Monthly Archives: December 2009
Moonlighting
No Vaseline for Me
Flash-based game that involves collisional dynamics, with friction. Don’t let the projectile return across the dotted line. When they come to rest, they expand until they hit a boundary of some sort.
Empirical Data
There are some bits of dialog that just kill a conversation.
On Thursday I accumulated the datum that the phrase I might work better wearing lederhosen, but we’re just not going to find that out instantly ends the meeting.
(No, I wasn’t the one who spoke the line)
I Drafted Laos. I am So Hosed
The prospect of fantasy geopolitics.
Has the GDP grown? Angola and Bhutan’s astonishing growth in the 2008 season are stories that fantasy geopolitics players will not soon forget.
Inflationary measures and exchange rates are also factored in, making Iceland a bad bet to hold this past year due to its economic meltdown. And if you had Zimbabwe in your active lineup in January, when its government unveiled the 100 trillion dollar bill, you would have probably considered going back to losing at fantasy football.
Now That's Cooking With Science
Physics Buzz: When chemistry dunces bake
What about my deflated cakes? I remember baking a very sad birthday cake that cooked but didn’t rise. Incredibly, a detail as tiny as what baking powder I used could have been the culprit. While baking soda reacts immediately, baking powder usually makes bubbles twice—once when cool and once when heated. But this all depends on the acids in the baking powder. If a baking powder happens to release all the bubbles in the first stage, when mixed, you’ll lose out on most of your leavening if you don’t act fast. Considering how slow I am about going about things, this could very well be an explanation.
Bonus for including the Möbius bagel at the end.
(I still maintain that most food preparation doesn’t rise to this level, to allow it to be called science. Jennifer and I will have to agree to disagree)
Progress
Since the Last Progress Report, I Have Worked on This Progress Report
This always takes much longer than it ought to, in large part because it’s hard to remember exactly when certain significant things happened, which leads to a lot of searching of my email trying to determine when various things saw print, and which of the available categories it fits in. I probably really ought to keep a running tally of my activities as the year goes along, but they tweak the form every year or two, so my attempts have always been thwarted– I end up spending a bunch of time working out how to convert from one version of the form to another.
I have to do monthly reports, and then I can choose my greatest hits from them for the annual report. At one point long ago the reports were weekly, but that got to heavily into minutia, which wasn’t particularly useful. There’s only so much you can report about aligning optics and tweaking lasers, and sometime no real progress is made at all, especially if you’ve stepped in some management and can’t spend time in the lab. All too often the reports go along the lines of
Week N: Discovered some anomaly.
Week N+1 Investigated anomaly; finally identified and solved the problem
Week N+2 Oops, no I didn’t.
When you finally do fix the issue, what you’ve reported is all of the path-dependent work you did, instead of the actual progress you made.
Conjugate This!
English Professors and other language professionals, long jealous of the attention and funding afforded the Large Hadron Collider and other “big physics” projects, have embarked on a new research initiative: that of high-energy language. The ambitious project will follow several avenues of investigation in an attempt to invigorate the field of research.
“We all know what happens when you split an infinitive,” remarked Prof. John Wurterschmidt, “but we’re only familiar with the results at pedestrian energies. Until now, nobody has investigated what happens when you do this at hundreds of MeV. Is the language relativistic? That is, we need to be finding out if words take on new meanings when they are traveling at a significant fraction of the speed of light. And, of course, the ultimate goal of discovering if there is an inherent structure to language, beyond what we give it. We really need this. A whole lot more than yet another analysis of Wuthering Heights.”
To do so, words will be accelerated to high energy and collided, and it is believed that this will result in the creation of participles and antiparticiples along with a shower of punctuation marks, mostly commas and apostrophes, but with the occasional exclamation point and question mark or even a rare ampersand, in the case of collisions involving irregular verbs. These reactions should shed some light on the asymptotic freedom behavior of individual syllables. At high enough energies, still years away from investigation, would be the creation of the Roget boson, also known as the saurus particle, which is thought to give words their meaning.
It is hypothesized that the symmetry of words is broken at some high energy of unknown value, and above this unification point words with similar meanings and etymologies are actually one word, there is no metaphor mixing and that all sentence structure is in palindrome form. That investigation will have to wait, however, as the preliminary funding will only allow for investigations of lower-energy interactions. In the initial experiments, words will be linearly accelerated to collide with a fixed target (The Oxford English Dictionary, if the collaboration can afford it), using a finely crafted “while-u-were-out” memo as a projectile. Later on, if sufficient funding is obtained, they will be able to construct a storage-ring system where nouns can be collided with their antonyms, which will be able to achieve much higher energies and allow for more exotic interactions. If all goes well, the construction of a relativistic fat novel collider will then be proposed, which will be able to explore even more aspects of the field, such as the effects of Lorentz contraction (does a novel become a short story at sufficiently high speeds?).
Wurterschmidt downplayed potential hazards of such projects, scoffing at the notion that this kind of an undertaking might prove dangerous. Some have posited that it could create a micro-meta-anthology of particularly dense and indecipherable writing which would accumulate chapters until it could devour entire libraries. “That’s poppycock. We wouldn’t be able to create anything not already being written. Stereo instructions already exist, and that hasn’t destroyed us yet.” The main danger appears to be much more mundane, as any such device must be power by a large number of monkeys typing on keyboards, which, Wurterschmidt notes, generates almost as much filth as the campus fraternities.
“Almost.”
Bra – vo
House panel passes college football playoff bill
Good god, we still don’t have a budget, and congress is futzing around with this? The budget is your JOB. Continuing resolutions SUCK for the people who have to live under them. It impedes work.
“We can walk across the street and chew gum at the same time,” said the subcommittee chairman, Illinois Democrat Bobby Rush, one of the bill’s co-sponsors. “We can do a number of things at the same time.”
Apparently not. Did I mention how we still don’t have a budget? It’s December, and that was supposed to be done by the end of September!
If you must do something football-related, revoke the NFL anti-trust exemption. I’m tired of being forced to watch the Redskins and having good alternatives blacked out.
Oliver Twist: May I Have Some … Möbius?
Mathematically Correct Breakfast
It is not hard to cut a bagel into two equal halves which are linked like two links of a chain.
You may be compelled to ask why anyone would figure out how to do such a thing. I understand why, but cannot explain.
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Something to consider: the nutritional content of a cubic lightyear of cream cheese