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7:01 PM
The university likes it because it reduces the number of TAs needed. Of course this reduces the number of jobs available.
 
Yeah...
I'll tell this to one of our professors. He'd like this idea.
 
But since it helps students learn, and doesn't make them wait until the next section to be corrected, I will live with the guilt
If he is interested, tell him to look at logiclx.humnet.ucla.edu
It was originally written to be used with Logic: Techniques of Formal Reasoning by Kalish and Montague
But a professor at UCLA has written an online book (PDF) to be used with the program.
 
Can it be used for other courses?
 
What sort of courses are you thinking about?
As long as they use similar rules and syntax, it should work
 
Linear algebra, calculus, stuff like that.
 
7:08 PM
@Asaf: ah, it is not a general framework for teaching. It is quite specialized for symbolic logic.
 
Aha. I see.
Well then, I'll talk to another professor then.
You know.
It might just be the key to securing the job as a TA for the logic course in the spring semester!
 
I am sure that the Professor in charge of the project will be happy to see the program used there. What school?
 
My university.
Anyway, the bread is about done, I gotta go finish making dinner.
See you after the movie ends (we're gonna watch a moovie too :-))
 
@AsafKaragila I know that :-p
 
7:33 PM
Blech, the courts were being used for a high school tournament.
 
Mmmmm... the garlic is an awesome addition to the bread.
Talk about a finishing touch.
The bread needs a few minutes though.
@JM: Dammit I am so addicted to flags :-D
 
i've still never seen spam, and i've been obsessing over rep capping today
 
@Jack don't worry, I can provide you with a few links as soon as you reach your 10k :) however, they're not as awesome as you might think... It's been quite calm recently after the fury of some webhost a while ago
I'll upvote your transitive automorphism groups implies abelian answer tomorrow, then :) rep-capping is quite annoying...
Wait, you've got 4 accepts, so you'll have three more counting votes.
 
7:49 PM
yup
i've only capped once, i usually do more like 10 or 20 a day
 
I see.
I'll check towards official midnight and see if you can use that vote more today or tomorrow. You'll get it anyway and I'll make sure it counts.
 
Hehe thanks. :-)
 
Do you mind my asking a silly question on representation theory/group theory?
I'll try: is there a deep reason why people are so obsessed about character-free proofs of group-theoretic facts?
 
sure
 
I always saw that as sort of Ockham's razor and a test if the "pure" group theoretical tools are sharp enough. But usually those character-free proofs are so much more complicated. Is it just to illustrate that representation theory is so powerful or is there another reason?
 
7:56 PM
I think it is partially because character theory proofs often use congruences and inequalities and number shuffling of all sorts (sort of like the congruence part of Sylow theorem trickery). At the end of most of these proofs, we just get a contradiction. We don't learn anything about the group, as all the intermediate steps are about some meaningless numbers.
 
Ah, that makes a lot of sense. That never occurred to me. So the hope is to get deeper insight in the inner workings of why the facts are true by looking for something more constructive. Great! Now I know what to look for when comparing. Thanks!
 
However, the character proofs of Burnside's theorem and Frobenius's theorem are both very short and beautiful. So nobody really minded them. But then Goldschmidt and (I think) more importantly Bender came up with methods of handling Burnside's theorem that actually described deep features of the groups.
So now people are hoping for more insight by trying other problems. Frobenius is high profile because the original proof is so good, the statement is pretty simple, and no one has managed to solve it. Maybe like Fermat's Last Theorem: its so simple, surely I can do it.
On the flip side though: lots of character theory proofs are about linear groups, and tell us about linear groups, and give us a deeper understanding of groups. I think everyone likes those. Its just the crazy numerical finishes of proofs like the the odd order theorem that make people nervous. Feit and Thompson actually used calculus in their proof (scary!).
 
That's excellent and provides me with some food for thought, thanks a lot! (I don't mind calculus, of course :)) But I'm a very non-constructive guy...
Could you point me to a good exposition of these ideas of Goldschmidt and Bender (for someone not so much acquainted with finite groups?)
 
I like Isaacs's Finite Group Theory book (page 216, I was just checking if it was a good rec). If you don't mind original sources, look at Bender's (partial) characterization of simple groups with Klein-4 Sylow 2-subgroups (i can get you the paper reference). It is frighteningly simple compared to gorenstein-walter.
 
Great! I'll look at Isaacs and I'll certainly check out the original references (I think I'll find them, otherwise I'll get back to you).
 
8:19 PM
Hey, there's a new group here now.
 
@tb: ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=335634 is an easy Bender paper and ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1879251 is a modern (2001) adaptation that uses more or less the same methods for a strengthened result. i mention because bender has similar sounding papers that are easier than Gorenstein–Walter but not easy
I actually find it a little hard to imagine life (in the finite group theory sense) before Bender. What did people even think groups looked like before they had his version of the Fitting subgroup? You had no internal way of representing the group at all.
 
@Jack: Thanks a lot, again! I think that's more than enough for now. I'll make sure to try and understand what you're telling me in the last paragraph and I'll keep it in mind. Since I don't know yet what Bender did, I don't think I can appreciate that statement fully.
 
@Mike: sorry to hear about your bad luck at court, er.. at the courts.
 
no prob. i'll go work on steve's problem :-)
 
Awesome response and service, Jack!
@Jack: take your time, you don't want to post too soon, anyway, mind the rep-cap :)
 
8:29 PM
I've only capped twice. I am usually lucky to get close.
 
I don't know how often it happened to me, but there was once where I got about 15 upvotes that didn't count... That was rather annoying.
 
I think my max was 4 that didn't count. That was when I first learned there was a cap
 
I remember your question on meta about that.
 
I haven't been here that long, so I don't know these things.
 
Sure, how could you?
and why should you.
 
8:32 PM
I learn more each day.
 
There's a way you can find out how many times you've capped: If you're logged in, go to math.stackexchange.com/reputation. It will tell you at the bottom how many days you've hit 200 rep.
 
@tb I could read the meta, I guess.
 
Sure, but this meta is such a mess and you'd waste a lot of time reading the threads that don't contain the information you want.
Just like reading in an encyclopedia. I used to find out everything, except the thing I actually wanted to know.
2
 
@t.b.: yeah, that is why I haven't :-)
@Mike: thanks for that link! Something new I've learned.
 
You can also query data.stackexchange.com/mathematics/queries to find out how much total rep you've lost because of rep caps. I don't remember what the query is named, but it's in there.
 
8:38 PM
@Mike: that is cool. It looks as though I can supply my own SQL query there, too.
 
@Mike: Thanks, I forgot about that part of the rep summary.
I think you mean this query
 
@robjohn: Yes, although when I've tried I've usually messed up something in the syntax and so my query failed to parse. I haven't taken the time to learn the language well enough, and so I've just used ones others have created.
@t.b.: Yep, that's it.
 
I use SQL a lot at work, so I might have some luck.
 
@robjohn: yes, you can. Just bear in mind that the databases are updated only every other month, the last dump was early october
 
@t.b.: it's something at least.
new toys :-)
 
8:41 PM
exactly :)
And to make sure that you lose only one night, here's another set of toys if you're into scripting and customizing the site
 
Has anyone tried Six To Eight?
 
No, what is it?
 
It's an iPhone client for StackExchange.
The web interface is bad on mobile. This might be better.
 
That's true. Unfortunately I have an (ancient!) 3G...
 
I haven't tried it, either.
 
8:50 PM
It requires 4.1, but you can run 4.1 on a 3G, right?
@t.b.: now that the 4S is out, my 4 is feeling creaky.
but I am not planning on upgrading anytime soon. My 4 works nicely.
 
I'm running on 4.1, but they don't let me upgrade anymore.
Ah, yes, on the AppStore they say that 4.1 is required, but on stackapps they say 4.2 devices. Hm.
 
they don't let you upgrade? You're stuck at 4.1? The first hardware limit I've seen on the iPhones. I've seen a lot of them on the Mac. :-(
@tb heh, that script says I would have 4480 rep if there were no cap. The data is pretty old.
 
9:11 PM
@robjohn: It's from Oct 4 and if you look at your rep summary you had a few good days right after that...
By the way I just checked, I was wrong about 4.1. But I'm sure that the first version of 4.2 was not for 3G's only 3GS and 4
 
@t.b.: hmm, I've gotten 2000 in two weeks?
I've had some pretty sad days, too, recently.
 
@robjohn: add +450 from the bounties and it looks okay, doesn't it?
 
It's almost 3 weeks for 2000 rep, I guess. It's the 20th already
@t.b.: yeah, it looks fine. It just seems as if I have been here longer.
 
and the query only counts up/downvotes + accepts.
You registered on 2011-07-28 18:59:07Z to be precise :)
 
10:16 PM
@t.b.: I guess for being here almost 3 months, getting 1/3 of my rep in the last month isn't so surprising. :-o
I see a cheshire Mariano watching us...
 
10:30 PM
Ah, I hate that. I just observed that I completely misinterpreted a question. No wonder the answer wasn't popular :s
@robjohn: The cheshire cat's gone, apparently
 
@t.b.: he still appears in my window.
If only his grin.
 
heh :)
 
Though he is less active than J.M. at this point.
 
Is that even possible ?
 
For a chesire Mariano, I think so!
 
10:34 PM
I only see the two of us and pale shades of Asaf and Mike
 
I see J.M. and Mariano past that.
Oh, and Mike Spivey...
Let me refresh my screen.
 
well, maybe they're living in parallel universes
 
Aha! I was seeing ghosts.
It's the same as with my rep below my gravatar, if I don't refresh the chat window things go stale.
I worry sometimes that if I refresh the window, I will cease to be here.
Am I more than the sum of my cached parts?
 
I don't have anything witty to say at the moment. It's getting late...
 
Almost 1AM there
No wit is necessary, I don't even know if I would recognize wit if it came up and bit me on the, uh, I don't know.
 
10:46 PM
heh :) yes, it's almost one here. I was working the whole day and found an obscure reference containing many of the things that I've been working on over the past months.
 
Were you mentioned, or just talking about things that you've worked on?
 
No, I'm working on a rather bigger thing and it was part of work-in-progress. While looking up something completely unrelated, I found a paper from a few years ago containing much of the things I've been doing until today.
My mistake
 
this doesn't sound good.
unless I am still misreading things.
@J.M. is back, or I am seeing a ghost again :-)
 
Yes, he's back! :)
You're not misreading I think. It's not so bad. Just a bit disappointing. A few weeks that I could have spent on different stuff.
On the other hand, I now know that I'm on the right track and these things are bound to happen from time to time.
 
yeah, that's what I was reading. I hate it when that happens.
It is good that you have validation that what you were doing is right :-)
but prevalidation is a bit different :-(
 
10:54 PM
@robjohn I never claimed it was healthy! And I clarify the butter to reduce the fat.
Yes, I'm awake.
 
Good morning ?!
 
Yep, good morning indeed. Sun's high in the sky!
 
@J.M.: I was not deprecating butter. We were just bemoaning the scarcity of olive oil there.
 
@J.M. If ever I should make a stopover on the Philippines make room for a five litres barrel of olio extra vergine from italy :)
 
I know, I did say olive oil is optimal. I don't think I'll ever understand how food is priced nowadays...
@t.b. Don't make me drool, man... :D
 
10:59 PM
@robjohn: just to finish the former thing up, there's some disappointment but the neat thing is that I can answer a few questions they raised, so there definitely remains something from that work. On the other hand they answer stuff that I haven't thought about yet, so in the end there will be a positive outcome. It's just momentary disappointment for a bit of wasted time.
 
keep on keepin' on
that's the important thing
 
Exactly. And it's just part of a much larger project, so I'm trying to think that work leaped forward a bit, somewhat unexpectedly :)
 
indeed
 
I hope I'll manage to convince myself by tomorrow...
 
I wonder how often this "rediscovery" happens...
 
11:03 PM
A lot I reckon
 
Indeed.
Especially if you're working at the intersection of various active fields, and there's often a huge language barrier to overcome.
 
One problem I've always hit is that stuff that seems new to you and your colleagues turns out to have been discussed (and extensively at that!) in a paper in a journal you and your colleagues wouldn't be usually peeking at...
...which gives you the feeling the author of that paper would consider you as unwashed heathens...
 
Since I am only an amateur, I consider anything new I find to be exciting. Most of the things I prove I can find elsewhere. The last new thing I discovered was a couple of years ago.
 
Yes, exactly. It happened several times already that I had to referee things in which some of the main theorems were sort of folklore lemmas for people in my surroundings but were never written up properly or were pushed so much further that the main idea was blurred.
(I was responding to JM's last point from the opposite perspective)
 
watching to see the parenthetical grow
 
11:11 PM
It's stabilized now
 
awww
 
disappointing, isn't it
 
It's like watching TV, I can veg while being entertained :-)
Ah, another day with substandard rep. I need to do more answers. However, being slow paid off today on one answer.
Mike Spivey answered a question that I was working on and posted pretty much what I was working on.
So I had to attack it from a different perspective and ended up getting accepted.
 
Ah that's what the two of you were talking about earlier :)
 
Oh, I upvoted your answer and Mike's. Though I was kind of expecting only one person would be doing those two ways... :D
 
11:16 PM
He and I seem to attack combinatorial problems in the same way.
He is a bit faster than I am so he usually gets there first.
whether I don't see the question as early, or he types faster, I don't know
 
Since I'm being talked about, I suppose it's only polite to mention that I'm here. :) And I agree, robjohn, about us approaching combinatorial problems in a similar way.
 
@Mike: that's right, we cheered your reappearance :-)
Oops, no that was J.M.
 
@robjohn: Thanks. :|
 
You've been here all along.
 
@Mike: I haven't replied to your e-mail since I'm still working on how to expand that particular section of the paper...
 
11:19 PM
@robjohn: I don't know that I'm faster, although I guess if I actually am, I wouldn't find that out, since I wouldn't get to see your posts.
 
@Mike: sorry, I was having problems with knowing who was here because I hadn't refreshed my screen and I was seeing ghosts.
 
(and I'm still not sure if showing off how Vandermonde fits into Kummer would be something the ref would want to see.)
 
@J.M.: That's fine. I'm working on the edits right now myself.
@robjohn: No worries. :)
I do type fast, though, and I use LaTeX so much these days that I can typeset LaTeX code pretty fast, too.
 
Mike and J.M.: you are working on a paper together?
 
@rob: check Mike's blog for the details. :)
 
11:22 PM
@Mike: I used to do ASCII art pretty fast on sci.math, but I am getting better at LaTeX.
Did you guys know each other before MSE?
 
Nope. I'm an amateur and he's, well...
 
@robjohn: It's edits to a paper. Believe it or not, it's based off of this old math.SE post. It's a survey paper composed of the answers to that question.
@J.M.: Glad to know somebody reads my blog. :)
 
@J.M.: are you a grad student?
 
Not anymore. :)
I'm working, like I said. You know, the "sysop" chemist?
 
@Mike: one of my favorite functions for making cutoff functions.
 
11:25 PM
@Mike: well, I like Euler-Maclaurin... :D it sure explains a lot of weird stuff.
 
@J.M.: I like EM too, it is a wonderful tool for asymptotics
 
Congratulations to the two of you, once again to you J.M and twice to you @Mike two accepted papers in one weekend - that must feel great!
 
@J.M.: ah yes, now I remember.
 
@t.b.: Who knew goofing off can actually add something to the ol' CV?
 
@t.b.: Thanks! Yes, it does feel good. Months of dry spells and then sometimes it all comes together. I guess that's research, though...
@J.M.: Yeah, I think my wife is starting to be convinced that I'm doing something productive - and not just wasting time - by hanging out on math.SE.
 
11:29 PM
Also, this has been the most educational "goofing off" I've ever had.
(e.g. until Mike, I had no idea such a thing as Lah numbers existed.)
 
Well, I hope the good period keeps on going for a while crosses fingers
 
I will be reading about Lah Numbers tonight. I have never heard of them before.
@Mike: I just downloaded your paper. :-)
 
@rob: You're into difference calculus, so yes, I think you'll enjoy them.
 
@J.M.: I agree. I may be a math professor, but I've learned as much in the past year from math.SE as I have in any year since I left grad school, I think.
@t.b.: Thanks!
 
@J.M.: I proved some sharp results with pseudodifferential operators using difference operators rather than differential operators. I know these were new because my advisor, who knows everything about pseudo DEs said they were.
 
11:33 PM
@robjohn: Hope you enjoy it; we'll see how much the final version looks like that draft.
 
@rob: Interesting. Keeping things discrete made all the difference!
 
It allowed me to break the phase space up and get the estimates to the very edge rather than arbitrarily close.
@J.M.: and EM is just the inverse of a difference op :-)
to get back to Euler-Maclaurin
 
Yeah, that fact I realized only after a few years of using the thing. :)
 
While I'm on the subject of benefits from math.SE... It has helped keep me sharp in the areas on the site I'm more active in, and I'm pretty sure it's improved my ability to communicate mathematics in writing. I think I saw Arturo say something similar to my last point once, too.
 
@MikeSpivey It is different understanding something yourself and explaining it to others.
Some of the best mathematicians I've known make terrible teachers.
 
11:39 PM
"keep yourself sharp" is right; some of my answers were impromptu, having only come up with them after some mucking with Google.
 
And the best teacher when I was in grad school, was a pretty mediocre student
 
(If I may segue a bit: I am jealous of Didier here.)
 
@J.M.: Awesome. :)
 
I wonder why he just garnered three upvotes :)
 
That is a marvelous answer.
Unfortunately (or not) he capped out just before a new day.
 
11:55 PM
@robjohn: It's heavier going, but you might like the other paper I mention in that same blog post. It gives a partial answer to one of the research problems in Concrete Mathematics. (I'm guessing you're also a fan of CMath.)
 
@Mike: yes, indeed. I taught Discrete Math at UCLA, though we didn't use that book.
 
Reminds me... I need to have my copy photocopied. My copy's about to fall apart from constant (over)use.
 
@Mike: got the paper. I will read it, but depending on my capability, it may take a while.
 
@J.M.: I got a second copy because my first one was falling apart. Now I have one at home and at work, so can use it to answer math.SE questions no matter where I am. :)
 
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