unregistered Wikipedia users, because when they make an edit they are identified only by IP address.
Ahhh.
And we know for a fact that this very site here is way more active during the week.
Is it?
By two orders of magnitude.
I guess many people chat in the office.
Exactly.
I check Wikipedia a lot at the office, and that's when I also come across things that I fix.
An explanation of the site.
Ohohoh, now it's flashing like mad.
And now it stopped completely.
Just like with any business everywhere. A store is either completely empty, or you have to line up forever. Nothing in-between.
Trying to push eyeballs back in their sockets after dinner
When I worked in a copy shop, we were either sitting on our hands for hours, or working like mad with a zillion customers in the shop at once.
@JohanLarsson too much chili?
16:34
too much much, I blame gf and her cooking
@RegDwighт Yeah, that's probably just the result of random distribution...
17:11
@cerb: what would be the Latin for"I'm not always right.but I'M never wrong"?
hej @WendiKidd
17:38
@Robusto How about this: Verum quidem non semper scio, sed numquam falsum.
"I may not always know the truth, but never error."
Or something like that.
There may be a better way to say it with equal brevity.
Of course you could render the English with more precision, but then it would become longer.
Now I must go, adieu!
18:21
@Robusto How about: Non semper sum rectus, sed numquam falsus.
19:18
@AndrewLeach Did you intentionally invert the more normal sum and rectus order there, perhaps because of the leading non semper?
(I’m not really here.)
It scans better.
Latin uses case as well as word-order. It doesn't always need to be in Reverse Polish Notation.
And it sets rectus directly adjacent to the second, contradictory, clause.
 
1 hour later…
20:54
@AndrewLeach I think rectus has a moral connotation when used with a person.
And than humans.
how humans are farthest away from the diagonal
goldfish surprises a bit :D
oh, yet another fail, I misread the wolf dot :D
and too late to edit, story of my chatlife :D
21:09
Wolf dot?
In the diagram, I misread the arrow/leader/label
Ahh.
You know Latin?
21:31
Sure.
Don't you?
not much, I know grus grus, have you met him?
22:01
Sooo.
What's everybody doing?
Knitting socks again, huh?
Good.
Something interesting?
Work related, one from aedia's list. It is ok but I think I switcged from reading to scanning.
Feel I need to at least read a few books for the superviser thing.
Ah hmm.
The superviser thing?
you found The prophet yet?
@Cerberus I'm supervising a woman who writes her thesis on ergonomy and usability.
22:09
Ahh.
Yeah, you want to be properly prepared.
Although she will probably believe whatever you tell her!
I don't know much about it really. The idea is for me to help her out with practical stuff and such but feel it is common courtesy to be a little interested also.
@Cerberus why?
because I hang with you guys? :D
(that is a good reason imo, except I don't really qualify :)
@JohanLarsson Because...you're her supervisor?
So you are supervising a thesis that is outside your own field?
@Cerberus oh, if so it would be even worse if I was completely clueless, maybe?
@Cerberus yes, she has one proper supervisor in school and I was very careful to tell her that I was not experienced. Maybe supervisor is a misnomer but that is what they call t.
Hmm.
I think you're probably underestimating your own expertise.
Like say, "OMG I don't know anything at all about American English! I'm just a British professor of English, I couldn't possibly advise you!". Excessive modesty?
Maybe, it is what it is any way, think she enjoys it thus far and that must be good.
Are you a professor?
22:20
Good. And nope.
I do have to tell kids I tutor that I don't know enough about the subject, though.
If I have to explain quantum mechanics to them, I really need to see their book first!
But you are a teacher?
Somewhat interesting article I don't agree I think but comments brings up an interesting point.
@JohanLarsson Why not?
Costs and benefits should be and are a part of a functioning system of justice.
Of course the problem is that you cannot quantify many costs and benefits, so it will never be a mathematical problem.
But you should quantify what you reasonably can. An important caveat is that some social scientists are hybrid in the sense that hybris leads them to think they can quantify and predict far more than they actually can.
22:44
Game theory probably applies for quantifying, still think the comment about war on drugs is more interesting.
21 mins ago, by Johan Larsson
But you are a teacher?
23:03
nite
23:49
Bai!

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