Wikipedia:Reference desk/Miscellaneous
Those are pearls that were his eyes
This line appears twice in T.S. Eliot's modernist masterpiece "The Waste Land" (both lines 48 and 125 I believe) and is taken from Ariel's song in Shakespeare's The Tempest. I was curious to see if anyone on here had any insight into the supposed meaning of this phrase, intended by both Eliot and Shakespeare. In another one of Shakespeare's plays I forgot which one exactly, a man describes a bad dream he just had where he is drowning in a ship-wreck type of disaster. And he describes how the jewels from the shipwreck are now sunken into the sockets of the skulls of others who have drowned where their eyes once were. Do you think the line "those are pearls that were his eyes" just means a drowning death and jewels replacing skull eye sockets - or something more? I've been through various idea of my own but nothing seems to feel right.
I decided to put below the part of T. S. Eliot's poem, "The Waste Land" that contains the line I speak of above, for clarification purposes. Thank you!
"...Madame Sosostris, famous clairvoyante,
Had a bad cold, nevertheless
Is known to be the wisest woman in Europe,
With a wicked pack of cards. Here, said she,
Is your card, the drowned Phoenician Sailor,
(Those are pearls that were his eyes. Look!)
Here is Belladonna, the Lady of the Rocks,
The lady of situations.
Here is the man with three staves, and here the Wheel,
And here is the one-eyed merchant, and this card,
Which is blank, is something he carries on his back,
Which I am forbidden to see. I do not find
The Hanged Man. Fear death by water.
I see crowds of people, walking round in a ring.
Thank you. If you see dear Mrs. Equitone,
Tell her I bring the horoscope myself:
One must be so careful these days..." --Nadsat 21:47, Dec 31, 2004 (UTC)
- Maybe petrified eyeballs? Peter O. (Talk, automation script) 22:05, Dec 31, 2004 (UTC)
Here's the relevent text from The Tempest (Project Gutenberg edition):
FERDINAND. Where should this music be? I' th' air or th'earth? It sounds no more; and sure it waits upon Some god o' th' island. Sitting on a bank, Weeping again the King my father's wreck, This music crept by me upon the waters, Allaying both their fury and my passion With its sweet air; thence I have follow'd it, Or it hath drawn me rather. But 'tis gone. No, it begins again. ARIEL'S SONG Full fathom five thy father lies; Of his bones are coral made; Those are pearls that were his eyes; Nothing of him that doth fade But doth suffer a sea-change Into something rich and strange. Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell: [Burden: Ding-dong.] Hark! now I hear them-Ding-dong bell. FERDINAND. The ditty does remember my drown'd father. This is no mortal business, nor no sound That the earth owes. I hear it now above me.
Ferdinand believes that his father Alonso, the King of Naples, died in the shipwreck, and he is stricken with grief. Ariel's song consoles him by presenting his father's drowning in a positive light, as a transformation, not just a loss. With his grief allayed, Ferdinand can carry out the next part of Prospero's plan by falling in love with Miranda.
So the line "those are pearls that were his eyes" refers to Alonso; we are to imagine that he has drowned and that his flesh has been colonised by marine life.
In the context of T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land the line describes the drowned Phoenician sailor on the Tarot card (the "drowned sailor" was added by Eliot to his Tarot deck for the purposes of the symbolism), who is presumably the Phlebas of part IV of the poem. It also establishes something about the character of Madame Sosostris — that she is prone to cliché (though quite learned cliché in this case). Gdr 23:50, 2004 Dec 31 (UTC)
- Random thoughts. As Gdr says, think of this as a transformation symbol, life arising from death. The poem begins with a description of the meaninglessness/faithlessness of European society between the wars.
- First instance of the allusion: April is cruel because it causes life to arise from death, and inspires hope. Marie Larisch's conversation evokes the destruction of the structure of Europe by World War I. Mankind is left with no faith, only "a heap of broken images", dry, sterile, unable to grow, inspired to fear by a handful of dust. Sosostris tells the fortune: your card is a drowned Phoenician Sailor (the opposite of dry), transfigured by water, a sea-change, into something precious: "Those are pearls that were his eyes! Look!" Yet she tells you to fear death by water, the death that would result in that marvelous transfiguration. (Eliot probably was not referring to Larisch's tale (in her ghost-written My Past) about a barren Queen whose tears become pearls, and is taken by a Water Spirit and impregnated with his daughter, who has her Fairy father's large black eyes, but is passed off as her husband's child). (Reflect here for a moment on the beauty of the interjection "Look!" here: Look at what (your eyes, for the card is you) with what (your eyes)!)
- Second instance of the allusion: The dry sterile wind is again evoked; the sterility of sex alluded to with the rape of Philomel. The wife asks the husband about the wind at the door; it is death, or the death rattle; some have thought that the scene is a depiction of Eliot's wife Vivien asking Eliot about Jean Verdenal's death. The lines as originally written read: "I remember the hyacinth garden. Those are pearls that were his eyes, yes!", but were edited to "I remember
the hyacinth garden. Those are pearls that were his eyes, yes!", but the meaning in either reading is that the husband is thinking both of the hyacinth girl and ofthe phoenician sailor. This is then followed by the discussion in a pub of another sterile outcome, Liz's abortion.
- So make of it what you will, I suppose, but transformation, sterility, hope, and death are all joined together here. - Nunh-huh 02:35, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Or just a colorful description of clouded over dead eyes. -- Cyrius|✎ 07:07, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)
"Apple in the Chapel" incident at Knox
This was a notorious incident in Australia quite a while ago. Can anyone give me a references to an article, or point me in the right direction? Doug Mulray got sued by Knox I believe. - Ta bu shi da yu 01:41, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Oceania or Australasia?
I am confused about which is the more correct name for the 'continent' housing Australia, New Zealand and the other small islands around there.
Neither the Oceania or Australasia articles states which is 'correct' but Australasia does seem to have more history.
Which is the generally accepted one these days, Oceania or Australasia? --Kevin 01:49, Jan 1, 2005 (UTC)
- Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think Australasia was the name of the tectonic plate housing Australia and Asia. So my guess would be Oceania of there's no other options. Mgm|(talk) 15:04, Jan 1, 2005 (UTC)
controlled aviation simulator
Do you have any info on a controlled aviation simulator? The disk is not a game and does not have a joy stick...but more, Thanks and Happy New Year, Adrianna, @ ... awire253yahoo.com
Adding links to external material
- moved to Wikipedia:Help desk DJ Clayworth 01:36, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
220 V from 110 V Breaker box.
How do I get 220V from a "D" breakerbox?.....Alex
- In standard North American residential electrical service, there's three lines coming off the pole into your house: one neutral, and two "hot". Each of the hot lines is 110V AC, but they are 180° out of phase with each other. For a normal 110V outlet, you connect to the neutral and one of the hots. To get 220V you connect to both hot lines.
- You'll want to use a double-pole circuit breaker. I'd suggest consulting an electrician, or at least reading the Electircal Wiring FAQ. -- Cyrius|✎ 02:38, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Or alternatively (and probably safer) go out and buy yourself a 2:1 transformer, wire it up, plug it in and use that. For low current devices that will work fine. I used it for stereos, blenders and stuff like that. (Not microwaves or heaters). DJ Clayworth 06:10, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I'm not getting something here. The voltage of an AC signal ranges from to relative to ground, yes? So if I get two of these signals, half a cycle out of phase, and add them, shouldn't I get zero? --Smack (talk) 16:57, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC)
changing wikipedia
So why was the editing pages locked for an hour or so?--Wonderfool 07:30, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Routine database maintenance that lasted longer than it should. I believe Jamesday has already been chastized for its length. -- Cyrius|✎ 08:47, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Germanic tribes: Sugambri, Sigambrer or Sicambri or Sigambrer (or Sugumbrer)
There are two articles Sugambri and Sigambrer which interlink suggesting that they are talking about the same topic, but don't say so clearly and have completely independent facts. They also end up giving five separate names all of which are variations on parts of each other. I'd like to know if this is all one and the same tribe? Should these articles be merged? Where did all these names come from? Azikala 10:26, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- From a little light Googling and my own books I see that Sigambrer mainly appears in German language sources and Sugambri on English ones. The names of iron age tribes often got mangled by the time they reached the ears of the Roman historians who wrote them down so they could all be the same people with variant spellings. I haven't any proof of this though and wouldn't feel comfortable merging them on this basis alone as they could have been neighbours who had similar names due to shared ancestry or something. adamsan 12:53, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Eaton, Leicestershire
- moved from article space BrokenSegue 18:41, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Anyone have any history on Eaton, Leicestershire, next village from Eastwell? Any would be appreciated... missy290370@yahoo.com User:82.3.32.72
ancient timekeeping
if you lived in 353 b.c., and someone asked what the date is today, what would the reply be
It would depend on where the person lived. If you asked a Roman, he or she would reply "400 anni ab urbe condita." alteripse 00:35, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC) Actually that gives you the year, not the date. Shall we say, "tres dies ante nones Ianuarii"? I'm probably off a day or a month, but you get the idea... right? alteripse 00:40, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC) They'd be more likely to describe the year as "The year of the consulship of C. Sulpicius Peticus and M. Valerius Poplicola" - see List of Republican Roman Consuls. -- Arwel 02:53, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC) I yield to your superior answer for the year. Did I get the day right after 3 tries? alteripse 03:32, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Most cultures have measured years from the beginning of the reign of the current monarch, e.g. "the xth year of the reign of King X". This applies to A.D. dates as well as B.C., and is still in use in Japan today (2005 is the 17th year of Heisei). I believe the use of A.D. years is relatively recent. --Auximines 10:36, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The UK used the practice of dating by regnal years in a legal context until (I think) the 1960s, following on from English practice - I have several legal books that cite, say, "1 Geo. I §2 c.5" for what modern style would title the "Riot Act 1715" (and Kipling, bless him, even managed to work "Georgii Quinti Anno Sexto" - 1916 - into verse) Shimgray 16:33, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Anno Domini dates have been used since the 7th century. See the section "The popularization of Anno Domini" in that article. The article calendar era compares year numbering systems in several calendars. User:Alteripse seems to be groping towards ante diem tertium Nonas Ianuarias. (ante takes the accusative and nonae is feminine plural.) Gdr 13:07, 2005 Jan 3 (UTC)
January 3 is the fifth day before the nones though, isn't it? The nones are on the seventh in a month with 31 days, so it's four days later, plus the day you are currently in. Adam Bishop 21:27, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- But Ianuarius had 29 days until the Julian calendar reform, so the Nones were on the 5th. See Roman calendar. Gdr 01:30, 2005 Jan 8 (UTC)
symtoms of imminent hard drive failure
My wife's computer is misbehaving and I suspect that the hard drive is in the process of going bad. Before going to the trouble and expense of replacing the drive, I want to be more confident that this is actually the source of the problem. What I'd really like is a list of common symptoms of an ailing hard drive. ike9898 00:38, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)
- I have no idea, but if you even think the hard drive may be going be sure you have a backup. DJ Clayworth 04:01, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- If your hard drive is making a clicking sound, that's the kiss of death. →Raul654 04:11, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)
- Weird noise, random lock-ups, random bluescreens (on Nt/2k/xp: 98 has them anyway). Stuff to look for especially are occasional failures to identify the HDD at boot (if your BIOS reports this), and lockups or reboots when running a scandisk or defrag. User:Anárion/sig 07:55, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Before you do anything, make a backup (the cost of replacing a hard drive is vanishingly small compared with the cost to regenerate the work you store on it). Diagnosis by sound is imperfect, as noisy fan bearings or loose panels can make a variety of suspicious sounds too, and the failure modalities Anárion suggests can also occur due to software problems or hardware problems unrelated to the hard drive. Modern hard-drives collect a lot of information about their operation. By using a utility to query this information, you can check for impending failure. ATA/IDE drives usually feature SMART; you can query a given drive's SMART statistics using a number of commercial programs or open source program smartmontools. The documentation for the tool you use should tell you how to interpret the data it produces (i.e. how to distinuish between humdrum errors and auguries of doom). If you chose to use smartmontools, I'd recommend burning a CD or floppy with one of the diagnostic linux releases that contain smartmontools (listed on its website) so you can run it without having to install anything on a drive about which you are already dubious. -- John Fader 14:05, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Drug for Alcoholics
A wile ago I heard that Trails were being performed with a experamental drug that controlls the urge to drink in alcoholics. What is it ? Did it prove to be effective and safe ? How can I get some in South Africa ? I need to save a alcoholic father's life !!
I think the drug is called 'Acamprosate', branded Campral® or Aotal® in France. It's produced by Merck-Lipha. Another drug is called Naltrexone and is approved by the FDA. I think you can get it in an online pharmacy; but, you should consult a doctor first and try to detoxicate the person before taking these drugs. Hope that helps you.
http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/08/19/alcoholism.cnna/index.html
M0rph 13:17, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Electro Plating metals
I am involved in restorstion of motor cars and need to do small scale plating. Specificaly Copper, Chrome and cadmium. What do I need to get started ? What are the chemicals and their "Recipes" required ? How is it done ?
Thanks for helping, Bennie.
The mysterious Swedish fricative
Hi, I may need a native Swedish speaker and linguist on this one.
I've just added a page for the swedish "sj" sound, which a previous contributor gave as [ɧ] (X-Sampa x\) but also named the "Voiceless dorso-palatal velar fricative".
I have tried reading up on the system of naming the consonants by place of articulation and airflow, and as far as I can tell, this isn't a very good name for it. The consonant is articulated in two places: The palate (like the 'voiceless palatal fricative' X-Sampa C2) and the narrowed lips (like the Japanese "voiceless bilabial fricative" X-Sampa Pslash). Given that, isn't it more accurate to call it the "voiceless dorso-palato-bilabial fricative" or something?
Also, what's the correct Kirschenbaum for this consonant?
Many thanks, --Steverapaport 16:50, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I'm not a fan of ascii phonetic transcription nor an expert in Swedish phonetics & phonology, but I do have a book that has a little on this sound. I have enclosed all sounds in brackets instead of using boldface like the book. Here we go:
- Finally in this survey of possible fricative gestures, we must consider some more complicated possibilites....Some dialects of Swedish have a fricative that has been said to have two or even three articulatory constrictions (Abercrombie 1967). We do not, however, think it is correct for more than one of these constrictions to be considered a fricative articulation. There is good data available on the Swedish sibilant fricatives (Lindblad 1980) allowing us to consider these sounds in detail.
- Swedish has four phonologically distinct fricative gestures. The contrasting sounds are sometimes symbolized [f], [s], [ɕ], [ɧ]; in addition, in Standard Swedish, there is a retroflex fricative [ʂ], which is, phonologically, the sequence of /rs/. The first two of these, [f] and [s], do not need extensive comment.... The other two, [ɕ], [ɧ]; are more difficult to describe. The basic descriptive problem is one of geographical, social, and stylistic variation....
- The fourth Swedish fricative, usually symbolized by <ɧ>, is the most interesting. Lindblad describes two common variants of Swedish [ɧ]. The first, for which he uses a different symbol, he calls a highly rounded, labiodental, velar or velarized fricative. A redrawn version of his x-ray tracing is shown in figure 5.27. Lindblad suggests that the source of frication is between the lower lip and the upper teeth, and it certainly appears to be so from his x-ray. He also demonstrates that the upper lip is considerably protruded in comparison with its position with that in the gesture of [i]. In addition to these anterior gestures, Lindblad notes that the "tongue body is raised and retracted towards the velum to form a fairly narrow constriction. (The presence of this constriction is constant, but not its width or location, which vary considerably.)" The posterior constriction in this variety of [ɧ] is not great enough to be itself a source of turbulence, so that, although this sound may have three notable constrictions, one in the velar region, one labiodental, and a lesser one between the two lips, only the labiodental constriction is a source of friction.
- The second common variant of Swedish [ɧ], illustrated in figure 5.28, is described by Lindblad as a "dorsovelar voiceless fricative" pronounced with the jaw more open and without the lip protrusion that occurs in the other variety. Lindblad suggests that the difference between this sound and the more usual velar fricative [x] is that the latter "is formed with low frequency irregular vibrations in the saliva at the constriction" (Lindblad 1980, our translation). We infer from his descriptions and diagrams that this variant of [ɧ] has less frication, and may be slightly further forward than the velar fricative [x] commonly found in other languages. Lindblad claims that between the extreme positions of the labiodental [ɧ] and the more velar [ɧ], "there are a number of intermediate types with various jaw and lip positions, including some with both anterior and posterior sound sources." As we note in chapter 10, we doubt that it is possible to produce turbulence at two points in mouth simultaneouly for ordinary linguistic purposes. (Ladefoged & Maddieson 1996: 171-172)
- Lindblad's demonstrations of his own pronuciations of some of the fricatives that occur in different Swedish dialects are shown in figure 5.31. He notes that these sounds may be characterized to a great extent by the frequency of the lower edge of the band of fricative noise. For the three sibilants [s], [ʂ], [ ʃ ] on the left of the figure, this frequency gradually descends. (It is somewhat surprising that it should be lower in [ ʃ ], than in [ʂ].) In the palatalized post-alveolar sibilant [ɕ] in the lower left of the figure there is a less sharp lower frequency cut off, as there is in the palatal fricative [ç] opposite it on the lower right side; [ɕ] differs from [ç] by having a higher mean spectral energy. The rounded fricatives in the upper right part of the figure have a strong low frequency peak. Both [ ʃʷ] and [ɧ] also have a low frequency peak, as well as a considerable amount of energy in the region just above 4 kHz. (Ladefoged & Maddieson 1996: 173-174)
- The other preliminary matter to be considered concerns the possibility of multiply-articulated fricatives. It is clear that generation of audible friction at two different locations in the oral cavity at the same time is very difficult. As noted in chapter 3, a fricative requires a more precise adjustment of the articulators than a stop or an approximant. The size of the inter-articulator aperture and the velocity of the airflow must be within critical limits for friction to be generated. To achieve two of these critical adjustments at the same time, especially when the flow requirements might be different for different places, is obviously problematical. From the auditory point of view, even if two sources of friction exist, the one further forward in the mouth is very likely to mask the acoustic effect of the more rearward one. Doubly-articulated fricatives would therefore seem to be linguisticall undesirable segments; they are hard to produce and poorly distinctive. Nonetheless, in a small number of languages it has been claimed that such segments do occur. We have examined some of these cases and found them to be instances of either fricative segments with a secondary articulation, or instances of a sequence of two fricatives that has been interpreted as a single segment for phonological reasons.
- The most well-known case is the Swedish segment that has been described as a doubly-articulated voiceless palato-alveoar-velar fricative, i.e., [ ʃ͡x]. The IPA even goes so far as to provide a separate symbol for this sound on its chart, namely <ɧ>. The sound in question is one variant of the pronunciation of the phonological element [ ʃ ], which is highly variable in Swedish dialects, receiving pronunciations ranging from a palatalized bilabial sound to a velarized palato-alveolar one to a fully velar one. As we showed in chapter 5 it is not clear that any of the variants is actually a doubly-articulated fricative. (Ladefoged & Maddieson 1996: 329-330)
- References:
- Abercrombie, David. (1967). Elements of general phonetics. Chicago: Aldine.
- Ladefoged, Peter; & Maddieson, Ian. (1996). The sounds of the world's languages. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.
- Lindblad, Per. (1980). Svenskans sje- och tje-ljud i ett Allmänfonetisk Perspektiv. Travaux de l'Institut de Linguistique de Lund 16. Lund: C. W. K. Gleerup.
- References:
- Maybe too informative, but please enjoy. Cheers! - Ish ishwar 21:09, 2005 Jan 3 (UTC)
- Beautiful, Ish! Thanks! Just what I needed. I understand a few things from this:
- 1. That there are several different ways to pronounce this sound, so it's not worth my trying too hard to pin it down.
- 2. That the way I pronounce it and hear it pronounced (in Stockholm) would fall under the "palatalized bilabial sound".
- 3. That my contention of the doubly-articulated fricative was inaccurate -- what I meant was "either fricative segments with a secondary articulation, or instances of a sequence of two fricatives that has been interpreted as a single segment for phonological reasons." To tell the truth I could pronounce "sj" just fine in either of those two ways.
- 4. And finally that this is an even more mysterious subject than I'd thought, and I'm unlikely to get it right on the first try, or even on the first Masters' thesis.... :-)
- By the way, just saying "phew" after all that turns out to be a pretty good approximation of [ɧ], and I'll write that too.
- Many thanks and cheers,
- \ Steverapaport 22:19, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I was about to write on this before I discovered that Ish Ishwar had already done so. There was a line confusing me, which I've now removed. I hope this doesn't disturb anyone. Unfortunately, there are lots of signs that this computer present as empty squares. I understand that to be IPA-characters, but I can not comment on them at the moment.
- After this long quote, I may instead make a few more functional and anectdotical comments:
- This subject touches on one of the major problems for students of Swedish, i.e. the absense of one single norm for pronounciation. In the case of English, it's easier to understand, with the huge distances and so on. For Swedish, the matter is further complicated by most Swedes being unaware or denying the great variances between "high-status varieties" of Swedish as spoken in Lund, Uppsala, Helsinki, Gothenburg or Umeå - this is particularly disturbing as it includes teachers of the language and writers of text books on Swedish, and even textbooks on phonetics written in Swedish: People know of lexical differences, but do typically believe that their own pronounciation is "the most common" and that other pronounciations can be categorized as more or less distinct "dialects". Australians, Indians, British and Americans do at least recognize that they pronounce differently - the Swedes do not, and put up a blank face when asked about it.
- I'm not knowing enough to make a comprehensive list of such differences, but
- the assimilation of 'rs', 'rd', 'rt' and 'rl is surely one
- my personal experience is that foreigners better do not, unless one is firmly located within the area where people do so. They who assimilate 'r' understand you if you don't, but they who don't assimilate may get problems to understand you if you have also other marks of a foreign accent.
- the extremely confusing distribution of what the Swedes call "sje-sounds" and "tje-sounds". There is a whole series of sounds, I believe, and the lengthy quote above is probably not totally comprehensive.
- Chief problem is that the way some people realize the tje-phonem (kära, tjära, kjortel) to my ears sounds exactly as how others pronounce the sje-phonem (skära, skjorta, sked). To make it just a little bit more complicated: I believe some Swedish speakers furthermore make a difference between kära and tjära — but most do probably not.
- The solution for the student of Swedish can be to ignore this issue and strive to use one sound for both of these phonems, which results in a situation like when some foreigners neglect the difference between "living" and "leaving" in English.
- Or one could strive to use the most distant realizations in order to enhance the chances to get understood, which also will sound wrong to a native ear, but relatively comprehensible.
- the assimilation of 'rs', 'rd', 'rt' and 'rl is surely one
- I'm not knowing enough to make a comprehensive list of such differences, but
- In the latter case, one need to use X-SAMPA /S/ or something similar for kära and the bi-labial X-SAMPA /p\/ sound in words as skära, skjorta, sked, sjuksköterska. When I learned that sound, we were a group of native Germans who used half a day trying to whistle a tune and then immediately continue humming on different vowels. After some exercise, we could all say sked, skära, sjuk, sköterska but to put that sound in the midsth of a word, as in magsjuk or sjuksköterska turned out to be even more demanding...
- --Ruhrjung 15:12, 2005 Jan 4 (UTC)
- P.S. Readers of Swedish can see this confusion illustrated at a Swedish-language cousin to Wikipedia: http://susning.nu/Sje-ljud --Ruhrjung 15:26, 2005 Jan 4 (UTC)
- Thanks to all, I've fixed the page to my satisfaction now. Edit away! Steverapaport 16:30, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Adding a link from Celebrities Worldwide the Celebrity contacts service for the media and entertainment industry
Please could you be kind enough to advise how I may be able to propose adding Link(s)
kind regards
Richard (Brecker) tel: + 44 (0) 20 7836 7705 and mobile + 44 (0) 7836 246 777
Joint Managing Director
Upfront Television (established 1991) and Celebrities Worldwide (est.2000)www.celebritiesworldwide.com the online Celebrity contacts service for the media and entertainment industry
39-41 New Oxford Street
London WC1A 1BN
Fax: +44 (0)20 7836 7701
- I looked at Mr. Brecker's site and it's a subscription-based service that supplies the contact information for celebrities' agents, managers, lawyers, publicists, etc. A link from an individual article to this site seems inappropriate and not useful to our users. One person I queried his site for, Katie Holmes, came up with a statement information was available but I'd have to pay to see it. But finding out her agent (or that of many Hollywood types) is a simple matter--call the Screen Actors Guild or whatever union they're in. PedanticallySpeaking 19:44, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)
Anti-randomness
(moved here from Wikipedia:Village pump (miscellaneous))
This has absolutely nothing to do with the Wikipedia, except that hopefully someone smart will read this, and there might be an article written about it already. A friend of mine is at a casino, which is having a contest. Whoever correctly guesses a 7-digit combination on a combination padlock wins a semi. (My friend is a trucker, and the casino gets a lot of business from truckers.) It seems to me that one way of improving the odds is to pick an "anti-random" number - a number not likely to have already been chosen at "random" by the last few thousand truckers. I'm not sure what the correct term for this is, but I'm sure there is one. I'm also sure that someone has already done a study on this somewhere, because it would be very useful for password cracking, and, of course, gambling. Does anybody know what the correct term for an "anti-random" number is, and where a good resource for selecting such a number might be located? (Of course, I'm sure the casino has the information, but "hacking the Gibson" doesn't seem like a good idea!) Also, assuming there is already an article written on this concept, it needs to be linked to from the random article. crazyeddie 05:22, 26 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I've heard of this sort of thing, but also have no idea what it's called. Sorry. -- Cyrius|✎ 07:34, 26 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Statisticians or mathematicians might know. Maurreen
Hmmm. While statisticians or mathematicians would probably be familar with the concept, at least enough to know the right name, I don't think they'd deal with it too much. I'm thinking cryptographers would know more about it. At any rate, this is about the only place I know of where I stand a good chance of running into somebody who knows something about it. crazyeddie 19:10, 26 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Don't know the term but reminds me that I've always wanted to buy a lotto ticket with the number 1,2,3,4,5,6 (in NZ you choose six numbers from 1-40). It is just as likely as any combination but I'm not sure that it has ever occurred. It would be interesting to find out what the winning combinations have been. Evil Monkey → Talk 00:54, Dec 27, 2004 (UTC)
I'm sure the winning combinations are random, but I remember something about it being a good thing to choose an "anti-random" number for such lotteries, since it will reduce the chances of having to share the prize with someone who also choose the winning combination. However, in this case, as more people choose "random" numbers, ruling out commonly picked numbers, the chances of the actual combination being an "anti-random" one goes up. And that's assuming that the casino didn't purposefully choose an "anti-random" number to put off the payoff as long as possible. crazyeddie 01:13, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
I'm not any kind of statistics expert, but I would suspect that in trying to outguess in a system where humans are doing most of the "random number" generation, you'd be better served to choose a more truly random number, since humans (either deliberately, by using birthdates and so forth, or accidentally, through some kind of unconscious bias towards certain numbers or the general feeling that sequences having "order", like 1,2,3,4,5,6, are somehow less likely) are already picking the less-random ones. In such a system, I would think it'd be best to say "what sequences are humans less likely to choose?" (assuming most other humans are not using a similar approach; if they are, then you're trying to guess what sequences are less likely to be chosen by people who are already trying to guess the unlikelier-to-be-chosen sequences. "But you must have known that I was not a great fool; you would have counted on it, so I can clearly not choose the wine in front of me.") -- Wapcaplet 21:10, 29 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- So by your quote you are suggesting that we shouldn't pick any of the numbers and buy tickets because we will lose either way? :-) —Mike 04:09, Dec 30, 2004 (UTC)
- That's what I meant by "anti-random" - sequences humans aren't likely to choose. I'm using "anti-random" for the time being because I have no freakin' clue what the real term is. crazyeddie 06:08, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I have read of a similar question concerning a state lottery (I can't remember the citation). The advise was to pick numbers greater than 31, because a lot of people used their birthdays to choose their numbers. That advise makes it more likely that the player would choose numbers that other players did not choose. Morris 23:28, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)
- 1) I think "Anti-random" is the wrong word. In software testing that term means choosing inputs pecificially to be as far from all the previous values as possible. Actually, I suppose that is one way to describe what you want, except it implies knowledge of the previous picks.
- 2) If I wanted to generate a "Crazyeddie Random" number, I would look at historical lotto results - specifically the draws for which there were no winners. I would weight my random number generator to favor those numbers which came up most often in the losing draws, on the theory that those are the ones least often picked by humans. I would also randomly shuffle the picked numbers, to avoid any kind of consious ordering. -Key45 00:43, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Well, I guess I have two actual questions. Firstly, what is the correct term for what I'm talking about, and secondly, what resources are there out there on the web for selecting these sorts of numbers - like historical lotto results. crazyeddie 06:51, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I suppose this is not a problem of statistics at all, but one of sociology, because the distribution of numbers picked will probably depend on age and education of the pickers (e.g. if your method becomes really famous, you'd have to go back to picking truly random numbers). Here are two relevant links I found: http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=1355&part=index&refpage=monthindex.php http://www.wilmott.com/messageview.cfm?catid=26&threadid=17247&STARTPAGE=1&FTVAR_MSGDBTABLE= dab (ᛏ) 18:01, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Yeah, it's not a problem of statistics, but I figured a statistician might know enough about the effect to pin the correct term on it. It would also vary from culture to culture - in America, 13 would be picked at a different rate than other numbers, while in Japan, something similar would happen with 4 (one way of saying 4 in Japanese is the same word as "death", so 4 is an unlucky number). I wouldn't expect "my" method would be used enough to make a difference in the overall results, at least in the case I'm talking about. (Most of the clients of the casino are truckers - one friend said "pick any number besides 1234567".) The results would probably also vary depending on the range of the possible choices - dates would probably be used for six digit numbers more often than for five digits.
The two links aren't directly related, but I wonder what would happen if one set a darwinian algorithim up against human players at the means game and/or ro-sham-bo. crazyeddie 23:15, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Anti-Randomness: yes it is (mathematically sort-of-precise). More precisely, the concept of "most random" and "more random" finite sequences of a given length over a given alphabet is well-defined. You can start with a search for Gregory J. Chaitin's work (or if you have Knuth vol. 2 at hand, the only reference to Chaitin in that volume is about this). Kolmogorov came up with this independently IIRC, but he did so much work in probability/statistics and various other branches of mathematics and mathematical physics that you'll be likely deluged if you google him.
--- mp from Calcutta India
Looks like a case of same term (which I choose at, heh, random), different concept. A Crazyeddie "random" number is a number which is picked by humans when they are asked to pick a random number at a greater rate than predicted by pure chance. A Crazyeddie "anti-random" number is one that is selected less than the rate predicted by pure chance. crazyeddie 10:40, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Maximum speed of DVD and CD drives
Is there a maximum speed for a DVD recorder/reader? Is it different for plus, minus, DL or RAM? Is there a maximum for CDRW drives? Why can't CD drives go faster than 50x?
- My cd drive goes 52x. Off the top of my head, spinning faster poses a risk of shattering the disk. From the CD-ROM article:
- CD-ROM drives are rated with a speed factor relative to music CDs (1x or 1-speed which gives a data transfer rate of 150 kilobytes per second in the most common data format). For example, an 8x CD-ROM data transfer rate would be 1.2 megabytes per second. Above 12x speed, there are problems with vibration and heat. Constant angular velocity (CAV) drives give speeds up to 20x but due to the nature of CAV the actual throughput increase over 12x is less than 20/12. 20x was thought to be the maximum speed due to mechanical constraints until February 1998, when Samsung Electronics introduced the SCR-3230, a 32x CD-ROM drive which uses a ball bearing system to balance the spinning disc in the drive to reduce noise. As of 2004, the fastest transfer rate commonly available is about 52x or about 7.8 megabytes per second, though this is only available when reading information from the outer parts of a disc.
- From the DVD-ROM article:
- The data transfer rate of a DVD drive is given in multiples of 1350 kB/s, which means that a drive with 16x speed designation allows a data transfer rate of 16 x 1350 = 21600 kB/s (21.09 MB/s). As CD drive speeds are given in mulitples of 150 kB/s, one DVD "speed" equals nine CD "speeds", i.e. 8x DVD drive should have data transfer rate similar to 72x CD drive (which do not exist). In physical rotation terms (spins per second), one DVD "speed" equals three CD "speeds", so the amount of data that are read during one rotation is three times larger for DVD than for CD and 8x DVD drive has the same rotational speed as 24x CD drive.
- --Alterego 06:43, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
- The maximum hypothetical speed for such devices depends on the materials involved. No, really.
- I have not seen the episode, but Mythbusters has reportedly quoted the CD manufacturers as stating that they don't see a need to go faster than 56x. Their testing indicated that it would take 100,000 rpm to cause a non-abused CD to fall apart. Standard 1x CD rotation is in the realm of 500 rpm, meaning you'd need a 200x drive. Given that at 1x speed, the linear speed is roughly 1.2 m/s, this translates into the edge of the CD moving at about 70% of the speed of sound.
- However, destructive testing by people with too much time on their hands indicates that the average CD will self-destruct somewhere in the realm of 30,000 rpm.
- I'd imagine that right now the maximum speed for DVDs is limited by the host computer's ability to transfer data, but that's just speculation. -- Cyrius|✎ 07:02, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The maximum data transfer rate for DVDs is not even close to the data transfer capabilities of modern computer buses. Modern SCSI buses can handle 320 MB/s. And new bus designs are much faster; see for example InfiniBand. In theory you could make faster optical media drives using multiple read heads and appropriate track layout on the disk. (This is one of the ways in which hard drives have become faster.) However, the resulting disks wouldn't be compatible with older drives. Gdr 11:43, 2005 Jan 4 (UTC)
- Yes, there are big, fast connections out there. I was speaking of the average ordinary desktop computer. Besides, at 320 MB/s, where are you going to put the data? -- Cyrius|✎ 13:04, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Seagate Cheetah 15K.4 37 GB HDD. "Up to 320 Mbyte-per second throughput and faster sustained transfer rate" =) --Alterego 18:01, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
- Like anyone believes a hard drive manufacturer's numbers on speed. :) -- Cyrius|✎ 18:08, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Just ask one of the techs. Ariel is running six of these bad boys (the .3 not the point .4 same transfer rate) at 73GB a piece. See also the May 2004 hardware order. --Alterego 18:20, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
- I myself was interested in this so I asked a bit in #mediawiki (you were in there so you probably have it logged). What I was basically told was that the max that has been seen on Ariel is 40MBps, but this is because she doesn't use throughput, but in-out per second. She's still a babe ;) --Alterego 19:30, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
- Just ask one of the techs. Ariel is running six of these bad boys (the .3 not the point .4 same transfer rate) at 73GB a piece. See also the May 2004 hardware order. --Alterego 18:20, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
- Like anyone believes a hard drive manufacturer's numbers on speed. :) -- Cyrius|✎ 18:08, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Seagate Cheetah 15K.4 37 GB HDD. "Up to 320 Mbyte-per second throughput and faster sustained transfer rate" =) --Alterego 18:01, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
- Yes, there are big, fast connections out there. I was speaking of the average ordinary desktop computer. Besides, at 320 MB/s, where are you going to put the data? -- Cyrius|✎ 13:04, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Drive backup software?
Is there a free software equivalent of Norton Ghost? -- Toytoy 16:10, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
- It's hardly fancy, but if you just want to wholesale clone drives or (better) partitions you can use dd, which is available on unix and windows. -- John Fader 16:18, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Perhaps g4u will suit you. —AlanBarrett 16:49, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Does anybody know the name of Pomegranate seeds?
I've spent hours on the internet and nobody knows it. I am about to loose a bet if I do not come up with the name in 2 days. Please HELP. TK (Please email me if you know it at:thomaskerenyi@aol.com)
- Probably because nobody would think that the seeds of apples or oranges, let alone pomegranates, even had a name. And about losing a bet, you seem really desperate. PoccilScript 03:23, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I think they're called pips, although that might just refer to the bit of tissue that surrounds each seed. Rhymeless (Er...let's shimmy) 04:35, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- They're pips. I have cookbooks that call them that. Considering that it gets a fair number of hits on Google, I'd consider it an attested usage. Diderot 08:47, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- All seeds are called "pips", whether or not they are from pomegranates. -- Dominus 12:48, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Not exactly off topic, but there was a long standing problem in mathematics to prove what the optimum method of packing spheres is. Johannes Kepler approached the problem in 1661 by considering how the seeds in a pomegranate would expand to fill the available space as the fruit grows. Unfortunately our article on the Kepler conjecture doesn't mention this, but a search for 'Kepler' and 'pomegranate' only seems to give results that call the seeds 'pomegranate seeds'. -- Solipsist 19:34, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Computer trouble =
Computer boots up fine, but no picture. No signal at all. Replaced video card with a new one (PNY GeForceFX 5700LE), still no picture. What could be the problem? Masterhomer 16:42, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Well, I assume you've already checked the obvious (bad monitor/monitor-cable/kvmSwitch). Given you can't see anything, what convinces you that it is indeed booting okay? If it echoes pings then something is wrong in video land, if not then it can be any number of hardware problems (do you get the diagnostic beeps?). Oh, and make sure your motherboard doesn't have onboard video too (i.e. that you've plugged the monitor into the wrong video port). -- John Fader 18:49, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
compartment syndrome
how is it possible to find an expert witness on this subject? I need to be able to maybe find someone who is an expert on this subject so that I could get them to testify that my son had compartment syndrome and he was realeased from the hospital the day after his surgery.I just dont know where to look for this.
- Well, if you know he had compartment syndrome you could always use whoever diagnosed it... Speak to your doctor, who should be able to give you the name of someone who can point out a specialist. Shimgray 18:36, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC) (NB: This information is worth exactly as much as you paid for it)
- Shimgray, the message isn't clear, but the phrasing suggests this person isn't interested in an opinion as to whether the son acutally had compartment syndrome, but rather wants to find a doctor willing to support a lawsuit. A malpractice lawyer won't have any trouble finding an expert if the case is clear. On the other hand, looking here for an expert witness suggests a do-it-yourself "lawyer" with lots to learn or that the inquirer's lawyer's experts have already said the case isn't so clear, but the inquirer doesn't like those opinions. Ah, the wonderful American legal system! alteripse 04:09, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Rose Bowl
In years when the Rose Bowl football game is not scheduled on January 1st (like next year, when the game is scheduled to be played on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2006), does the Rose Bowl parade still happen on January 1st ? - Bevo 20:36, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)
roman mouse diet
do you know what is the nutritional value of mice and rats e.g. edible dormice?
- Sure, just look on the package. It says one dormouse has 34 g protein, 4 g fat, but less than 1 g carbs (so Dr Atkinus would approve). But notice that it says a serving is only 1 mouse, and who eats just one once the package is opened? Rats I wouldn't touch-- nobody but the plebs eat those and only when the corn ships are late. alteripse 04:15, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I'd imagine it'd be similar to squirrel meat, nutritionally. But that's just a guess. -- Cyrius|✎ 05:10, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Or hamsters, but it may be just as tricky to find someone who offhand knows nutritional values for them (I'm told they're really quite nice, it's just impolitic to cook them here). Shimgray 14:53, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Uh huh. foodie to the rescue: I suggest that you contact this link with this question directly. They will not only provide the nutritional content of mice, rats, dormice, squirrels, hamsters, and other vermints, but also safe cooking techniques and precautions for handling critters with sharp little teeth. Essential advice for any culinary adventurers: http://food.oregonstate.edu/
One question does beg another: Do you live in Rome, or do you just import Roman mice? Or is that the name of a new diet?
Fighter Lead-In Trainer Course
Hi there,
I am looking for a place where they train conduct FLIT course. Preferably from the European countries and allow the contract be handled by an agent, i.e. not a G-to-G thing.
Thank you.
Who is William J. Bell?
When was this man born and where? How did he jump into the scriptwriting business? Any data would be of great use?
He's a long-time soap opera writer and producer. You can find his credits at imdb.com, but it doesn't say why he jumped into scriptwriting. RickK 08:20, Jan 11, 2005 (UTC)
electronics fluorescent light
please i want u to send me some literature review about electronics fluorescent light.i need it to complete my project.please you can send it to my mail if icant get the reply right now. my mail is clementito_1@yahoo.com. thanks
English word for ma'amoul?
There is a type of snack called "ma'amoul" in Arabic. (I hope I got that right. The actual Arabic spelling is meem-ayn-meem-waw-lam.) What is it called in English?
- A bit of Googling shows that other people have called them:
- "nut filled cookies"
- "Easter cakes"
- "semoilina cookies"
See [1], [2] -- The Anome 18:39, Jan 6, 2005 (UTC)
- I've seen it for sale in Philadelphia under the name "mamool" and various other spellings. -- Dominus 20:06, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Defined Benefit Plan
I am interested in understanding the differences between defined benefit plan and defined contribution plan.
Can anyone help? No pages exist.
Thank you,
Jay
twominute00 AT hotmail.com
ps. I have no idea where to get the answer, so please email me with your post!
Recipe For Tortilla Pinwheels
Please, help..I need to know the recipe fopr Tortilla Pinwheels. Urgently. All I remember from the recipe is that it has olives and chiles in it, and you twist the ends..and it chills overnight.
--Tina
- Wikipedia is not a search engine, which would have answered your question in seconds. -- Cyrius|✎ 01:35, 7 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Please don't bite the newcomers. If these sorts of questions bother you, then just ignore them. There are plenty of people here who are more than happy to offer friendly help. --David Iberri | Talk 17:56, Jan 7, 2005 (UTC)
- Doesn't look like a bite to me. The question was answered and useful additional advice on the utility of search engines given. Terse, maybe, but not rude. --Tagishsimon (talk)
Uh huh. Well, Tina. I do a lot of research on food history. Here is a very comprehensive link with a lot more than you need to know. It's a lot better than Google (why does always say: Do a Google?) because it'll not only provide recipes, but recipes for EVERYTHING you need to know, and the history, nutritional value, food safety, heck - they'll snail mail you a chef as well: http://food.oregonstate.edu/ So: Share those pinwheels? Best Regards,--allie 22:21, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Arabic script for "oud"?
I know that in Arabic, the oud is al-ūd, but how would you write that in Arabic script? Thanks for the help, Gelu Ignisque
"oud" is written like this:
عُود
--Auximines 22:33, 7 Jan 2005 (UTC)
about wikipedia picture
I've asked in the talk page, but no one answered. So I'll try here. The picture is in here Image:Sojourner Rover taking measurements (large).jpg, and the question is in here Image talk:Sojourner Rover taking measurements (large).jpg. Roscoe x 06:28, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Answered there with links and stuff. In brief: Pathfinder had a lander with a camera on it. -- Cyrius|✎ 07:34, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Help about relation between various categories and their hierarchy.
We are the GNU project working at TIFR under the guidance of Dr.Nagarjuna G. We had previously enquired about the hierarchy of categories.You had directed us to categorylink table.But we are unable to understand the hierarchy of the categories from that.We request you to tell us how the hierarchy is maintained.For eg: Anarchism has category Political Theories. This category has sub-categories like Nazism and Marxism. We need to such hierarchy and not the categories to which a particular article belongs to.
We would be grateful to you if we get some information about the above.
Thanking you. --[anon]
- There seem to be some words missing from your question (between "to" and "such"). Gdr 13:46, 2005 Jan 8 (UTC)
- Like all of Wikipedia, the categories are defined and linked by many different users over time. Even if there was some "defined" hierarchy, there would be variances. However, there is no defined hierarchy. From Wikipedia:Categorisation FAQ:
- The software feature does not force a strict hierarchy or tree of categories, but allows multiple categorisation schemes to co-exist simultaneously. Because each article can appear in more than one category, and each category to appear in more than one parent categories, the categories do not form a tree structure, but a more general directed graph. It is even possible to construct loops in the category graph, but this is seldom a good idea.
- I hope this helps. -Rholton 03:19, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
what is colour for?
Too good a question to ignore. Inasmuch as "colour" is the human perception of light, I'd say that the perception of colour provides important survival advantages in the interaction of the individual with the environment, notably the identification of prey and food. Sharkford 14:53, 2005 Jan 9 (UTC)
Animals can perceive light, too. Bees see well into the infrared range, and infrared photography I've seen of flowers show that some of them actually have a bulls-eye of different wavelengths which the human eye can't detect. RickK 07:22, Jan 11, 2005 (UTC)
- Your answer made me curious and then I quickly found these infra-red images of flowers --62.255.64.4 00:35, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
A rubbish question
Why is it that, no matter what you put in the rubbish bin, it always smells the same? Is there some kind of chemical released by all foods when it decomposes? My housemates theorized that there must be a chemical reaction with the bin liner, but that is a lame hypothesis. And the above question on colour is a very poignant one too.
- There seems to be a small group of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that are produced by the putrescence of rubbish. These include putrescine and cadaverine. See here for some more detailed chemistry. --Heron 15:00, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I wonder if it's also likely that your rubbish bin tends to smell the same since, over the average week, you tend to put the same things in it. Of course, to see if this is true, you ought to seek out the bins of people who are likely to have a different diet to yourself and give their bins a good sniffing. I think any problems of a social nature that may arise from this activity would be more than compensated by your increased wisdom.
Alternatively you could wuss out and decide that next week you are going to have a themed diet in the household: see what happens if you and your co-habitees live entirely on cake for 7 days. Surely that's an experiment with broad appeal? --62.255.64.4 00:42, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
1862 Virginia Commenwealth currency
I would like to ask, how would I find out the value of a original 1862 $100.00 bill virginia treasury note? Featuring: John Letcher in the middle, George Washington on the left, and Indian maiden Pocohontas on the right. If you can answer my question, or help me with it, my email address is etriggs@knology.net. Thank You R.D. Scarbrough
- Here's the "Paper Money Collecting FAQ" [3] (from rec.collecting.paper-money on Usenet; it might be worth asking there, as well]. It lists several books (I believe Pick is the standard reference, but...); try seeing if any of your local libraries have access to these, as they list the market value for huge numbers of notes.
- [4] lists a $100 Confederate bill for about eighty dollars, although this could be due to something unusual about it. Condition will also - strongly - affect the value of a note.
- However... [5] notes that replicas of Confederate notes were commonly produced as souvenirs, and one of the known examples is a Treasury Note; $100; Oct. 15, 1862, with the serial number(s) of the replicas given as 119, 2875. If it has either of those numbers, it may well be a replica. Just a caution. Shimgray 17:16, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The American Numismatic Association recommends tracking down a copy of Gene Hessler's Comprehensive Catalog of U.S. Paper Money. If you don't have access to a library with the book, I'd recommend seeing if it passes the newsgroup's smell test. -- Cyrius|✎ 17:40, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- One quick way to find out what the actual going price for collectibles is (as opposed to the book value) is to do a search on eBay for it. In this case, a look at these closed auctions shows that there were three recent auctions for such a note, at least one of which is a replica, and that the prices ranged from $2 (for a replica) to $275 (for one guaranteed by the seller to be authentic.) Me, I wouldn't touch one with a ten foot pole unless it were vetted by a highly reputable dealer or collector. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 03:29, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)
first world war veteran
Hi, I am looking for any information regarding my great uncle.
- Hmm. IP says you're probably British. But, really, give us a smaller target next time... if you can tell us where he was from, we can tell you where to look for the information.
- If he died in the war, the Commonwealth War Graves Commision website will have an entry for his grave, and a small amount of related information. Mind you, he was a veteran of it, so probably didn't... The National Archives have a set of interesting leaflets on researching various topics [6] here; specifically, you might find [7] this useful.
- If you collate all the information you have on him - where he lived, his full name, dates of birth, anything you know he did in the War - you may find this a very useful way of helping search for information, or decide if information is relevant (if he was an officer, for example, this opens up a whole new set of possible sources; if he won a specific medal ditto, since the citation will be filed somewhere). If he was in the Army, knowing battalion and regiment is very useful; if in the Navy, ship names.
- Genealogy websites may also prove useful, although the first half of the century is a bit of a blackspot - it's recent enough that many of the records are still private due to the fact the people in them may be living, but old enough that they're often not easily available.
- Hope this helps - we really don't have information to help you with individual people, but we can point you towards relevant resources. Shimgray 17:46, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Where is Silmi Island, Korea?
Silmido (Silmi Island) is the best-selling Korean movie of 2003. I can't believe it. I consulted the maps of Microsoft Encarta and the NASA freeware World Wind and still cannot find where Silmi Island is. I also googled. There are some guided tours to that island, but so far, none of them provide a map. There are dozens of small nameless islands off the coast of Incheon. I just don't know which one is that island. -- Toytoy 17:07, Jan 9, 2005 (UTC)
- From what I've managed to find, Silmi Island is located just off the larger Muui Island, which has ferry service from Yeongjong, home of Incheon International Airport. At low tide, you can reportedly walk from Silmi Beach on Muui to Silmi itself.
- Based on this map, apparently from the Muui tourism board, I'm guessing silmido's the small green island off the northwest coast of the larger green island (Muuido). However, I have a complete inability to read Korean, so don't take that as being any kind of authoritative statement.
- I don't know how much this helps, but it's all I could find in a brief search. -- Cyrius|✎ 18:25, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
According to the map on http://www.hotelqueen.com/kor-1/new_land_mueui.html, Silmido (실미도, 實尾島) is the little island west of Muuido (무의도, 舞衣島) (the 2nd umbrella from the top). For a broader view, you may visit http://www.viewkorea.co.kr/Korean/muido.htm.
Thanks to the movie, these two islands have become very popular in Korea. See the 3rd picture on http://kr.blog.yahoo.com/msrpine/330339.html.
Silmi Island (37.40 N, 126.39 E) is no more than 50 km (30 mi) from the North Korean border and only 5 km (3 mi) from the Incheon International Airport opened in 2001. A high-flying aircraft would possibly had taken aerial photos of that island and the commando training camp on the west coast easily. This might not be the best place in the world to launch a top secret plan to kill Kim Il-sung. -- Toytoy 03:38, Jan 10, 2005 (UTC)
- Wait, so my interpretation of stuff I couldn't read was correct!? Hooray! -- Cyrius|✎ 04:31, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Yes. You did it right! I used World Wind to simulate an aerial view from North Korea, if the weather allows, you may possibly take some good pictures of that island without crossing border (37.5 N) at 10,000 m altitude. That's business as usual for a commercial airliner. A piece of cake for a MiG-19 that has a ceiling of 17,500 m. These are not the crystal clear "license plate" grade pictures taken by the Pentagon because of the 50 km atmosphere that gets in the way. But these pictures may still be marginally usable. What you need is a good camera and a good pilot. -- Toytoy 04:51, Jan 10, 2005 (UTC)
You may find this image useful. -- Toytoy 05:26, Jan 10, 2005 (UTC)
Largest gun?
Were Schwerer Gustav and Dora really the largest guns ever made? — Kieff | Talk 18:41, Jan 9, 2005 (UTC)
- Depends how you define "largest". They were probably the physically largest guns (if you don't count Gerald Bull's "supergun", which was never assembled or fired), but the Tsar Cannon, built in the 1500s, had a larger calibre. I believe this is the largest-calibre weapon known to exist, although larger ones may possibly have been constructed and then lost to history. Shimgray 19:44, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
DNA
I have two questions relating to DNA: 1. How are purine and pyrimidine nucleotides similar and how are they different? 2. In order for DNA to bond to phosphoric acid, what type of reaction must occur?
See the DNA article for pictures.
- Adenine and guanine are the purines. They have double rings. Cytosine and thymine are the pyrimidines. They have single rings. A is slightly different from G and only pairs with T. G only pairs with C. Reciprocally, C and T are slightly different, and C only pairs with G, and T only pairs with A.
- There is a phosphate group between each base in each strand. Phosphoric acid exists primarily as phosphate. It binds to ribose even before the ribose and purine or pyrimidine become part of DNA, so it is misleading to say "DNA bonds to phosphoric acid"; rather the phosphate is already part of every base before it becomes incorporated into the string of bases that is DNA. The reaction by which phosphate bonds to ribose is called phosphorylation. alteripse 00:32, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Franklin D. Roosevelts legislation act of 1935 re; Social Security
Dear Sir or Madam, Allow me introduce myself, my name is Mamie Glorioso and my e mail address is, honeybee12@cox.net.
Perhaps you can help me, I have been trying to find the acutal written contents of FDR's or Legislations Act of 1935 regarding Social Security. By this I mean the actual written contents of this bill as directed under this act word for word. Is there such an animal? and if there is can you direct me to it? I haven't been able to find this anywhere, perhaps I'm not putting in the correct word search. I've tried just about everything.
Thanking you in advance regarding the above request, I remain, Very truly yours,
Mamie Glorioso
- The Social Security Administration has a copy here; first hit on Google for 1935 Social security act. [8] has related historical material. Shimgray 21:52, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Dryer lint
So... why is clothes dryer lint almost always (95%?) bluish in colour? Rhymeless (Er...let's shimmy) 06:00, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Perhaps due to the non-binding nature of indigo dye. Rmhermen 06:23, Jan 10, 2005 (UTC)
- Mine is usually light grey to blue-grey. ike9898 20:00, Jan 11, 2005 (UTC)
- When I shared a flat, and a dryer, with a woman, it was clear whose dryer lint was whose. I wore "guy" colours, she lighter and more "girly" ones, and so my lint was blue or black or grey and her's tended to be pink or white or yellow. As neither of us was terribly good about cleaning the lint-trap, several strata of lint would build up. On removing it, one could clearly see (a la dendrochronology) who had done what washes and in what order. -- John Fader 01:54, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The article on belly button fluff has, loosely, I believe a scientific explanation somewhere]].--Wonderfool 13:12, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
What is dryer lint?
Does it come from the fibers that make up your clothes, or is it more like dust particles from the environment that collect on the clothes? ike9898 20:00, Jan 11, 2005 (UTC)
- I'm pretty sure it's mostly clothes. Mine tends to include quite a bit of Kleenex tissue in addition. Some small fraction is probably hair, dead skin, whatever. moink
- I'm surprised that old clothes continue to lose fibers, even after many dryings. ike9898 21:47, Jan 22, 2005 (UTC)
- Not surprising at all, i think, because these are not whole fibers but small broken off ends. Notice how a garment ages, becoming softer as it's worn and washed; that reflects lessening cohesion between adjacent fibers as they break off where they come closest most often, from the stress that is makes the closth stiff. An old enough garment actually gets thinner as well as softer. --Jerzy(t) 22:32, 2005 Jan 22 (UTC)
- I'm surprised that old clothes continue to lose fibers, even after many dryings. ike9898 21:47, Jan 22, 2005 (UTC)
I created a new article -- it's not yet posted.
About a week ago (give of take a couple of days) I created a new article for the Wikipedia. I titled the article PIGS IS PIGS (1937), which refered to a WB cartoon that was released in 1937. True, there is an article in the Wikipedia titled PIGS IS PIGS and is linled to the WB short by that title. However, the link and the article are both wrong. In 1954 Disney released an animated short based on the best-selling humour book by Ellis Parker Butler that goes by the same name -- the article referes to this work. This is a mistake.
The 1954 Disney animated short and the best-selling humour book by Ellis Parker Butler that goes by the same name have absolutely nothing to do with this cartoon!
Seeing that no article existed for this work, I set down to create one. It was submitted, but has not yet appeared on the Wikipedia.
Why?
Sincerly;
KRR
- Is that the exact punctuation you used? I've checked and found nothing in the deletion log, or your contributions listing. MacGyverMagic|(talk) (editing from public IP) 08:52, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I don't think so. I used the same puctuation as was used in the title of the other (unrelated) article. It would read as Pigs is Pigs (1937).
Thanks. I'll have to try again.
- Seems to be there now... Pigs is Pigs (1937). I wonder if the old one hit one of the intermittent periods of the servers being overly strained, and got lost en route? Shimgray 16:58, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
yaws
In the religious context or the seaworthy one? Either way, it's yaw singular. --allie 00:55, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Problems occuring when cancelling unstable poles
I'm revising for an exam on classical control theory and have a few problems.
What are the shortcomings of using the cancellation process in the light of uncertainties in the values of the system parameters?
Also, if I have the system G(s) = 1 / (s-1.5)(s^2+s+1) and have to design a stabilizer of the form C(s) = [k(s^2+as+b)] / (s^2+cs+d), how would I go about this?
anon
- Are you taking MIT PhD qualifying exams this week like I am? (which by the way, all of you who may remember me, is why i'm so seldom around).
By "the cancellation process" I presume you mean pole-zero cancellation. It's a somewhat reasonable strategy for stable poles, if you have a pretty linear, well-modeled system, but a BAD BAD BAD idea for unstable poles. Here's why: Our models of systems are never perfect. As you mention, there will always be uncertainties in the values of the system parameters. That translates into uncertainties in the positions of the poles. And of course, these "linear, time invariant" systems we're always talking about are just idealizations. Very little is ever truly linear, we just linearize about the operating point. So if the operating point moves a touch, our model is just a bit off at that point, and oops, the zeros we decided to put on top of those poles are a little bit off. Uh-oh. Unstable poles. They'll have small residues, yes, due to the proximity of the zeros, but something starting small and growing to infinity is just as scary in the long run as something that starts bigger and grows to infinity.
It's even a bad idea to use pole-zero cancellation on stable but "slow" poles. Again, you'll significantly reduce the magnitude of their residues, therefore making them unimportant (relative to other effects) right at zero, but if they stick around long enough they'll start to become dominant. It's really a better idea, in my opinion, to put some zeros way out in the left half-plane somewhere where they can suck in the poles as the gain increases and speed up and stabilize the whole system. That is, if you aren't trying to limit high-frequency noise...
As to your second question, I guess it depends on what your goal is. Do you have particular requirements for your control system? That plant transfer function you have there is pretty simple, just a real pole and a complex conjugate pair. I'd probably do a PD or phase lead if I wanted to increase the damping ratio or speed the system up. But that controller transfer function you've got there looks like a filter aimed at particular frequencies. Depending on the values you choose, it could be a bandpass filter or a notch filter. If I were you I'd use Bode methods to design the controller. And get some requirements. Like, do you have a bandwidth requirement? Are you trying to limit noise in a certain frequency range? If that's the extent of a test question, your prof doesn't know what she's doing. moink
Gas Prices
- moved from article space BrokenSegue 21:57, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Now when we think of gas we think of 1.79 to 2.00 dollars. I was wondering how much was gas back then in the year i was born 1989.
- Was about $1.00 / gal in Pennsylvania that year. (I was delivering pizza, and filling up a lot...).
- Using some inflation calculators the actual difference ranges from negligible to moderate. Cvaneg 00:19, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Was about $1.00 / gal in Pennsylvania that year. (I was delivering pizza, and filling up a lot...).
Hyperglycemia - is it a Metabolic disorder?
I see that Hypoglycemia is in Category:Metabolic disorders. Why isn't Hyperglycemia also classified thus? Ancheta Wis 02:44, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- based on a quick Google, I see Diabetes & Other Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders is probably sufficient justification for placing the Hyperglycemia stub in Category:Metabolic disorders. Someone with better knowledge please reverse my cat if I am wrong. Ancheta Wis 02:50, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- IANAMP, but I don't think that either should be in that category. Both are conditions that have various causes. For example, Hyperglycemia (high blood sugar) can be caused by Diabetes Mellitus, but there may be other possible causes. According to our article, Hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) has at least 10 possible causes. -Rholton 03:01, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
This is not so much a medical question as one of categorization and nosology. Both hyper and hypoglycemia, like hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism, and adrenal insufficiency and Cushing's syndrome, refer to metabolic derangements with many causes. They can be mild or severe, transient or persistent, can be imperceptible to the patient or make the person feel ill, and can have minimal or severe consequences. I tend to favor a broad definition of disease that would include all of them. When you think of disease categorizations, think of a forest of trees. The trunk of one tree may be chief complaint:fatigue, with branches that include metabolic disorders, smaller brances that include each of the above categories, and still smaller twigs and leaves for the myriad disorders that can cause hypo and hyperglycemia to a degree that causes fatigue. However, the next tree in the forest is pancreatic disorders, which includes defective insulin secretion and hyperglycemia as one of the large branches and many, but not all of the same small branches causing hyperglycemia (but only those that arise from pancreatic disorders).
In practice, a physician does not always define a condition down as narrowly in terms of physiological function, molecular pathology, or tissue change as might be achieved, so he or she might think that this patient has hyperglycemia and treat it it without determining the cause (this putative physician is obviously not an endocrinologist). So I would tend to use the large category of disease for any condition that a physician might use to think about and treat a patient, recognizing that any system you use has some arbitrary and inconsistent exclusions and inclusions. Does this make sense? alteripse 12:14, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Hitler and English
Did Adolf Hitler speak English? Thanks in advance, -Branddobbe 07:05, Jan 11, 2005 (UTC)
- While his Irish sister-in-law Bridget Hitler (wife of his older half-brother Alois) claimed that he spent some time living with them in Liverpool before the First World War, and consequently he might have spoken some English, this account is nowadays discounted. This reply on holocaust-history.org indicates that the replier doesn't think AH spoke English, citing AH's interpreter, and personally I've never seen any indication that he did. -- Arwel 12:18, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Medieval naming of animals
The medieval French gave standard names for animals in their fables, like Reynard for foxes and Chanticleer for roosters. Is there somewhere that I can find a list of those names? RickK 07:18, Jan 11, 2005 (UTC)
- I didn't find an exhaustive list of these names in English or French. There is one for German at de:Fabel. A small list of English names is given in Reynard the Fox, for French in fr:Le_Roman_de_Renart. Regarding Jean de la Fontaine's fables, the book by Pierre Bornecque, La Fontaine Fabuliste, SEDES 1975, ISBN 2-718-10303-5, seems to be the standard reference, but it appears to be out of print. You could probably compile a list yourself from [9]. I am not aware of la Fontaine's animals having proper names. They do, however, address each other using various honorifics. The "Reynard" (typically "Renart" in French) in "Reynard the Fox" is obviously a word-play on the French word for fox, "renard". (In German, he is called "Reineke Fuchs" or "Meister Reineke".) About "Chanticleer", see [10] (derives from "chante clair", "sing clearly"). The wolf was called "Ysengrin" or "Isengrin" [11], in French and English ("Isegrim" in German) (cf. Google cache of Britannica page). See also the 1911 Britannica. [12] gives a few more, comparing with de:Fabel, it appears that "Grimbert" or "Grimbeard" is a typical name for the badger, and "Brun" or "Bruin" for the bear. You might also check out the History of Reynard the Fox (PDF, 393kB). [13] also has some more info on Reynard. Lupo 11:57, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I wrote: "...is obviously a word-play on the French word for fox, "renard".. It appears that I have that backwards: according to fr:Le_Roman_de_Renart, "renard" is derived from "Renart" and effectively has replaced the older word "goupil". Lupo 12:01, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
why does a year start on january 1?
Oh, does it? See New Year and New Year's Day. Lupo 16:08, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
False color images in astronomy
I understand that many of the astronomical images we see in magazines, etc. are actually black and white images that have had color added. But -Why not just take color images to begin with? -Is the choice of added colors based on anything other than aesthetic appeal? -What a about relatively close objects like planets, are some of these pictures in true color? ike9898 20:07, Jan 11, 2005 (UTC)
- I've always thought the colors were supposed to convey information; e.g., green indicates the surface is primarily silicon dioxide, blue indicates water-ice, or some such thing. Michael Hardy 03:37, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Reasons include:
- The original image was infra-red, x-ray, or some other non-visible part of the spectrum. In order to render into a human visible form, some mapping between the "invisible colours" and the ordinary "visible spectrum" colours must be made. Such a mapping is of necessity somewhat arbitrary.
- The original image, while technically in colour, occupied only a narrow band of the visible spectrum. To make details more apparent, the spectrum is "dilated": so things that in "reality" would be slightly green turn into things that are very green, etc.
- The final image is a composite of different source images of different types.
- Or simply that features of different types have been coloured (at a person's behest) or otherwise enhanced differently for didactic purposes.
- -- John Fader 20:18, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- As to planets: yes, many of the photos you've seen of Mars, Saturn and Jupiter are more normal colour images, largely because those planets are interesting to look at in the "normal" part of the spectrum. Still, there are plenty of artificial-colour images of all, particularly with planets like Venus which are uninteresting in the visible spectrum. But even though a telescope or probe's camera has a gamut that is roughly like your eye, that doesn't mean that those planets would look just like that if you were near them, looking at them with your naked eye; the detector will have different response characteristics across the spectrum. There was, for example, much debate about which was the "correct" way to post-process colour images from the recent Mars landers - some ways make the sky look the rose/red people expect, others make it appear almost blue, and it's debatable which (if any) is "correct". -- John Fader 20:29, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Consider (as a pleasantly weird example) Hubble's newer "normal" camera, Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2. It features broad-response (i.e. black and white) CCDs. Between it and the source are mechanically interposed a filter (one of 48, mounted on a wheel, I think). So the operators can pick one of 48 different response curves. And by taking the same photo through different filters the resulting images can be combined to give a huge range and scope of response characteristics. There's even one filter slide that has a graduated filter, so (by carefully placing the target at the point in the filter with just the desired frequency range) the operator has really accurate control of filtering (per STSCI). All in all this is a system of colour vision so utterly unlike the one your eye uses that really all HST-WFPC2 images (which is pretty much every Hubble image you see in the media) are, and have to be, false colour. -- John Fader 21:09, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The popular press, from your local newspaper to National Geographic, will insist on bringing visually interesting images to their readers. That means colour. Colour—or coloured—images will be requested or selected for publication even if specialists use greyscale ones for their own analysis. For example, how often do you see pure greyscale MRI or CT (aka "CAT") images in the popular press? And yet I do not believe you will see a radiologist make a diagnosis from a coloured image of these modalities. In fact, it has been the norm in many hospitals to render these inherently digital formats on film (inevitably greyscale) for use on lightboxes; this is gradually changing as hospitals find high-quality computer displays more affordable. --Sharkford 14:34, 2005 Jan 12 (UTC)
- Black and white (monochrome) images are probably more common in astronomy because they're much easier to accomplish. A monochrome image is a map of the intensity of radiation emitted by an object within a certain band of the electromagnetic spectrum, such as the visible spectrum. A color image also contains information as to the specific wavelength of light.
- A camera that captures all of this additional information simultaneously is much more difficult to build than one that produces simple monochrome. AFAIK, spacecraft produce color images by taking a series of several monochrome images in different spectral bands. For instance, they might take one image in the red wavelengths, another in the greens, and another in the blues. The combination of these three images would produce what we know as "true color".
- Alternatively, they might take pictures in three (or two or four) radio wavelength bands. For several reasons, not least because we can't see radio, these images are printed in the visible spectrum, producing "false color". --Smack (talk) 05:59, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- P.S. in response to Michael Hardy: Yes, false-color images do often convey information as to the chemical composition of an object. However, I think it's ignorant to believe that someone comes in and applies false color based upon chemical data. I would guess that the image is the source of this data. Take a photograph at a wavelength corresponding to an absorption band of a molecule, and your photo will be a map of the presence of that molecule. --Smack (talk) 05:59, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
What style of music did he work in? If the answer is Jazz, then what type of Jazz? (Yes, I've already had a look at both articles, and it's still not clear to me). ike9898 02:14, Jan 12, 2005 (UTC)
- Musical categorizations aren't so neatly defined. Part of what's interesting about Sinatra is that he brought jazz-influenced vocal stylings (and especially phrasings) into realms of popular music that had previously not had much influence from jazz vocals. I suppose his early work was unambigously big-band jazz, but his later work was something else that he more or less invented. -- Jmabel | Talk 19:11, Jan 12, 2005 (UTC)
What is the similarity between her music and Rhythm and Blues? I know this is how she discribes her music, but I don't get it. They two don't seem very similar to me. ike9898 02:16, Jan 12, 2005 (UTC)
Has there been any suggestion of a link between this syndrome and birth order? It seems to me that there are some similarities between Asperger's and first born children.
- A quick glance at Google Scholar throws up some papers noting a link between birth order and autistic-spectrum disorders, eg:
- [14] Compared with control subjects, cases had significantly older parents and were more likely to be firstborn
- There's a few others (mostly PDFs) which posit a link; it's debatable if that link is physiological (as in the paper above, which deals with related obestric complications) or related to the different upbringing of an older child. Certainly at least a correlation, though. Shimgray 03:15, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
English French
Are there any words that are pronounced exactly the same in both French and English? I would've thought the old reliable taxi would be, but my fr-eng dictionary puts a difference between the pronounciation: tæcsi for English, and tacsi for french. So i thought if taxi isnt the same, then surely no word woudl be.even French words borrowed from English, and viceversa, have been frenchised or englishised. Anybody spotted any?--Wonderfool 09:48, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Many Americans (though no Brits) pronounce "garage" in a very French way: accent on the second syllable, rolled "j" sound, etc., although the first vowel tends to be slightly off (a schwa rather than a pure "ah", but that sound is slightly off when they try to speak French, too!). Or how about "entente" and "detente"? -- Jmabel | Talk 19:24, Jan 12, 2005 (UTC)
- It depends on whether you're looking at a phonemic or phonetic level. French /t/ is pronounced at the teeth, or dentally, whereas English /t/ is an alveolar consonant pronounced at the ridge at the top of the mouth. Also, the final <e> in entente and détente reflects a central, voiceless and very reduced vowel similar to the English schwa. So if you're looking at French and English at a phonetic level, there will virtually always be articulatory differences. P.S. Any word that has orthographic <r> you can pretty much forget about—it's a retroflex approximant in English but a uvular continuant in French. :-\ --Gelu Ignisque
- I may be answering my own question here, but I was lookin thru a big Collins Fr-Eng dictionary last night, pondering this and found none such - there was the 'r' being rolled or the 'i' being slightly diffrent or wotever. but, there were 2 words i did track down as having the exact same phonetics: wiktionary:Peppy and wiktionary:pépi; and wiktionary:messy and wiktionary:messie. I took about an hour to find those bloody words. Damn the uber-curious mind I have. And somehow, I was expecting a Jmabel reply.Its appreciated. --Wonderfool 12:58, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- French orthographic <e-acute accent> is IPA [e], though, whereas the first vowel in English peppy is [(lowercase epsilon)] in that same transcription. The first is tense and front while the latter is lax and central. English messy is stressed on the first syllable, whereas messie, if it is a French word, is stressed on the last. --G.I.Q.
- dude, you're right.that peppy and messie thing was wrong, lookin back.So I decide that there are, in fact, no words are the same--Wonderfool 12:58, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Equality of the genders
In just about every society I have heard of where there is a big fuss about the equality of the genders, this assertion of equality seems to be specifically a denial that women are inferior to men. What, if any, major cases exist of assertion of the equality of the genders being specifically a denial that men are inferior to women? --User:Juuitchan
- In the US and other western cultures, women tend to be seen as better caregivers and nurturers than men. Some men contend that because of this bias they are at an unfair disadvantage during custodial battles. The group Fathers 4 Justice comes to mind in this respect. --Cvaneg 20:03, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The Two Ronnies had a long-running segment in their televison comedy show called The Worm That Turned which depicted a matriachal society that oppressed men. Dunno about any real life examples of such a thing. --62.255.64.4 00:52, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Trying to locate a soldier!!!!
Hello,
I am trying to find out which troops were stationed in my hometown in 1945/46.
My grandmother got pregnant by a soldier - and it's been hard on our family - since my grandfather does not want to even discuss the subject and my grandmother passed away taking the secret with her.
The name of my hometown is: Schwabhausen - the next bigger town is Boxberg - the next bigger town is Tauberbischofsheim - they are all located in Baden Wuertemberg.
We only have the first name of the soldier - Oscar - and since there couldn't have been that many stationed in or around our hometown and I am assuming there can't be that many soldiers with that first name.
Where would I be able to find a listing of troops???
Any information is greatly appreciated.
Sincerely,
Heike Puhr Fort Lauderdale, FL
- You're not going to be able to find a listing of names, not easily; what might be plausible starting point is finding a broad date when you reckon the chap in question will have been in the area (birthdate of child less nine months plus or minus a month should do it), and trying to work from there. If you have dates and a named location, you might be able to get the names of a set of units from the Centre for Military History [15], but I wouldn't bet on this being exhaustive or accurate (there'll have been a lot of individuals passing through, or non-combat units which often aren't recorded as exhaustively). The problem is... now you have a list of units, and you need to make the jump to the list of names and try to select one from there... I'd suggest your best bet would be to figure out all the information you have, get it down on paper, and then contact the CMH (above) and NARA's Military Personnel Records department [16] - I don't think either will be able to help you on just that information, but it's quite possible they've dealt with similar queries before and may be able to put you in touch with organisations that help with this sort of thing. (Even if you did get a 1945 personnel list, it wouldn't help much; you'd still have to get hold of the records of the individuals)
- Note also that CMH has disclaimers like The U.S. Army Center of Military History does not maintain [information on locating veterans], and the release of personnel information is strictly governed by the Privacy Act.. This is likely to be the case with most government bodies; they won't be allowed to release information regarding individuals to you on privacy grounds. If you can identify individual units, however, then you can try getting in touch with (eg) veterans' regimental associations, and asking if they can assist you. Best of luck. Shimgray 20:24, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Burkitts's Lymphoma
(moved from Village Pump) Hello my niece passed away 2 weeks ago the hospital said she had Burkitts's Ly[m]phoma and we where wondering if this type of cancer can be spread to other children. She was only 15 when she died. Please emil me at jerryadams45505@yahoo.com
- Burkitt's lymphoma is not generally considered a contagious disease, though it is associated in some places with certain other infections, such as Epstein-Barr virus in Africa. "There is no risk to others from a person with Burkitt lymphoma or any other cancer." [17] - Nunh-huh 21:23, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Why are roadways at night time always wet in the movies?
This has intrigued me for years and years. I have noticed that in any scene in a movie that shows a sealed road or street in a town or city, the asphalt surface of the road is always wet. It is rarely raining at the time, and rarely has there been any previous scene where it had been raining, or where the roads were cleaned with water. IN fact, the absence or presence of water on the road is virtually always completely irrelevant to the story, yet the roads at night-time are virtually always wet, whereas in day time they are virtually always dry. This happens in American movies, Australian moves, European movies, and others as well. WHY IS THIS SO?? One theory I have dreamed up is that a wet bitumen surface at night-time provides greater reflection and looks "better" on the screen than a duller, darker, dry roadway. Is this something like the truth, or is there another explanation?? Cheers JackofOz 23:32, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The reason you see this in the movies is that cinematographers put it there, and cinematographers love wet streets. They are more visually interesting; they reflect images, light, etc. It's a not-uncommon source of continuity errors, where within a scene you will see the street switch from wet to dry to wet. - Nunh-huh 23:36, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- So I WAS on the right track. Thanks for confirming my hunch. JackofOz 23:48, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- When you think about it, you'll also notice that fog is quite often used for visual rather than narrative reasons. "Cinematographers Love Wet Streets" would be a fun title for an essay<g> - Nunh-huh 23:55, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- And there I was thinking it was just a particularly obscure country music song... ;-) Shimgray 03:03, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I don't think nighttime streets are anywhere near "always" wet in movies. They're wet more often than it rains, yes, but most of the time they're dry. You're just noticing it when they're wet. -Branddobbe 07:50, Jan 13, 2005 (UTC)
Well, you may be right, and maybe I am biasing my observations. And yes, it is probably true that "always" is not correct. But why not take a tally of the next 10 movies you see that contain night-time streetscapes, and tell me how many of the roads are wet. I'll bet you that at least 90% of them are wet. I'll stand corrected if you can disprove me. JackofOz 01:46, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
TB PPD Test
The TB PPD test (or simply the TB skin test) is given to determine if a person has tuberculosis. Now, can having a cold affect the accuracy of the test? I mean, can my having a cold cause the test to be positive for TB?
- The PPD test can't determine if someone has tuberculosis. It is used to determine whether they've had tuberculosis exposure in the past and (based on what their chest X-ray looks like) would benefit from antitubercular prophylaxis or needs treatment for tuberculosis. Many things can cause a false positive result (BCG vaccination, infection with mycobacteria other than M. tuberculosis) and other things can cause false negative results (immunosuppression, AIDS). But having a cold should not cause a false positive result. - Nunh-huh 08:00, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Whats the name of this illustration style?
Ive wondered for a while what the formal name for this particular illustration style is, assuming there is a term for it, so maybe somebody can finally cue me in and let me sleep at night. It's basically that old, inky, highly detailed, medieval-ish style. Ive noticed a lot of variations in the style, so its hard for me to be more very specific, but I see it a lot inside of old books, logos and the like. Im refering specifically to the type that has very densely packed lines as shading, not just outlines and figures. This image is really interesting to me and Id also be very curious to know the name of this exact style (really detailed, busy, and whimsical ) if at all possible
this is another really good example of what I'm talking about:[18]
and another:[19]
I've heard the term "woodcuts" before, but I think thats just the medium and not really the style. --Clngre 04:06, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Ahem—"...very densely packed lines as shading..." is a characteristic of a copperplate engraving. Wood generally doesn't support this style: if the fine grooves are very close together, the burrs can easily break off. With copperplates, that problem doesn't exist. But that still doesn't give a name to this style. I don't know of one, I've always known this type of illustration as "engraving". On a related note, cf. etching. Lupo 08:13, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- are we just talking about the shading/lines, or also about the style of drawing the figures, or even about the content? I don't know the correct term either, but content-wise I would say it is a typical 18th century allegorical vignette, the kind they typically put on books' title pages dab (ᛏ) 09:50, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- And there I was thinking it was just a particularly obscure prog rock song... ;-)--Wonderfool 12:50, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I think searching on the word Intaglio will give you all you want. Steverapaport 14:41, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Thanks a lot, I have enough keywords to branch out from for a while. At first I was wondering about the style of illustration, as if it were done with a quill pen or soemthing. Assuming that all of its look -- the basic aesthetic look of it -- was done intentionally, but I now realize that some of it is probably just a product of the medium. Just as a sidenote, how would you define that first image I posted; in any sense. So it's probably some form of engraving, it was an image associated with some secret society, its very lavish and busy, and what else? My goal is to narrow down my search for engravings more of the style seen in the first and second images. Kind of absurd, weird, mystical, symbolic, etc. Maybe its even naive to think that there are subgenres or specific movements or eras with it, I dont really know. --Clngre 16:31, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- This is rather a side note, but I recall that shading drafted by using densely placed diagonal lines in two directions is referred to as cross hatching. And my Google search for the term gave this which might give you some related words. This gives you more on cross hatching.
- If you're looking for more images such as those you gave, the ones with textual content that act as labels for some of the figures etc are, I believe, usually political in nature. So, I would suggest trying to search for something like the history of political cartoons or history of satirical illustration, things like that. Here's a site called Political and Editorial Cartoons In U.S. History which may have some of interest, though a brief look makes me wonder if your style may be older and more European.
- Once you've got an idea what sort of period your style hails from try searching on X illustrations where X is a European ruler of that period, a King, Queen or Prime Minister.
- This image search for politcal engravings returns some nice images, though I think, again, possibly more modern than your style.
- Or maybe this one for century+woodcuts (dunno why) is of interest.
- I don't think any of them quite hit the nail on the head, but you should have lots of roads to follow, one of which should get you there. If you do find a good site, please report back as I quite like that style of stuff too. --62.255.64.5 01:16, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)...
- ...found some more. A search on political etchings seems pretty fertile. Led me to [20]which stemmed from this index. You may also find some stuff at Graphic Witness of interest. Political lithography might give you some interesting results too. --62.255.64.5 01:52, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Wow, thanks a lot. Some of the images on those pages you posted were fantastic as it is. I really appreciate it, I'll defintately post some good links if I upon any. --Clngre 06:24, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- A couple of follows up. Although you can usually get finer lines with copper plate engraving, it is certainly possible to get fine detail with woodcuts - it depends on the preparation of the wood, density of the grain and the skill of the artist - see for example much of the work of M. C. Escher (more illustrations in the Gallery section of http://www.mcescher.com/). Also note that woodcuts are in a way the opposite of intaglio printing in that the ink remains on the raised surface, rather than the hollows. With copper engraving, the artist draws in positive cutting through the mask, whilst with woodcuts (and linocuts), the artist draws in negative - effectively drawing the white lines.
- The second image shown, is apparently neither woodcut nor engraving, but a pen and ink drawing by the the Jazz musician Lhasa herself [21]. Pen and ink drawing is quite a common technique used in cartoon illustrations. The style does remind me of someone, but I can't quite place it. I thought it might be Sir John Tenniel's illustrations for Alice in Wonderland, but its not.
- In terms of the 'busy' style of the first image, as much as anything it is about finding space for each of the symbols that needs to be included. The style is somewhat baroque, but also owes something to the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch and peasant scenes of Pieter Bruegel the Elder and family (particularly his Netherlandish Proverbs). Of course many similar engravings can be found in relating to freemasonry.
- In general, engraving has been popular for illustrating books between 16th-19th century so it covers a wide range of sytles. Try also Albrecht Dürer (and his Four Horsemen), Thomas Bewick (eg. animal and bird illustrations). You can also find a lot of interesting examples from early copies of the Illustrated London News (eg. [22]) -- Solipsist 09:24, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
A wonderful book on the history and styles of printmaking is William M. Ivins, Jr., Prints and Visual Communications (Harvard University Press, 1951). It is a joy to read (it is very well written), puts forth a few provocative theses (without printmaking, we'd still be in the Dark Ages; and, the Greeks weren't actually that bright), and will also acquaint you with the different styles of printmaking and how they evolved from the 15th through the 19th centuries. Highly recommended. --Fastfission 18:30, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Menstrual Cycle
I have heard differing opinions about how many eggs are expelled when a woman has her period. One friend stated that it was only one, as this was the one egg that wasn't fertilized (i.e. the woman is not pregnant, so she has her period) but then we later read in a magazine that it was somethign like 1,000 eggs that are expelled each time. Which ever number is right, is that for the 7 days or so that it lasts, or what? Thanks! --anon
- 1000 is definitely wrong. Maybe the article was discussing fish spawning: but human women produce one or two mature eggs per menstrual cycle, not thousands. That's per month. - Nunh-huh 20:38, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- As it has been explained to me, each cycle sees the "ripening" of many eggs (I believe on the order of a dozen), but usually only one is released (that term being more common than "expelled" in the books). Upon the release of the first one (which can be from either ovary), hormones are released which suppress the release of all others, in both ovaries. Sometimes, of course, two or more are released, which leads to the possibility of fraternal multiple births. Fertilization, if it occurs, is most commonly by sperm which is already present in the fallopian tubes, having found its way there up to a small number of days prior. (After a few days it degrades in motility and becomes unable to fertilize). If fertilization does not occur, the one (or sometimes, two or more) released eggs are lost in the next menstrual flow. In any event the eggs that were not released from the ovaries are "reabsorbed", whatever that means. They don't get re-used; each cycle a never-previously-used group of eggs are ripened. --Sharkford 15:13, 2005 Jan 17 (UTC)
At-large voting
While adding an article on City Commission government, I noticed that at-large is a red link. I've been trying to figure out if this is already described in an article somewhere or, if not, which article would be most appropriate to include this in. Any suggestions? (cross-posted to Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Voting systems#At-large voting). older≠wiser 19:27, Jan 13, 2005 (UTC)
This is partly an article request, but it's also a more specific question. I have a (vague) memory from childhood of two animated cartoon birds, possible crows, named Heckel and Jeckel. In particular, I was wondering if anyone knows if these names may have a history predating those cartoon birds, and in particular if they may have roots in Yiddish theater, which I have been researching. The names look like Anglicized spellings of Yiddish diminutives, and an early play by Abraham Goldfaden was apparently named Yukel un Yekel. (As with all things Yiddish, that transliteration is rather arbitrary, it could as easily be Iukl un Iekl). -- Jmabel | Talk 01:36, Jan 14, 2005 (UTC)
- I remember them well. They were Anglicized further than you think, to Heckle and Jeckle. They were talking magpies, debuted in 1946, and were "TerryToons" cartoon characters. I found a bit of info about them at IMDB, and a bit about their producer, Paul Terry. Nothing too much there that relates to their history or any antecedent characters, though.A page on the 1955 show is [http://www.toonopedia.com/hekljekl.htm here. - Nunh-huh 02:07, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Math question--Heyting algebra and intuitionistic logic.
I posted this on the talk page, but thought I might get a better response here.
In the "law of the excluded middle" example under "Heyting algebra", is divvied up into a set A and its complement, the first comprising . Now, it would seem to me that the complement of A would be . However, it's given as , which is then used to show that the plane isn't included in the union of A and not-A. How can this be? grendel|khan 03:45, 2005 Jan 14 (UTC)
- That's just weird. Doesn't look right to me. -- Phyzome is Tim McCormack 00:44, 2005 Jan 15 (UTC)
Bloomstorm and Synnegi
Would you mind headlining or documenting these terms?
They can be found, among other sites, mainly here if you need further analysis: http://stormier.blogspot.com/
Synnegi can be described here: http://stormier.blogspot.com/2005/01/synnegi-explanation-death-creates.html
And bloomstorm here: http://stormier.blogspot.com/2005/01/bloomstorm-look-at-evolution-creation.html
Thanks much in advance. Bye
- These look to be the personal creations of one person, and seem to have little to no currency. Wikipedia is not (supposed to be) a tool for promoting one's ideas and theories. Specifically, Wikipedia is not a soapbox, nor is original research allowed. -- Cyrius|✎ 07:02, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)
installation
please tell me how to install swarm-2.2 in windows 2000 ,thanks!--hywwlh
- You're going to have to be more specific. I see at least two pieces of software named Swarm that have reached version 2.2. Since I wouldn't be able to offer specific instructions for either, I'm going to have to go with generalities. Read the documentation, and use the mailing lists/forums. You're going to get better results asking the people that are interested in the software than from the random collection of people on Wikipedia. -- Cyrius|✎ 15:13, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Was there a crisis which called for action?
Abuse of technology in American schools is an excellent example of a crisis which called for action. Here we have an example where computers are available to students to further not only their education and schoolwork, but to provide them with the skills necessary to enter the workforce in society in a more competitive and productive position. In order to do so, however, these students must learn to harness the power of computer technology in a reasonable and responsible fashion. By not harnessing the full creativity and by the abuse of this powerful learning experience, this did indeed create a crisis which called for action. allie 01:17, 15 Jan 2005 (UTC).
Evolution
How and why did some animals becomer amblers others not? Erik Borries, Denmark.
- I think you may get more specific information from editors at the Evolution and Horse gait articles. Personally, I think it's just something they tried early on in evolution. It worked for them, so they survived due to natural selection. That's my opinion, but unfortunately, I've got nothing to back it up. Also, you may want to be careful in giving out personal information like you did. Mgm|(talk) 22:25, Jan 14, 2005 (UTC)
Huygens probe
Is this the first probe to land on a moon other than Earth's? I can't find any mention of this fact or any earlier lander. Rmhermen 18:16, Jan 14, 2005 (UTC)
- I'm fairly sure that it is. Nothing has ever landed on the Martian moons, although I think there have been some moderately closeup photos from Mars orbiters. Nothing has landed or impacted on Jovian moons either - the Galileo spacecraft made several closeup flybys, and launched a probe into Jupiter itself, but was deliberately sent into Jupiter at the end of its life so it wouldn't ever crash on a moon with possible contamination of any life there. NEAR Shoemaker landed on a asteroid in 2001, and the Rosetta space probe is intended to set a lander on a comet in 2014.-gadfium 19:10, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Well, at least the first probe FROM Earth to land on on another moon;) ike9898 04:06, Jan 15, 2005 (UTC)
Superpower competition?
The CIA relased a report that said by 2020 China might be a global superpower and the United States might loose its unique position of global dominance and instead share the global stage with China. But given the huge gap in military and economic power between the US and the rest of the world, is it realistic to be concerened that China might catch up to the US and restart a superpower competition?
- I just have trouble imagining China or any other country for that matter becoming a superpower anytime soon. Since the end of the cold war the United States has leaped light years ahead of all nations in economic, military, and technological capabilities. The United States is a megapower and no one comes even close to matching them. The only way China would catch up is if the US government allows it to happen but as long as the US economy remains strong and the government keeps spending 400 billion a year on defense there is nothing to worry about as China and the rest of the world would be left far behind
- Military power relies on having the ability to spend money. The economy of China is expanding at a huge rate whereas that of the US is by comparison static. The Europeans are too good at arguing amongst themselves to present anything militarily. In twenty years the economy of China will be bigger than that of the US and hence they will have more power.
- Is this cause for concern? Yes. The Chinese have a very autocratic system of government, though I suspect democratic reforms will have to come at some point. It is very bad if you're Taiwanese. As for competition, this is different from the Cold War competition where the ideology of the two sides was different and at loggerheads, the Chinese don't now want to force Maoism on anyone else, they seem to be happy making money, and if they open their markets to global companies, those companies who weald power in the US and elsewhere won't kick up a stink.
- I am very concerned at the behaviour of the US government, and perhaps another large power block could help balance power so as not to leave it unchecked. Dunc|☺ 21:06, 15 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I'm out of my depth here. But I would imagine any theory that China will match US power would make reference to the vast size of its population and lower labour costs. If the CIA have reported it I imagine you could also discover the CIA's rationale for drawing such a conclusion. In fact here's a BBC thread about it with streaming video of a programme on the topic. --62.255.64.5 01:34, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
The parliamentary verb "table"
In the United States to "table" a motion means that the motion is disposed of, exactly the opposite of its sense in Britain where it means to put an issue on the agenda. I heard it used in connection with the Canadian parliament and wonder if Canadians use it in the American or the British sense. PedanticallySpeaking 19:13, Jan 15, 2005 (UTC)
- You can google search for occurrences of "tabled" within [canada.com, which is a news portal to major newspaper stories. See [23]
- The answer seems to be, the word is almost exclusively used in the context of Parliament and the House of Commons, and there it's always used in the British sense, ie to bring legislation up for consideration. It would not be used in the broader sense of putting an issue on the agenda (of a business meeting or whatever) or the American sense of putting an issue "on ice". However Canadians have a great deal of exposure to American media, both print and television, and are probably familiar with the American usage as well. -- Curps 21:29, 15 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The British sense, I think...that is what immediately comes to my mind, at least. Adam Bishop 00:39, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I'm looking for a particular phrase-please help
I'm stumped, the phrase keeps coming to the back of my head and disappearing.
The phrase, like an "occam's razor" phrase, is for the ultimate conundrum. A mother is holding two children in the tsunami, she has to let one go or all die. It's the ultimate conundrum that has no answer.
Praises from San Francisco for anyone who can name that obscure phrase.
Thanks.
- Hobson's choice (when the choice is illusory) or Gordian Knot (when the problem is insoluble). -- John Fader 20:46, 15 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Isn't the whole point of the Gordian Knot that it can be solved, but in a direct and bold way? ("Cutting the Gordian Knot") --80.3.32.7 21:00, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Occam's razor is correct. Without going through the Latin phrase, his theological rational, and etcetera, it means that the simplest theory is the best theory. Intellectual abstractions are not valid explanations; all reasoning must be based on experimental proof. In other words, there may be several hypothetical explanations for a situation, but the simplest one usually prevails. Yes: Occam's razor is correct. It's a Google hit, just took a really long time to get the search terms down. Best Regards, allie 21:44, 15 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Morton's Fork seems to fit the situation.-gadfium 22:28, 15 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Wow, that Morton's Fork is an incredible article. If the quote that San Francisco is looking for isn't linked somewhere on that page. Thanks! I definitely learned something new! Best Regards, --allie 21:31, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
How about Sophie's Choice? Much closer, both logically and literally. Occam's razor is a guide to choosing the most likely causal connection when one can imagine more than one possible cause. What does it have to do with this situation?alteripse 01:02, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- True: I should have been more careful. He was a fourtheenth century theologian, and I merely followed up on the translation and its contemporary concept, without considering the proper usage for the phrase. That it is also referred to as the "law of parsinomy" should have been a good clue. I ignored it. Criticism well meant, and well taken. --allie 21:31, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
How about Between a rock and a hard place?--Fastfission 10:17, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
The closest single word to fit what you're after would be "dilemma" Noodhoog 18:36, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Dates of events on other worlds
Yesterday's landing on Titan has made me wonder anew about whether there is any agreed convention as to the basis on which events on extraterrestrial worlds are dated. For example, the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon in 1969 happened on 17th or 18th July, depending on where on the Earth you were at the time. So what date do we use to record the event in history books on Earth?
Events on Earth are dated according to the time zone applying in the place where the event happened, at the time that it happened (so, for example, if Daylight Saving started or ended at around the time of the event, this could well influence the date of the event). The problem with events outside the Earth is, there is no such thing as a Greenwich meridian or an in International Date Line or any other type of time-keeping convention (or none that I'm aware of).
It would make sense to me if extraterrestrial "events" were dated either (a) always using Universal Standard Time on Earth, or (b) using the time zone in the place from where the spacecraft blasted off (eg. Cape Canaveral; Baikonur; China or wherever). Of course, the latter option would be of no use for events such as Shoemaker-Levy comet blasting into Jupiter in 1994. But I don't know if either of these conventions actually applies (and if so, when and how were they adopted), or if there is an alternative solution.
Also, when scientists are computing the date of an extra-terrestrial event, do they work out when it actually occurred in real time by taking into account the time it took for whatever electronic signal to reach the Earth to let us know about it, or do they base it on the time that Earth first got to know about it? Does anybody know? Cheers JackofOz 01:30, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I can't tell you about other agencies, but I've got some ideas about NASA.
- For most missions, NASA uses what is called "Mission Elapsed Time (MET). This clock hits zero at launch, which is why if you're watching a countdown, you'll hear a guy saying "T-minus #". The clock is negative at that point. This is all well and good for space shuttles and Voyagers and such, because days don't have too much meaning for them. They claim that they convert to UTC for use by others, but I've seen US Eastern (KSC), Central (JSC), and perhaps Pacific (JPL) used.
- However, you want to know about things that land on other things. As of right now, we've put landers on four planet-like objects: Venus, the Moon, Mars, and Titan. The landers on Venus and Titan didn't last long enough for any local measurement of time to have any meaning. Lunar landers did last long enough, but days on the Moon are a month long, so trying to operate off a lunar clock isn't really practical. While this is speculation, I'd guess they ran off MET.
- However, Mars is a special case. Because the Martian day is roughly the same as Earth's, and because landers have been solar powered, and probably because of some other things too, Mars missions have run off "Local Mean Solar Time" (see Time and date and astronomy on Mars). As I recall, the Mars Exploration Rover teams had watches custom-made to run off the slighly longer days.
- According to the Huygens descent timeline, ESA is reporting things to the public in CET "Earth Received" time, which doesn't necessarily mean that's what they're operating on internally. I have absolutely no idea what the Russians were using on their Venera missions. -- Cyrius|✎ 07:44, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Time and date and astronomy on Mars has some information about timekeeping on Mars -- Curps 08:00, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Ethel Rosenberg and VENONA evidence
The articles on Ethel and Julius Rosenberg and the VENONA project contradict each other, the first stating that the venona evidence proved that Ethel Rosenberg was innocent, the second, that she was an accomplice. Since I know next to nothing about the trial and encountered "VENONA" for the first time when reading the article on the trial (and I doubt any library within reach will have up-to-date info on this), could somebody else find out which version is correct? -- AlexR 02:54, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Google venona rosenberg and you get all the details you want. E.g., [24]. Venona proved the Rosenbergs were Soviet agents; a significant embarrassment to American liberals who long disputed the claim. alteripse 03:01, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Ethel's participation as reflected by VENONA is largely a matter of interpretation. She was not given a code name which seems to indicate that she was not a major player. But again, it's hard to know, and whether she was guilty of what they were accused of, were given a fair trial, or were punished appropriately are all somewhat separate from some of these facts, which is half of the disparity... If you'd read the very link you posted, alteripse, you'd see it says: Associated Press story, David admitted he lied under oath about his sister Ethel's involvement to reduce his own sentence and keep his wife Ruth out of prison. In an interview on CBS's "60 Minutes II," David said simply, "As a spy who turned his family in ... I don't care." David and Ruth Greenglass continue to live in the New York area under assumed names. The problem with the Rosenbergs in general is you are quick to get people on one side who say "VENONA is unreliable, throw it all out" and you are quick to get people on the other side who say, "VENONA proves everything." Neither show a very good knowledge of VENONA or the history of the case, in my opinion. --Fastfission 10:01, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- You are right, I failed to recognize that the question was specifically about Ethel: the VENONA evidence indicated that Julius, Ruth, and David were agents. Whether you consider Ethel an accomplice depends on whether you think it likely (1) she didn't know what her brother and husband were doing, (2) that Julius wouldn't have confessed to exculpate her, and (3) that David and Ruth were evil enough to implicate her if she had been truly ignorant. It doesn't take much more than knowledge to meet the definition of accomplice. This and the other issues people will have differing opinions about. I will agree with you that the more you learn about a case like this, the less likely you are to think that either "side" is entirely right. alteripse 15:41, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Well, in that case both articles should say that it is not so easy to interpret the evidence, instead of interpreting it differently and therefore contradict each other. -- AlexR 13:59, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I agree completely. I think the Rosenberg article in general should go into more detail about where the points of differentiation lie. As I know them, they are: 1. they were innocent, 2. they were guilty, 3. Ethel might have been innocent or at least not guilty of what she was accused of, 4. the evidence is too weak/problematic to decide, 5. whether or not they were guilty, they were punished too harshly, 6. their trial was botched in any event. Or something like that. I'm sort of a #5 and #6 man myself, and though I don't take VENONA at face value I find it likely that Julius at least was guilty (what really bothers me the most about their trial, I have to admit, is that Julius wouldn't just say he was guilty, whether he was or not, to save Ethel. Instead, they both died, and left two kids behind. I find that extremely irresponsible, I have to admit. As despicable as Greenglass generally seems to be, if he did lie in order to save his wife, I would at least sympathize with his motivations, which I don't for Julius and Ethel. But I'm digressing). --Fastfission 18:21, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- BTW, the picture gets even more complicated because while VENONA show pretty definitely that Julius was an agent, it doesn't provide evidence for any of the specific espionage for which he was convicted; also, there is, of course, the question of whether there was any "H-Bomb secret" to steal. -- Jmabel | Talk 23:42, Jan 16, 2005 (UTC)
- I think you mean A-bomb secret ("H-bomb secret" wasn't even available until 1951).. the things that Greenglass testified that Rosenberg helped steal (which is now on the new page, David Greenglass) were on the construction of the lens molds and the implosion concept more generally. How valuable were they? Probably not very -- Greenglass's knowledge was fairly general, he often didn't know what he was looking at, and he didn't give them anywhere as complete or accurate information as Fuchs did (though he didn't know Fuchs existed at the time, of course). Did it actually help the Soviets "get the bomb" any quicker? New historiorgraphy based on Russian sources suggests not. But anyway, that's only one aspect of things, relating more to the severity of the sentencing than anything else... --Fastfission 07:06, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Year of birth for Mary Kay Ash
I reverted what I thought was vandalism to that article, but Google reveals widespread disagreement about Ash's birthdate. 1915? 1918? Probably May 12 in Hot Wells, Texas, but I'm not confident about the year. -leigh (φθόγγος) 05:28, Jan 16, 2005 (UTC)
See Talk:Mary Kay Ash - Nunh-huh 08:20, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Graphing with X, Y, Z coordinates
I realized just today that Excel won't let me make the graph I want to make. Basically, I have a list of labels and for each label I have 3 different variables (X, Y, Z), which range from -4 to 4. I want to be able to graph them in space as points (not connected), with the label next to each point. What software will do this? (I have easy access to Excel, Freehand, Igor Pro, Matlab Pro, and Stata, though I have never used the latter three before nor do I know if they are even appropriate) Help! --Fastfission 09:55, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Matlab would probably be your best shot, but I'm not sure how to go about it. Alphax (t) (c) (e) 06:24, Jan 17, 2005 (UTC)
- Matlab will definitely plot points in 3space for you, but I'm not sure how the labeling would look. It might depend on how many points you have. Here's a little Matlab program for you:
x=[-4 -3 2 2 1 0 1]; y=[3 1 1 -1 -3 0 2]; z=x.^2-y; plot3(x,y,z,'x') for i=1:length(x) text(x(i),y(i),z(i)+0.2,sprintf('x=%d y=%d z=%d',x(i),y(i),z(i))) end title('My pretty plot'); xlabel('The x axis'); ylabel('The y axis'); zlabel('z=x^2-y'); grid on
- Type "help plot" if you want to see what options there are for symbols. moink
scope and utility of sociolinguistics
can anyone give me in detail the answer of "what is the scope and utility of sociolinguistics now-a-days?"
- Well we wont' answer your teacher's question for you, but reading the article on sociolinguistics will give you a few examples and a reference and read pages linked from that page and pages that link there. Remember however, to cite Wikipedia as your source. Dunc|☺ 14:18, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Burning MPEGS to a CD
I want to burn some MPEG files to a CD so I can watch them on a VCD/DVD player. Do I need to burn anything else (i.e. codecs) or do I just have to burn the MPEG files alone and that will be enough? Johnleemk | Talk 11:23, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- No, that won't work - you don't need codecs or the like, but VCDs have a particular format. Most buring programs have an option for burning VCDs, or check http://www.dvdrhelp.com/ for more information. -- AlexR 14:09, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Short answer - no you don't need to put the codec on the disc. Long answer - you can't just burn any old file onto a CD and expect it to work. The content requirements for VCDs and SVCDs are very specific. VCDs hold MPEG-1 format video at 352x240 pixels (NTSC) or 352x288 pixels (PAL); while SVCDs hold MPEG-2 format video at 480x480 pixels (for NTSC) or 480x576 pixels (for PAL) (there are some slight variations that you can make on thse resolutions by changign the frames/sec rate). If your file is in any other format it needs to be converted. Very specifically if your file is in any form of MPEG-4 based format (i.e. DivX, XVid, 3ivx etc..) it must be converted with a high probability of loss of quality. If you use Nero Burning ROM (and if you're not using it you should probably switch to using it) then Nero will attempt to convert any file you try to burn to the correct format, but in all probability it won't do this in quite the way you would want, so I recommend you use TMPGEnc to convert the file if you need to. Jooler 14:15, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Addendum - as AlexR points out - normally you can't just burn a raw mpg file as a data file and expect it to play. You have to use your software to burn it as a VCD/SVCD. This will put various helper files on the disk as well (see http://www.videohelp.com/vcd). However, I am told that some DVD players will bring up a menu if you are trying to play a DVD- on which you have burnt several raw mpg1/2 format files. Maybe this works on some machines with a CD-R too I don't know. There are a few players that are capable of playing DivX format files burnt onto CD, itmight be the case that only DivX capable players treat raw mpgs in this fashion. Jooler 14:35, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Digitally Synthesizing Siren Sounds (Police, Air-raid, etc.)
I'm trying to write a program to produce various types of siren sounds, so as to immitate police sirens, abulance sirens, air-raid sirens, etc.. I already have a program that can take a sine wave and modulate the pitch up and down to create a bad impression of a siren. Unfortunately, the result sounds more like someone playing with the pitch-bend wheel on an analog synth than any siren one might actually hear in the real world. I suspect I'd get pretty similar results if I substituted, say, a square wave or a triangle wave for the sine wave in my program.
Does anyone know if there are any easy-to-synthesize waveforms that might sound more like a siren? Or am I going to need to actually go out and digitize sounds from a real-life siren (a la Sampler (musical instrument))? --Ryguasu 04:58, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- A simple sine wave might be a good starting point for a siren sound, but sounds in the real world are generally made up of a number of different waveforms at different frequencies - for a halfway believable siren, you might try adding some harmonic overtones and maybe a tiny bit of phase distortion (more of both for a classic air raid siren than for a modern police siren). It also seems that with most sirens, different frequencies aren't shifted up and down by the same pitch which leads to a slightly more distorted sound as the siren's wail reaches its highest pitch - I guess it would be pretty tricky to sysntheize a naturally-sounding siren unless you either have a pretty detailed idea what you are doing or you are willing to experiment for a couple of hours with some wave-shaping software (which is generally great fun but rarely leads to the results you were trying to achieve - at least, that's the case with most of my synth experiments :P ) -- Ferkelparade π 22:14, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- . As Ferkelparade said, you'd need multiple frequency sources to get the overtones. Notice that the highest frequencies bend up over a longer time period than the root frequency. Also note that this siren has 2 separate whistles, overlapping in time. An alternative to multiple sines or sampling the whole siren would be to record a siren, then take a small looped sample while it is steady at its highest frequency. Then you could pitch bend one or more copies of that waveform to get different siren patterns. -Key45 22:57, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Speaking of synthesizing instrument sounds, I've been trying to make them using overlapped sine waves at different frequencies and amplitudes, but it doesn't seem to work. What am I doing wrong, and where can I find analyses of real instruments to work from? Alphax (t) (c) (e) 16:27, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
- search for "Physical Modelling" and "Modular Synthesis". Stanford's Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics is one place to start. -Key45 02:26, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Replicating the show/hide functions on TOCs
Ok, this could be a bit tricky. We all know that the TOCs on Wikipedia have show/hide links, which show or hide the TOC when you click them. How would I go about a similar function on a webpage I'm building, so that when I click a link it expands a table? Alphax (t) (c) (e) 06:26, Jan 17, 2005 (UTC)
- The simplest solution would be to have two versions of the page, one with the table expanded and one with the table shrunk. You should also be able to use inline frames. --Smack (talk) 07:20, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- is there a reason why you can't do it the way Wikipedia does, using javascript to set the "display" CSS property? Frencheigh 10:05, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Yes - I don't know how to. I'm quite opposed to using multiple versions of the same page, because I want a side navigation bar with "expanding" links. For example:
Link1
- This will become visible on clicking link1
- This will become visible on clicking link1
Link2
- This will become visible on clicking link2
- This will become visible on clicking link2
...
So how would I go about this using Javascript and CSS? Have a class element for each table row, and then have a JS function that takes variables to set the display CSS element? Alphax (t) (c) (e) 06:25, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
[25] <- there's a simple example i've uploaded, the important part of which is the function
function toggledisp(x){
el=document.getElementById(x);
if(el){
if(el.style.display=='none')el.style.display='inline';
else el.style.display='none';}
}
which (when say called from the onclick of a button) toggles the 'display' (of say a div, with an id). but did you need it to expand a particular row of a table? because out of the browsers ive tested only IE seems to do that correctly. Frencheigh 09:43, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
:Well, I guess I can do it with a div, but my main problem now is how to get it to work when I use frames - I discovered the relevant bit of code sitting around from a downloaded WP page. I'm guessing that it's something along the lines of document.frame.parent.getElementById, but I have very litte experience with JS. Alphax (t) (c) (e) 12:30, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
- Ok, I got it to work. Can I get it to work for all elements of a particular class? Alphax (t) (c) (e) 13:46, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
Boil Advisories
Sorry about there being no question here. I started typing and must have hit return and all that was posted was the header. Then when I went back my request to save text kept getting timed out. Anyhow, thank you, Sharkford, for attempting to answer the question based on only two words. The question I had was that boil advisories are posted by water departments here citing low pressure in the mains. What about low water pressure necessitates boiling water? Where I live most of the water comes from wells rather than surface bodies of water, so runoff shouldn't be the problem.
Sharkford's reply was based on just the header--no question.
- If you mean the boil-water advisories that towns occasionally announce, it means that the town water supply is known to have an unsafe high level of pathogens. Bringing water to a boil is presumed to make it safe for human consumption, so you are advised to do this for any water which you will be drinking or cooking with. It seems to be assumed, true or not, that you do not ingest water during washing or bathing. Often such advisories follow heavy rains which introduce lots of surface runoff into the reservoirs or lakes from which the town water supply is drawn, bringing more decomposing organic matter than the utility's chlorination process can accommodate. Less commonly it's associated with a breakdown of the water-purification system. --Sharkford 15:13, 2005 Jan 18 (UTC)
- At a guess, wouldn't one of the likely causes of low pressure be a significant leak (or leaks)? If enough water to seriously affect pressure in the whole system can get out, contamination may well be able to get in... Shimgray 00:02, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Could it also work the other way around? If the pressure is high, then any small leaks will be leaks out. If the pressure grows too low, such leaks could leak in, resulting in contamination. -Rholton 05:22, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- That certainly makes sense - it's the logic behind overpressure systems, which we don't seem to have a page on. Military vehicles intended to operate "sealed" in NBC environments are often built in such a way that they're kept at a slightly higher pressure than the outside world, in order that if there is a breach in the protection, air will flow out of the vehicle and not in. When the air outside may be full of nerve agents, this becomes really quite a nice detail... ;-)
- Similarly, some medical facilities are built like this; it's not uncommon for research labs to be kept at below the ambient pressure, so that if there's a leak nothing nasty can escape. Shimgray 16:30, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- In fact, when I saw the lone header "Boil advisories" my first thought was "don't break it, it will get infected". So relative to that I guessed prety close! Given the actual question, I think Rholton's got it; low pressure in the mains allows unchlorinated ground water to seep in. --Sharkford 21:29, 2005 Jan 20 (UTC)
Is the Gang of Four's "Design Patterns" of More Than Historical Interest?
I'm hoping to read up on Design pattern (computer science). It seems like the logical place to start might be where the description of design patterns began, i.e., with the Gang of Four's "Design Patterns". That book is almost ten years old now, though, so before I run out and buy it, I'm wondering if it has in any sense become "outdated". Is this book now better suited for those studying the history of programming than for those studying programming itself? Or does it still make sense as a good place to start learning about design patterns? --Ryguasu 19:45, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I'm sure it remains a perfectly good place to start, this is pretty timeless stuff, but if you don't mind reading on line, you probably won't find much in the book that is not also by now on line. -- Jmabel | Talk 21:22, Jan 17, 2005 (UTC)
- It's still a good, worthwhile read. It's well written and thoughtfully structured, and the patterns it decribes abound in current OO systems like the class libraries for java and c#. I guess it's no longer (if it ever was) a definative library of the patterns themselves, with numerous new ones being created and some of the existing falling from favour. But what's important isn't the list of patterns per-se, but the principle (you can find endless list of patterns and discussions on their pros and cons for free on the internet). But if you read that, beg borrow steal or save up for The Timeless Way of Building, the original pattern language book (and pleasantly one without all that dull comp-sci stuff to get between your brain and the idea) - it's simply brilliant. -- John Fader 22:47, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- A good place to dig around online is the Portland Pattern Repository, aka the Wiki. -- Cyrius|✎ 22:52, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
What's up with the Nicobar Islands?
Reading some recent coverage about tsunami aftermath in the Nicobar Islands, I was puzzled about why the local government might be prohibiting foreigners from traveling to the island. Union territory says that the islands are ruled directly by the federal government, which seems to contradict the CNN article. [26] says, "Travel to the Nicobar Islands is restricted, and only Indian nationals engaged in research may visit. Some exceptions are made for tourists with special permits." [27] says: "The Nicobar Islands are not open to visiting foreigners, whether scholars or tourists. Indian citizens need a special permit - which is hardly ever granted." [28] mentions the island's lieutenant governor.
So I'm wondering why the Indian government restricts travel to the islands. Is it for ecological reasons, to maintain tribal culture, something to do with the island's past as a prison, or some other historical or political context we're missing?
What is the actual structure of the island's non-tribal government?
The tribal/non-tribal population and protected land area figures also seem to vary a lot from source to source.
The situtation on the islands seems to be in a little bit of flux because of the tsunami, but it would be nice to get a handle on how things were right beforehand. Thanks for any insight you can lend. -- Beland 21:36, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Hmm, there was a segment on Channel 4 News a few days ago, I think about the Nicobar Islands. In this case the government was trying to keep modernity away from the few remaining aboriginal islanders, whose culture was clearly teetering on a precipice. I think the relief consisted of chucking coconuts at the islanders from a fleeting boat, while they chucked pointy sticks back at the boat. So your cultural contamination theory seemed to be supported by that. -- John Fader 23:04, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Have a look at http://www.andaman.org/ - it has some related info on travel restrictions to the Andamans. But I think in this particular case, it may have a lot to do with not wanting people killed by the inhabitants, who are famously hostile to outsiders. - Mustafaa 23:06, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- This BBC article suggest that some islands are off-limit because of military reasons. Furthermore, this article states that there were 93,000 visits by tourists to the Andaman and Nicobar islands, but it may be that in fact these tourists all went to the Andamans. -- Jitse Niesen 14:31, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
identity security issue?
Yesterday I received an email from
wiki@wikimedia.org
It states a password and username.
These do not refer to me!
I did not ask for any reminder.
Is this a scam or a security bloop from wiki?
I have posted this question on the general help page but thought it might be more relevant here.
Ton
The article on pressure refers to units of weight called 'ton(US)' and 'ton(UK)'. Does anyone know what these are? I suspect that they're Imperial and metric tons, respectively, but I'm not sure. --Smack (talk) 01:07, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Ton explains this, to more detail than your poor mortal mind can possibly withstand. -- John Fader 01:24, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
It looks like ton(US) and ton(UK) mean short ton and long ton, respectively. The terms are not used verbatim in ton but the text leads fairly straightly to that conclusion. I have heard of short and long tons forever but never heard of them categorized as U.S. vs U.K. (as are e.g. gallons). Such opportunity for enlightenment is the joy of our poor mortal minds. However, it would perhaps improve pressure to revise it to the more standard terms? --Sharkford 15:25, 2005 Jan 18 (UTC)
Weapons of Mass Destruction Destruction
Can anyone direct me to an article about the safe destruction of WMD's, particularly nuclear warheads? Every time I hear talk of destruction, I always become curious about the physics and mechanics as to how this is supposedly done. Thanks.
lvlarx 09:49, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
- AFAIK (but IANARS) a nuclear warhead will not detonate unless critical mass is achieved AND an appropriate neutron source is introduced to initiate fission. Removing enough fissionable material to prevent critical mass is the safest way to prevent a nuke from going nuclear; however, since critical mass and initiation are usually achieved by an explosion of some kind, it will still explode, making a reasonably big mess. Or at least that's what I've been led to believe. How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb might not be of use here. Alphax (t) (c) (e) 12:46, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
- Nuclear weapons are comparatively easy. Take out the (overwhelmingly plutonium) fissile core elements and they can be de-enriched (empoverished?) into fuel for a plutonium burning reactor. The polonium initiator is probably going to end up as medium-level nuclear waste. I've no idea what one does with a ton or so of powdered lithium-deuteride fusion fuel, but it's not particularly hazardous. Biological and chemical weapons are a bit harder. Biological weapons are fairly straightfoward, largely because there isn't such a large volume of it and it can't be stored in weaponised form for a long time. Bleach, irradiation and high-temperature incineration are straightforward options. The hard case is chemical weapons. By some estimates the US Army alone has over 30,000 tons of them, and the Soviets had (and thus the Russians still have) even more. The US solution is high-temperature incineration, which is rather expensive. Many of the shells and rockets are decades old and have been poorly stored, and nasty chemical reactions have changed and corroded them. So they have to be processed in a special facility that can dismantle them using machines. Here's a story from the LA Times detailing how incredibly slow and expensive that process is. -- John Fader 13:09, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- For chemical weapons, see also Chemical Weapons Convention which describes how far various countries have come in regards to eliminating their weapons as well as the weapons of mass destruction series which describes in more detail. (By the way the U.S. has less than 22,000 tons of chemical agents and is testing chemical neutralization methods of destruction of chemical weapons) Rmhermen 16:23, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
LCD displays
I'd like to know why 17-19" LCD displays almost always have 5/4 aspect ratio, while most CRT and most 15" LCD displays have 4/3 ratio. What is the reason - is it easier to produce, is there particular demand for more squarish displays, do they look better on a desk?
And a second question is why the resolution of LCD displays is so limited? Why are there almost no displays with 1600x1200 or 1440x1050 resolution, while such resolution is commonplace on laptops. Is there no demand for higher res desktop LCD displays? Did someone decided that people don't need that resolution? Is the demand for hi-res LCD panels from notebook manufacturers so high that there are no panels left for stand-alone displays? Paranoid 17:16, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
a site to trace a great grandmother born in {gutengerg} mainz 1830 s
Dear sir, My grandmother emigrated to england some time in the early 1800s and her name was theresa breiding. theresa married edward byrchall in london 1873. she is mentioned on the english 1901 census as aged 70 years a british subject born in germany The latter day saints records give her birth place as gutenberg your assistance is requested on where I may search for information as non german perso and no knowledge of the language.. thank you very much , david r bluff
School Research: Murder or Manslaughter?
I am presently enrolled in a college Socioligy course and where writing a paper on a certain incedent that has happened with two diffrent groups. I am to take a position on the detailed story and write about it but befor i take a final position i would like to learn the diffrence between the two. Here is the situation:
- I'm afraid we need a bit more detail than that :-)
- If you were going to ask about the difference between the two terms, then broadly speaking (at least in English common-law systems) the difference is one of intent; murder is unlawful killing with the intent to kill someone, whereas manslaughter is unlawful killing without that intent (although if you set out to seriously injure someone, that may well be considered analogous to the intent to kill)
- To take an example, were someone to be assaulted and fight back - and, by using more force than they intended, kill their assailant... that would be manslaughter; the killing was not a lawful one (although a plea of self-defence might well see them acquitted of the crime), but they did not intend for the victim to die.
- However, were they assaulted, and fight their assailant off - then chase them down and beat them to death... that would be considered murder, since they acted with an intent to kill.
- I have a suspicion you were going to ask for a suggestion over a specific case; my suggestion would be to go through the mind of the killer at the time of the incident. Were they aware their actions could or would lead to death? Had they taken a decision in the light of this awareness to continue with the action?
- Best of luck reaching a decision; a lot of very interesting debate has taken place in the past by judges mulling over this very issue, and you may find it interesting to try looking for some of those cases. (For example: if, in the fight example above, party A restrains B - but B party has a grave medical condition, unknown to A, which causes the restraint to kill them... is that murder? A acted with intent to do the particular act that killed B, but did not intend it to be an act that could cause death...)
Postmodern economics
What are viable methods for establishing and maintaining a post-monetary economy free of barter — a system without a medium of exchange or store of value?
- In the absence of other answers, you might try reading the short story And Then There Were None by Eric Frank Russell. (Google will tell you where to find it. Then you might consider whether that society depicted is truly free of medium of exchange. DJ Clayworth 18:35, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- So ur after a society where people give and take at their own will? If i capte what u say, then try looking Economy of Smurfs, or if that doesnt exists, try Smurfs. They may infact be apre-monetary economy
Breast cancer and mammorgrams
- moved from Village Pump BrokenSegue 01:54, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Hello out there! I want to get feedback on the subject of mamograms causing cancer. I read a long time ago (can't remember where) that the London Journal of Medicine stated that the pressure put upon the breast during a mamogram could activate inactive cancer cells. Has anyone heard of this? Can you give me any insight? Could this be possible and why or why not. If you have any info or links you can email me at pamelaleb@comcast.net Thank you very much.
- There is research on the x-rays used in mammograms causing cancer. Rmhermen 02:25, Jan 19, 2005 (UTC)
- First problem, no "London Journal of Medicine"... There seem to be quite a few papers discussing beliefs related to cancer, which mention the popular misconception that mammograms cause cancer, and a lot on the negative effects of excessive screening (basically, it screws with peoples' heads) but nothing I can find which seems to be the research you mention... this isn't a systematic search, but ten or fifteen minutes hasn't got me anywhere. Shimgray 03:39, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)
do lemmings go in the water?
Look up Lemming (and, in particular, Norway Lemming). Lupo 08:16, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- And don't bite the newcomers, Lupo. --Tagishsimon (talk)
Function
What is a function from x to y? How to use an arc arrow diagram to depict a function.
- See Function (mathematics)#Formal_definition. utcursch 08:40, Jan 19, 2005 (UTC)
Quebec French accent?
I had this question up on the Quebec French talk page for over a week and nobody seemed to know, so I'll try here. The basic question is:
"What are the linguistic terms and basics relating to this accent question? Is it phonology? or something physical? Where can I look up more on this question?"
On the Quebec french "ear" and "mouth"
I'd love to note somewhere the obvious difference between the location in the mouth of Quebec French vs. France French, and the related difference in how a Quebecois hears foreign sounds. Unfortunately I'm not really qualified to do this in detail. All I know is that the foreign "th" sounds come out very different in the different French accents when speaking English:
sound English Quebec France [θ] "think" "tink" "sink" [ð] "this" "dis" "zis" Obviously the two languages are either differently placed in the mouth, or have a different "ear" for consonants, or both. Anyone understand the linguistic terminology here well enough to comment on this?
Steverapaport 20:20, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- While the fact has been widely aknowledged (I've seen numerous references to it), I have yet to see a suggested hypothesis. Maybe Quebecois are more exposed to English slang /t, d/ for [θ, ð] than European French speakers? --Circeus 20:42, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- First, my qualifications to comment: I lived in Ottawa (near the Quebec border) for a year, and in Northern Quebec for a summer. I've also spent a bit of time in France and in other parts of Europe where I have had business dealings with Frenchmen. In English and in Parisian French, which I studied for 7 years.
- The difference is definitely not due to slang English influence, because in the remote parts of Quebec there isn't any to speak of. It is rather due to an entire way of speaking. To my ear the Quebecois speak a version of French that is spoken further back in the mouth -- their "R"s retreat almost to the uvula, the mouth is held further open, and the words alternate between sounding swallowed and sounding flat. The articulation points are further back on the tongue. There's also a bit of an adenoidal sound, as if the speaker has a cold.
- The Parisiens speak closer to the front of the mouth, with more closed mouth, and most of the articulation done near the tip of the tongue and lips. I'd love to say all this with authority but all I have is my own eyes and ears for this.
- I'm pretty sure that the difference in the "th" sounds is related to the different articulation points or the adenoidal thing, but I don't have much to back it up. But I'd love to hear from someone who does! Steverapaport 23:37, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)
So, pointers to more on this question?
Steverapaport 18:20, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Deaths from the Crusades
I'm trying to find out how many people died fighting for the Vatican during all of the Crusades - all 12 or 13 or however many there were. That is, not the people defending the Holy Lands, just the people 'on offense'. Thanks! 168.213.1.134 18:45, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)
There was no Vatican during the Crusades. You might want to look at Papal States, but even so, the Crusaders weren't fighting for the Pope. RickK 01:19, Jan 21, 2005 (UTC)
- Thanks, I guess I'm a bit off on the exact background of the Crusades. But you still understand my question - the number of people who died trying to reclaim the Holy Lands. I guess I'm really shady on my history here... 168.213.1.134 16:49, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I think that the kind of answer you're looking for may not exist. Our article on the Crusades contains some good summary information, and links to more detailed accounts. From First Crusade:
- Both knights and peasants from many different nations of western Europe, with little central leadership, travelled over land and by sea towards Jerusalem and captured the city in July 1099...
- The crusades were not simple military campaigns, but were also a sort of migration. You might want to think of something kind of like the invading Vandals. -Rholton 15:56, 22 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I think that the kind of answer you're looking for may not exist. Our article on the Crusades contains some good summary information, and links to more detailed accounts. From First Crusade:
Academic failure
What are some good Web resources that deal with the causes of academic failure in high-school students? I'm not looking for ultrascholarly reports but rather for sites that an ordinary intelligent person can understand. Thanks, anon.
- Rather than a link, I can offer some guidelines which are known to be predictors of failure:
- 7th grade performance of a student is an early indicator of how well that student, who was used to the less demanding environment of 1st - 6th grades, might fare. This is an indicator of high school performance for that student. (Specifically, how well they cope with change)
- Similarly, the grades in a high school chemistry (including lab work) course are precursors of college-level performance. Those students taking the manual drafting course will get grades that are precursors of post-high school performance.
- The key is how do the students react to more exacting or demanding standards. Ancheta Wis 15:02, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)
equation for the area of a triangle
See Heron's formula -- Dominus 16:51, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)
... which is fine if you know the lengths of all three sides, but if you know the length of one side and an altitude then you can use Area=(Base x Height)/2. The triangle article describes several different ways of calculating area. Gandalf61 10:49, Jan 21, 2005 (UTC)
Can someone either direct me to a webpage completely explaining the Usenet hierarchy (eg alt. and talk.) or explain it below. I have looked at Great Renaming and Usenet already. Thanks, --anon
free articles?
Hello, I am building an internet business and am looking for a source for free articles that I can send through a retail opt-in list. Can I use Wikipedia and if so then what is my next step? Thank you in advance. Best Regards, -anon
- Well, theoretically yes. But in practice you have to comply with the GFDL which means that in addition to sending the article itself you'd also have to send the entire text of the GFDL (which is rather large) and a full list of all the wikipedia contributors who contributed to the article. Now, there are those (left-handed unibrowed communists, all) who'll tell you that you need only distribute a link to the latter, but that's never been tested in court; I can't recommend volunteering to be the test case. -- John Fader 01:20, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Medical records
I would like to know if I have a right to request copies of medical records form the various doctors and hospitals I have gone to through my life (I live in the US). How do I go about it? Should I expect to pay very much? ike9898 19:39, Jan 20, 2005 (UTC)
- Your right to access and correct your medical record (aka "personal health information") is protected under the HIPAA. Unfortunately, the HIPAA doesn't help make the process of obtaining your PHI any easier -- I'm pretty sure you'll have to request documents from each hospital individually. Just call or write them; they'll send you a form or (rarely) direct you to a website where you can download and print out a PDF and mail it in. IIRC, in many (most?) cases, you should expect to pay up to about $1 per page. --David Iberri | Talk 21:38, Jan 20, 2005 (UTC)
These answers apply to US only. You have the right to see your records and request copies, but remember that they are the "work notes" of your contractors and the original physical record does not "belong" to you. In general most doctor's offices, clinics, and hospitals do not charge to send a single copy of your current records to another doctor or hospital. Especially sensitive (mental health, HIV, addiction) records have tighter legal restrictions of various types and transfer and access can be a bigger pain in the rear. Many will charge to make a copy if you ask them to send to yourself, especially if the records are voluminous. You mention "through my life;" I don't know how old you are, but law does not require storage forever for adults. Most hospitals and clinics send records to storage occasionally and you might expect to pay for accessing archived records (or you may find they cant be found). As far as I know, there is no law regarding charging for copies of records, so above is custom and may or may not be followed in unusual cases (e.g., if your inpatient records take up an entire shelf in the hospital). If you are an adult and you actually get records from, say, the 1970s, you may be surprised at how scant they are. Legally required documentation has increased probably 10-fold over the last 25 years (and you wonder why health care costs continue to rise). And absolutely, you will have to request from each provider; legally, even if your current provider has a complete set of your whole-life records from ten previous providers, they can only transfer the record of their own care of you to another provider. alteripse 13:26, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Metaphysical Psychotherapist
Is there such a thing as a Metaphysical Psychotherapist
- Yes, but not for long. You see, the constructive interference caused by the wavefront coincidence of two such strong sources of pseudoscientific claptrap will produce localized levels of blatant untruth that exceed the fundamental capacity of Einstein-Minowsky spacetime to sustain dissemblance (given by the Rumsfeld constant, that is 14.6 barefaced lies per cubic inch). To shed the excess nonsense a Heisenberg-Posen bridge will form (a perfect sphere with a diameter of approximately one meter) and the space therein will be ejected into hyperspace. From the frame of reference of a nearby stationary observer, that volume will appear to vanish (with the corresponding inrush of 4*pi/3 cubic meters of air, producing a loud "gasp" sound) leaving only the calves, feet, and sandals of the metaphysical psychotherapist (unless they're a midget, of course). -- 81.153.211.84 01:56, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- It is with extreme reluctance that I venture to even slightly temper the positively awe-inspiring paragraph offered above. And I've been led to believe that some of my wit was a tad sharp for tastes here... I also wouldn't trust a "Metaphysical Psychotherapist" as far as I could speculate her, but their more honest cousins usually hang out under the sign of "philosophical counseling." Google it [29] and you will find an immediate page of references to their learned societies and even pages answering that common, burning question, "what is philosophical counseling" [30]. alteripse 02:46, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- It only leaves us with the burning question ... can paragraphs from this page be transferred to BJAODN? (Though GJAODN might be more appropriate). DJ Clayworth 04:34, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Veterans Administration Cuts - 70% ??
Reference junkie here can't find anything to verify this. According to the VA Patient Advocate at the VA in Florida, the administration is cutting the VA budget by 70%. Now, why can't I find anything to substantiate this? It's not on Google or High Beam - nada. Apparently, it was just announced to the VA. Even if it wasn't released to the press yet, wouldn't there be something somewhere to confirm this? --allie 22:10, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Time warp? This [31] was posted in March 2003. Here is another angle from approx 1 year ago on this same topic [32]. These two [33] [34] from last spring address the planned reductions through 2009: more like a 17% reduction over 4 years, it looks like. A 70% imminent cut that none of these groups has heard about seems unlikely. alteripse 05:06, 22 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Thank you. I feel like such a dyslexic dolt. Appreciate the references, very, very much. --allie 11:09, 22 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Sri Lankan local government
What is the structure of Sri Lankan govt (not LTTE areas) below District level? What are the names of the administrative subdivisions in Trincomalee? Thanks! 203.94.91.81 05:10, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Intermittent modem hardware failure
Yes, sad to say, some of us are still using 56k dial-up modems. Occasionally mine attempts to dial and says "hardware failure". Now, it only does this when my dial up tries to connect (my ISP disconnects me every 2 hours on the dot but I have a little bit of software that reconnects me automatically to fight my ISP's evil ways), so it can't be a loose connection. Rebooting often, but not always, solves it. Any ideas?
Apologies in advance if my signature appears strange. I've been told off. I worked on the bloody thing for ages, but now I'll have to simplify it again. Grrrrr! Actually, what was said was that it made somebody's page go broken, so probably best not to put it on a significant page at all. (No sig, this is user : bodnotbod).
Saving money by cancelling school
About how much money would the U.S. and the school systems in it save if they took off the last day of school for all public schools? How much would be saved in pay, transportation, etc? --elpenmaster
- In all likelyhood, not as much as you might think. I believe all administrators and teachers are exempt from overtime laws, meaning that they get paid the same regardless of how many days they work. You might get some savings in power utilization, and perhaps fuel and salary from busses, assuming that the district picks up the tab for them and not the parents. Also, it's important to remember that many schools do not shut down just because the school year is out. There's always summer sessions, the janitorial staff is typically employed year round, so costs will always be incurred. Also, I believe in California at least, a district's funding is directly tied to their attendance, so by cutting a day, the district itself would be getting less money. Of course, this also raises the counter-question, "What is the average cost/benefit to society per student per day of school attended?" --Cvaneg 22:42, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Asian alphabetization
Let's say the only language you know is Japanese, or one of the other Asian languages that doesn't use a [[phonetic alphabet. Is there an equivalent of alphabetization that your can use to organize items, such as an index or a phone book? How does this work? ike9898 14:16, Jan 21, 2005 (UTC)
- Japanese is a bad example, because it does have a phonetic alphabet, and has had for about a thousand years. But your question is reasonable. I recently did some research into the way medieval Chinese printers organized their type cases; as you can imagine, the problems are similar.
- Typically, each Chinese character is associated with a "radical", which is a common subpart of that character and many others. For example, the character for "明" = "bright" is clearly a compound of the two characters for "sun" ("日") and "moon" ("月"), and the radical is "sun". The radicals themselves are ordered partly by the number of strokes they contain and partly in an arbitrary but conventional way. Often, a major dictionary such as the K'ang Hsi Tzu-Tien (Kangxi zi dian in modern spelling) of 1716 will establish an order for characters or radicals, and this order will be re-used for hundreds of years afterwards.
- Chinese characters in dictionaries are usually ordered by one or more of: number of strokes; what radical they contain (with the radicals themselves ordered as in K'ang Hsi Tzu-Tien or some other well-known and widely-available source); how many strokes they have in addition to the radical; what order they appear in a standard dictionary; or some combination of these.
- Typically, for example, the dictionary will list the characters ordered first by number of strokes; characters with the same number of strokes will be ordered by radical, with the characters with simpler radicals before those with more complicated radicals; where the radicals have the same number of strokes the radicals will be ordered in a conventional and well-known order; and where the characters contains the same number of strokes and the same radicals, they will be ordered in a conventional order.
- Note that even a phonetic alphabet doesn't solve all your problems. Consider the problem of locating John Smith in the telephone book. The spelling is unambiguous, but you still can't find the one you want. Modern Chinese dictionaries often list words in order by pinyin phonetic spelling, but some languages, like Mandarin and Korean, contain so many homonyms that this is insufficient. My Chinese dictionary, for example, lists seven different words all pronounced "chá".
- I suggest that if you're interested in this you go to the library or bookstore and take a look at a Chinese-English dictionary. You will probably find its organization quite absorbing.
- I hope this was helpful. -- Dominus 16:07, 21 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- THEN
- Even though it was Chinese who invented movable type, as late as a couple of hundred years ago, many Chinese printers preferred block printing because of economics. Reason: Cheap labor. Some books are selling like hot cakes. Instead of reset each page at each run, they could save the wooden board for later use.
- Movable type was not very popular in China. However, it was a different story in Korea. Many Korean scholars studied Chinese works. To help their customers catch-up quickly, many Korean printers used durable brass type to print Chinese books as soon as they got a copy from China. I don't know how they managed the font.
- The project of Chin Ch'ien (Jian Jin) in 1776 had twelve huge type cases with two hundred drawers each. Each drawer was divided into eight compartments and each compartment held four types. The cases were labled with the twelve divisions set out in the K'ang Hsi Tzu-Tien and each drawer also had a label; the drawers were ordered (as usual) by radical and by number of strokes.
- Before each page was composed, the printer would go through it and make a list of which characters were required and how many of each. Then his assistants would gather the types from the case. Another person was responsible for returning the types to the cases when a page was broken down.
- Often an unusual character would be required that had not been made up beforehand. Chin Ch'ien was using wooden type, so he could have a new character made up on the spot when necessary.
- Wang Chen in 1313 was using metal types. He had them organized on two huge round tables with rotating tabletops. On the tables, the types were organized as usual, by strokes and radicals, with one table for the common characters and the other for the rare ones. As the types were needed, a printer sitting between the tables would select the appropriate types. -- Dominus 13:54, 22 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- In the
- NOW
- A Chinese dictionary usually has two or more index systems. The formal one is radical + stroke number system. No matter which dialect you speak, if you can write, you can use it. A schoolboy has to spend weeks to months to learn how to use the 100-some radicals. Usually, there will be another index that orders words using stroke numbers only. These are usually for the "difficult" words. Sometimes, you just can't tell which radical is the one.
- Another method is to order the characters according to its pronounciation. Before the 20th century, there was no widely accepted way to so it. People invented many ordering systems. Currently, two widely used standards based on Standard Mandarin are used: pinyin and bopomofo. If you can pronounce, you can find it.
- There are many less-used index methods. Example: the four corner method. Not each dictionary is using it.
- Today they don't print so many copies of telephone directories. A telephone directory may order names according to the family name -> given name order. Family names are sorted by stroke number -> order of pinyin or bopomofo. -- Toytoy 18:37, Jan 21, 2005 (UTC)
- Okay, so if a literate Chinese person was given 100 index cards that each had a different word on it, could he easily put these cards in order according to one of the above schemes (without using any sort of reference book)? ike9898 22:34, Jan 21, 2005 (UTC)
- Possibly not. To sort several English words, you just compare each word's each alphabets. With Chinese characters, this can be more difficult. 1st level ordering could be easy. 2nd level would be much more difficult.
- Radicals and stroke numbers are 1st level. They do not distinguish each charcter withing the group. You need another ordering method to sort each character. ("狼" (wolf) and "狗" (dog) both have the "犬" (the left part) radical, you don't know which comes first). Using phonemes is usually easier.
- Some methods are too difficult to do it in mind. There are 100-200 radicals (1st level), you just can't remember the correct dictionary order of them unless you are truly insane. Counting stroke numbers (1st level) is a tedious job because there are some exceptions when two strokes are actually counted as one (or vice versa) because you are wrong and they are right. (How do you write R? P then slash or I then "a crescent and a slash"?) Sometimes, your order of writing is just different from theirs. (How do you write H? Vertical, vertical, horizontal? Or vertical, horizontal, vertical?) Possibly you still need a dictionary.
- Ordering using phonetics is somewhat easier. Many people in Taiwan were taught bopomofo (a set of non-Roman phonemes) in kindergarten or 1st grade. People in China learned pinyin (Romanization) at about the same age. Both systems are nearly identical except for the writing systems. (See: music notation). It is possibly easier to order in pinyin because many bopomofo users forgot the exact order except for the first four or eight phonemes: bo, po, mo, fo, de, te, ne, le ... . They know the order of Latin alphabets.
- If you have a rollodex or a notebook filled with telephone numbers, you may use stroke number or pinyin to order names. There's a system of family name's order "The Hundred Families' Surnames" (百家姓) (趙錢孫李 周吳鄭王 ...) and another list of 1,000 frequently used characters "An Essay of One Thousand Words" (千字文) (a meaningful article written in exact 1,000 different words: "天地玄黃 宇宙洪荒 ..." "In the beginning of the time and universe ..."). These are not usually used for general purpose ordering. Many ordering systems may be too difficult to implement in mind.
- You can configure your Chinese version of Microsoft Windows, Linux or MacOS to order using the character codes or language specific orders. With the Traditional Chinese Windows, you can choose between stroke number and bopomofo. Some systems may support more ordering methods. -- Toytoy 04:25, Jan 22, 2005 (UTC)
Sculptured Reliefs at Perspolis
Can someone find info on the Sculptured Reliefs at Perspolis? I can't seen to find anything on them ((well at least not that which is useful.. >>; )) What info I do have is mostly pics and that cannot help me do a report on it. So please if you do find something ie- How is it made... What materials where used... What techique was used.... In what location are the works found.. bla bla bla.. you get the Idea I'm pretty sure
It's possible your trouble finding info is that most people who are likely to be providing useful info spell it Persepolis, and PRESTO, there's a whole article about it right here! alteripse 12:44, 22 Jan 2005 (UTC)
electrical heating element
My electric stove has a heating element that has 'gone bad' (doesn't heat when voltage is applied across it). I assumed these things go bad because somehow the conductive path is broken, like a light bulb burning out. However, when I test the resistance across the busted heating element, it is not infinite but something more like 1 M-ohm. Can these heating elements go bad in some other way? ike9898 22:44, Jan 21, 2005 (UTC)
- Ordinarily, the resistance should be a few tens of ohms (e.go., 220 V across 30 ohms gives 1.6 kW of heat). 1 M-ohm will be leakage across imperfect insulation somewhere. —AlanBarrett 10:56, 23 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Chef
Is there a complete list of the Chef's songs from South Park? I cannot find one that is GFDL or other open license. --Fan
You mean you want the lyrics, or just the titles? The lyrics are copyrighted, and will be for many years, so you're not going to find a GFDL listing of them. If you're just talking about the titles, that can't be copyrighted, so a list is perfectly free use. RickK 21:59, Jan 22, 2005 (UTC)
Just the titles, and maybe some information about where each one appears, the context and some description of what the song is about and any guests who feature on it. I could not find it on the South Park article. Am I missing it? Thanks --Fan
- I can do some research on this - I'll post it at List of Chef's songs (South Park). 203.94.91.71 10:12, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Police (APCO?) 10 codes
What are all of the (APCO?) 10 codes? (i.e.: 10-4 = "Message recieved", "OK"; 10-10= "Negative","No.") I found a list of them, but it only have from 10-1 to 10-34 or somewhere around there. I know there are more (95?)..
- Codes above 40 vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction; APCO only created (I think) and standardized the first 40, and allowed anything higher to be defined by the user. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 03:05, 23 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Okay, thank you. Do you know of a website (or do you know them off-hand?) where I can find the entire list for the NYPD? (And uh...just out of pure curiosity, what does APCO stand for?)
- The 10-codes are not standardised. APCO stands for Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials. I think the 10-codes are different for each city or whatever. Alphax (t) (c) (e) 09:45, Jan 23, 2005 (UTC)
- Here are the NYPD radio codes. They differ significantly from common (if not "standard") usage -- so much that an outsider trying to interpret and act upon them could get quite confused. For example, the "common" (if not standard) 10-10 is, as stated, "negative"; but for the NYPD, 10-10 means "Possible crime" -- while for FDNY, 10-10 means "Current location". --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 17:58, 23 Jan 2005 (UTC)
South Park Script?
Where can I find the script to "South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut"? I found a script once, but it left out some parts. I'm looking for a script that has everythnig every character said, word-for-word, including the songs. Does such a thing exsist? o.o;
Can you buy it? It must be copyright. The South Park Article is a little vague about many details. --Fan
- It's not unusual for movie scripts to be published. If this one hasn't been, it probably will be. You might do a normal web search for the title plus "ISBN"; you might try a book-focused site like Amazon or Abe Books; you might talk to a library or book store, especially a book store specializing in film-related books. -- Jmabel | Talk 21:54, Jan 23, 2005 (UTC)
Religion question
Which are the most and least religious countries in the world? Are they Senegal/Nigeria and Czech Republic/France respectively? A Google search yields contradicting results.
- I'm guessing ur aware of the laicité situation in France, whereby it seems to me that its illegal to do a survey on the national religious practices. So France is vague. Hard to get a decent value for number of believers. I'd imagine Pitcairn is not very religious --Wonderfool 13:08, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Actually, every Pitcairn Islander is a member of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church. This makes it the most religious country in the world, although the population is only 47.-gadfium 21:53, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- It is probably impossible to answer this question objetively. It depends on how you define the word religious. Most Americans would probably claim to believe in God, but how many ever actually do anything religious on a regular basis? What about countries with a state religion, where everybody is technically a member? There are also people who don't like the word religion, even though they might seem very religious by your standards. You can, I am sure, find statistics on this, but you have to remember that their interpretation is very subjective. -Aranel ("Sarah") 22:37, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Actually, every Pitcairn Islander is a member of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church. This makes it the most religious country in the world, although the population is only 47.-gadfium 21:53, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Creative writing assignment
Have you ever been trapped and imprisonned in a tall dark tower? What do you think it would feel like? What thoughts would go through your head? Tnx. Nigel
- I doubt Wikipedians will be of much help to you, because a creative writing assignment isn't a matter of fact. Only you can tell your teacher what would go through your head, etc. --Gelu Ignisque
- Or, of course you could arrange to be trapped and imprisoned in a tall dark tower. -- Jmabel | Talk 21:56, Jan 23, 2005 (UTC)
- Try Anne Boleyn and Rapunzel, Nigel. Then go lock yourself in a dark closet before tackling that assignment and try not to plagiarize. --allie 00:24, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I reckon, first thing would be annoyance that u let urself get trapped. then later stages would come paranoia, hunger, thrist, boredom, until you eventually get used to the dark and use the time to think really deeply. what id do is invent a language or sumthin, just to keep my mind from going to jelly. sometime during the imprisonment i'd think "does the fact that the tower is tall actually affect the mindframe? i'd make up dozens of stories in my head, then put music to them in my head. and try and think of every single person ive ever met, of every place ive ever been, of the best things i've ever done. maybe u should put sumthing in the essay about time, and how it all seems so pointless when there's no days or nights, and everything is the same always. The key is keeping ur mind and body useful. so i guess doing pressups or pushups or situps or some kind of exercise would be a good plan. And I'd spend a certain amount of time simply doin nothing, paying attention to the sound of silence, trying to somehow make things appear or happen thru telekinesis. And id also try somehow to inscribe something into the wall or the floor, with my nails perhaps. inscribing things like how many times i peed, or trying to draw perfect circles. I would create an imaginary friend, and talk to him/her/it about escaping and what we would do when we got out. And some time i would possibly think "Dude, am i dead? i may aswell be. Death is just darkness and nothingness. or is it? how should i know.im not dead. because i can think. dammit who said "credo ...." i think therefore i am. I would love to die just to feel what it feels like". paranoia, u know. at some time, id be eventually thinking "i wish i had internet here". And worry about if my capturees have forgotten about me.but then again, i guess they'd be obliged to send me food. So the food would be a pleasant relief.u could use the time to try and cunt to a million; and try to predict, using ur counting, when the guards are gonna come and feed you. Phew, that was the fastest thing ive ever typed in my life. also the most useless. but i hope this shit helps. if only i had an essay like this to ask the world help for
- Yanno--that's exactly what happened to Anne Boleyn! And then she had her head chopped off. But I don't think she did push-ups...or said, "dude," but really accurate nonetheless. A- based on creativity, turning in the assignment with lightnening speed, but the spelling and grammar gets you every time... Best regards --allie 02:24, 25 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Removing the border from frames in XHTML
Now, I understand that this can be done with frameborder="0"
in the frameset tag, but this isn't official. Is there an official way of doing it? Alphax (t) (c) (e) 09:54, Jan 23, 2005 (UTC)
- In fact,
frameborder="0"
is exactly the coding to remove frame borders in XHTML. This is shown in the DTD as produced by the W3C [35]. If you search for "frameborder" in that, you will see that this coding is allowed under XHTML 1.0. It is also allowed in HTML 4.01. However, in HTML 3.2, not only wasframeborder
not allowed, neither wereframeset
andframe
. If you are interested, this can be seen at [36], where trying to search for "frame" does not yield results. So if your website is being written in strict 3.2, you cannot actually use frames. They are an innovation introduced with HTML 4, although, obviously, many browsers already had them in their programming, and they were de facto standard, although not de jure. However, most websites you will write today will be in 4.01, so you can includeframe
,frameset
andframeborder="0"
to your heart's content. :) Smoddy | ειπετε 19:37, 23 Jan 2005 (UTC)
rainfall patterns in Ireland
Does anyone have a link for rainfall patterns in Ireland on a month by month basis? I'm thinking of holidaying in Ireland in the summer and would like to know what is most likely to be the least wettest month. Jooler
Canadian pilot ww1 question
I am having trouble finding any information on the Canadian Pilot (ww1-?) Eddie Redenbacher.
Am I spelling the name wrong....Can you offer me any help or suggestions on how to get the info??
Thank you C. wallace
Do you mean Eddie Rickenbacker, American WWI ace ?
question_output
Output to screen: How does an appropriate binary pattern output by a program get
turned into a pattern of pixels on the screen? How is it possible to change the
appearance of some text by changing the font, font size, etc.? How is flashing text
implemented? How is it that a picture (e.g. text) stays on the screen, even if the CPU
is now executing some quite unrelated task?
- It's not done in one step, of course. If you're talking about text, the rough order is:
- Text memory -> markup engine -> video memory -> video driver
- The text memory remembers alphanumerics, and handles remembering what's been printed, where the cursor is, and what will come next.
- The markup engine (in a word processor, etc) will keep invisible tags in the text that indicate that some text is bigger, smaller, flashing, colored, etc.
- The video memory is on the single pixel level, and has enough memory to represent the output screen, in full color, at least once. The markup engine writes the text in fonts and colors to this memory, where it remains until it's erased or changed. Video memory is often double-buffered, so it keeps two copies around -- one for updates, and one to display. This way the memory doesn't have to change while it's being displayed on the screen, which would cause unpleasant flashing effects.
- The video driver simply copies the appropriate video memory buffer to the display, sixty or so times a second, over and over. Or you could consider it the other way round, the driver repaints the screen many times per second, taking its latest information from the video memory.
- Note that the CPU need be involved only in the first two stages. In modern computers the video memory and driver are in separate hardware.
- In general, which of these components is on the motherboard, which is part of the video card, and which is included in the operating system, all change between vendors and over time. That's why I've used very generic names for everything.
Four and nine
Anonymous request moved from article space. Peter O. (Talk) 21:44, Jan 23, 2005 (UTC)
song Title Four and Nine
Words I took a lady out one night she had a very large appetite I took her to Lockharts but we didnt go inside I took her to the Cecil Four and Nine This song was sung in the music halls about the 1930's
Can somebody help. If so please contact gerryb@big pond.net.au
Scrap Iron for the War effort-WW II
Where or how can I find information about the United States civilian war effort during WW II? Specifically farmers turning in scrap iron and farm tools for the war effort. Thank you, Gary Owens coyoteridgeranch@amaonline.com
- The Library of Congress: http://catalog.loc.gov/ has a good selection of photographs, but it'll take some research to find more than that. I tried the "Farm Administration Bureau" but be sure to narrow your search terms to a specific area or a more specific request, or you'll just end up with some very interesting photos, the way I did. Hope that's a lead for you. --allie 00:47, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Effect on (air) pressure by filling up a space with fluid
Hi,
please assume the following:
I have a cylinder that is filled with air (1 atmosphere) and it is oriented in a horizontal direction, so that you could roll it, on a table for example. The top and bottom are seals. The seals are necessary, because on both sides of the cylinder you have oil. Now, the seals are leaking, and oil seeps into the cylinder.
What I am concerned with here is the effect this seeping of oil has on the pressure inside this cylinder.
My thoughts are: the air gets compressed, so that if we would half the cylinder filled with oil, instead of having 1 atmosphere, we would have 2 atmosphere, in the part that is filled with air. (note: I assume that air cannot leave the cylinder) Is that correct?
This is the pressure, that according to my thinking, is now acting on the surface of the oil, and on that part of the seals that is not yet covered with oil. The next question is: what is the pressure on that part of the cylinder wall that is covered with oil?
The surface of the oil at midpoint should be length of cylinder * diameter of cylinder
The cylinder surface that is covered with oil is: 2* 1/2 of the top and bottom (=2* pi*r^2) 1/2 cylinder side surface (= 1/2 * h*2*pi*r) What pressure will be acting now on this surface, if the pressure on the top of the oil surface is 2 bar?
Thank you very much for your help!
Sincerely, Juergen
- Oil is a liquid, so we're going to assume that it's incompressible. So yes, if somehow oil is getting in and air is not leaving you will get an increase in air pressure. Now, the next question is whether or not the temperature varies, and how. If your system is in contact with a constant-temperature reservoir, you could assume it's isothermal (i.e., the temperature is not allowed to change). We can model air as an ideal gas. Then you get pV=RT=const, or, if you halve the volume that the air is in, you'll get twice the pressure. Alternatively, you can assume, instead of being isothermal, that the system is adiabatic. That means that there is no heat transfer from the air to the oil or the cylinder or any kind of reservoir. Then you'd use:
- Now for the pressure in the oil. Since air is much lighter than oil, I ignored the hydrostatic pressure variations in the air. But you're going to find that the pressure varies with height through the oil. Specifically, in the oil:
- where is the density of the oil and is the acceleration due to gravity: 9.81m/s^2.
- And the pressure on the top of the oil will be the same as the air pressure. So, at a distance d below the surface of the oil, the pressure in the oil will be:
- So it's going to be different at different parts of the cylinder. If you want the total force, you'll have to integrate it. Or alternatively, the total force on the bottom of the cylinder is just the weight of the oil plus the weight of the air. On the ends of the cylinder, you'll have to integrate it.
- Hope that answers your question. moink 20:20, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
material that lets through air, fuel and oil, but not water and dust
Hi, I am looking for a material that I can use to plug a hole. It should let air, fuel and oil through, as these are inside the pump I want to plug, but it should not let water and dust through (possible contaminants from the outside) If the material gets destroyed over some time by fuel and oil, this is okay. Thank you!
- How about a few more details - what is the pump for? Is it a fuel pump? If so, you should filter the fuel before it gets to this stage. Can you post a sketch?
- Hi, yes, it its a fuel pump with a weep hole chamber into which oil and fuel are leaking.
So, we want these to run out of the weep hole chamber, by putting a weep hole on top, but we don't want to let water and contaminants in through the weep hole. Therefore I am looking for a material for a plug that might be suitable here.
Thank you!
Music: turning 1 beat into 2 (or 4)?
Sometimes, it seems, a song will have its tempo increased, not by shortening the duration of each beat, by placing new beats halfway between the original beats, so each beat becomes two beats. One Celine Dion song had so slow a tempo that each beat had to become, not two, but four beats for the dance version!
What is it called when the tempo is increased in this manner?
- In what you are describing, does the "faster" version of the song take the same amount of time, line for line, for instance (the dance version may be longer, but through repetition)?
- Rock and roll usually features an eigth-note ride (or cymbal) pattern, while disco and later dance music usually features a sixteenth-note ride pattern.
- Thus when a song is turned into a dance version the amount of rhythmic activity increases even if the tempo does not. Hyacinth 03:45, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I don't know, and don't care, about eighth notes and sixteenth notes. And of course what I described increases the tempo! --User:Juuitchan
- If you take eight notes and split them into sixteenth notes, the effect is just what you described. The tempo describes the length of one measure (for instance). If you have two beats in one measure (say they're half notes because they take up half the measure) and you add two extra notes in between, then you've got four quarter notes. The tempo, however, is the same, because it takes just as long to play two half notes as it does to play four quarter notes. You can divide it again into eight eighth notes or 16 sixteenth notes, all without necessarily changing the tempo.
- You increase the tempo by shortening the duration of each beat. Subdividing the beats as you described does not change the tempo at all, although it does make the music sound "faster".
- (And no, I don't know what this is called.) -Aranel ("Sarah") 22:30, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I don't know, and don't care, about eighth notes and sixteenth notes. And of course what I described increases the tempo! --User:Juuitchan
Educational System - 1879-1890
Whatwas formal name of boarding schools what are names of schooling like college?
- I think you may have to say a bit more about this question? Are you looking for an official name used to describe schools where the pupils live there? If so, which country are you interested in? DJ Clayworth 04:22, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
ethical code of professional teacher in republic act 7836
File formats
Can anybody tell me if Au file format is lossless or not? Tim Rhymeless (Er...let's shimmy) 07:32, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- To my eye (based on readnig the header information), it looks like it's lossless and uncompressed. →Raul654 07:35, Jan 24, 2005 (UTC)
- It depends on the value of the 'encoding' field (word 3 of the header). Formats 2-7 are uncompressed PCM, therefore lossless. Formats 23-26 are ADPCM, which is a lossy, roughly 4:1 compression. Formats 1 and 27 are μ-law and A-Law, respectively, both lossy. Several of the others are DSP commands or data, designed to be processed by the NeXT MusicKit software. -Key45 21:22, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC).
Neon lamp
Hello, my question is about a neonlamp I have in my room. It has the shape of a palmtree, but the right part of it doesn't glow as much as the left part.The weirdest thing is: when I touch the topdown right point of it the whole tree glows at the same amount, it has someting to do with the touching. Can I fix my lamp? And why is my lamp ok when I touch it? Hope you know the answer! greetings --Sanneseubers 13:25, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Nellie Harbridge, artist
moved from Wikipedia:Help desk -- Ferkelparade π 13:34, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC) I am looking for any information on one Nellie Harbridge. I have recently acquired a pair of watercolours at auction, and would like to know if anyone knows anything about the artist. They appear to be approximately 70 years old, possibly older, from the signatures. Both are beautifully executed works of wild flowers gathered from beside a riverbank or pond, with details of waterlilies, water iris, forget-me-nots, mimulus, tansy and other flora, grasses and leaves. It may be that she was an amateur painter and I have purchased something which just gives me pleasure, but if there is a history behind the glass, I should be happier to know of it.
- Well, a quick flip through Google, the Library of Congress, and the Smithsonian Museum yielded nothing. However, do not despair: a call to Sotheby's and to Christie's American Arts Department in Manhattan might yield a clue. Both have an 800#. They'll ask you to send in photographs and won't guarantee a response; lovely, I know, but there you go. There is also a special database that dealers use, so try to locate a reputable one who specializes in this market - watercolors, prints, posters, et. cetera. A lot depends on the provenance, the condition of the watercolors, and of course - the name. Good luck! --allie 02:10, 25 Jan 2005 (UTC)
What does the letter K stand for in this CNN article?
CNN.com Updated: 10:54 a.m. EST (15:54 GMT) January 24, 2005
• Man wins 450k for wrongful surgery
LAW CENTER:
$450,000 settlement for wrong surgery
Friday, January 21, 2005 Posted: 9:12 AM EST (1412 GMT) NEW YORK (AP) -- A hospital and the New York Rangers' hockey team doctor Thursday were ordered to pay $450,000 to a dance director and choreographer who had surgery on the wrong knee.
What does the letter K (450k) stand for in this article?
With kind regards Martin de Wit The Netherlands
- kilo, i.e. thousand. -- John Fader 16:37, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
American Election 1860
As I understand it, the population of the US at this time was about 31,000,000
ONLY 5,000,000 PEOPLE VOTED
hOW MANY PEOPLE HAD THE VOTE?? or WHAT WAS THE APPROXIMATE BREAKDOWN OF THE POPULATION??
pRESUMABLY WOMEN COULDN'T VOTE
- I unfortunately don't have time to dig up the numbers right now, but here's a couple of thoughts:
- Age distribution. This has been changing in recent decades, but in the 1860s, I'd be surprised if more than 20 of the 30 million were of voting age.
- Of course, women could not vote in the 1860 election, so take away another 10 million.
- Slaves also couldn't vote, but I don't know if the 31 million figure is for population or for number of citizens, so let us ignore that for the moment.
- Now take into account spatial distribution (most people lived in the big cities in the East coast, but maybe a million or two lived out in the middle of nowhere without much communication with the outside world and without much interest in the goings-on in politics), and an approximate 50% voter turnout does not look all that bad.
- Oh, and methinks your caps lock key got stuck :P -- Ferkelparade π 17:46, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Area from GPS coordinates...
Anybody know the best algorithm to calculate the area of a region bounded by points of which you know the latitude and longitude (from a GPS)? At the moment I'm cheating by assuming the earth is flat (which is a reasonable enough approximation over a small area, but not so great on a big one). Do I have to approximate the surface with a bunch of triangles in 3D space, or is there something more elegant? --Robert Merkel 23:40, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I'm guessing here, but how about mapping the coordinates onto an cylindrical equal-area map projection, and then taking the rectangular area? for "Lambert's Cylindrical Equal-Area" projection, it should be simply: x = longitude, y = sin(latitude), where lat and long are in radians. You'll have to multiply x and y by the number of kilometers in one radian as measured at the longitude of the equator. -Key45 02:32, 25 Jan 2005 (UTC)