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> "Teach in small groups."

this advice sounds like it could fix many, many other issues as well?


Except the scaling ones..

(Where I went to school, they taught us, parallel to reading, how to analyse propaganda. You can imagine the unintended consequences XD)


Yeah, the scaling is very unfortunate; maybe if AI puts everyone out of work we'll have enough teachers? (that's a joke: my understanding is that there's a knee at a 1:12 ratio that may not be as good as an Oxbridge 1:2 but certainly would've improved upon the 1:30+ classrooms of my youth)

Were you also fortunate enough to have Alisa Seleznyova in your classes, or was that part of general ed? Where I went to school, I had to rely on MAD magazine for propanal instruction! (subscription thankfully provided by the same parents who'd ensured my basic literacy before entrusting me to K-12)



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_Will_Come_Soft_Rains_(po...

Almost politically incorrect woke?

Another Bradbury adaptation

https://youtu.be/02FgildTKMs

(Here there be Tygers)


In particular, 6-letter long function names may have been convenient on mainframes that used 6-bit alphanumerics in 36-bit words, the 36-bits having been backward compatible with 10-decimal-digit electromechanical calculators.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/36-bit_computing#History

EDIT: I had thought 10 digits of precision were required for certain calculations, but the WP article points out that they may have just corresponded to the operators having had 10 digits on 2 hands, in which case we're being backwards compatible with Hox genes, specifically Hoxd, and tetrapod pentadactyly is backwards compatible to hundreds of millions of years:

https://www.popsci.com/science/why-five-fingers-toes/


Had more to do with punch cards and flexowriter tapes and octal, which predates large word sizes or even mainframes. Note the following from the MIDAS macro assembler [0]

Fortran predates this and was a different lineage than IBM, but not how six char symbols were a request

> The MACRO language had been used on the TX-0 for some three years previous to the writing of MIDAS. Hence, MIDAS incorporates most, of the features which have been requested by users of MACRO, such as more flexible macro Instructions, six character symbols and relocation.

Note that when porting b to the pdp-11, which was ascii vs the earlier FIODEC/flexowriter 6 bit paper tapes is why c case statements fall through, they used it to allow lower case commands in ed as an example.

Flexowriters are 1940s iirc, and TX-0 through the early pdps were octal so it makes sense to grow in multiples of the 3.3 bit lines of paper tape

[0] http://bitsavers.org/pdf/mit/rle_pdp1/memos/PDP-1_MIDAS.pdf


Also note you can count to 12 on one hand and 60 with the other. That is why the ancient Sumerians used it. Base 10 was added to Roman abacus but they still kept the uncia (12) for some functions.

IIRC that wasn’t droop until the renaissance when they read Archimedes attempt to calculate the number of grains of sand needed to fill the universe with grains of sand, he used decimal and they asserted it was superior.

So you can consider decimal as tech debt:)


At my first job circa 1990, our codebase was constrained to 6-character function names in the core libraries, which had to run on many platforms including mainframes. If I recall correctly, you could have longer names, but only the first 6 characters were significant to the linker.

Never thought about why that might be other than "yeah, memory is expensive".


From a contemporary viewpoint, Berkeley seems to have been a bit of an edgelord in his defense of faith: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_the_stone#Origin

(or am I doing him an injustice and he was running with the whole Cartesian Demon thing to see just how far he could take it?)

Mumford (a grand-advisee of Castelnuovo's) on the infamous school: https://ftp.mcs.anl.gov/pub/qed/archive/209


Fwiw, (exotericised)

   Accidentally self-awakened patriotic^W self-reliant cynic
Seems like it could be somewhat ticklish, and

   Accidentally self-(right-)radicalising marginally-woke
Could almost be.

Btw, JD Vance claimed his wife is his spirit animal, so if he's a racist, he is at best the kind of racist who'd find it morally imperative that animals try and become human?

PS: have you figured out what math pros would call the satirical functor? It's alright to ask your kith kin or kollegen for help :)


Unless it be one of the functors from Mathematics Made Difficult (1971) I shall have to ask my kith for counsel...

Short answer is no.

(Your two Cat's are presumably, "listenable now" and "listenable later"?)

Mid-answer is.. (depending on how _useful_ it appears to be ;) I'll find out which case(s) from Mumonkan that was soon enough..

Btw, Hiroyuki concluding "1% Perspiration" (apologetic to Edison?), calls himself "Ronin".. so.. Takuan or Musashi?

https://youtu.be/SoHxYBMuegE?t=2m09s

Ps: "weaponized kernel-bugs" (personal translation from preface:)


I'd always kind of imagined the reactionary geometers were defending an order in which their tools were imperfect finite approximations that yielded insights into perfect infinite truths, where the original sin of the revolutionary analysts was in saying that "yes, and with compactness and continuity, many of these problems have their α-and-ω in finite descriptions".

Is that a fair take? Would it be one, even if it were ahistorical?


I like that perspective, but I believe the conflict was more about "old vs. new". Geometry was very old by that point, ancient, and it carried a lot of personal gravitas by being associated with Euclid, Archimedes, Thales etc. (Galenic theory of humors enjoyed similar ancient intellectual prestige, hence its long and bitter retreat from the scene at approximately the same time.) It was also "obviously right", in the sense of "everyone can look and see for themselves". Even uneducated peple can verify that a certain line touches both circles etc. No wonder it was an attractive safe haven for conservative minds.

Meanwhile, analysis was not yet particularly rigorous and it took several decades to converge on a standard apparatus and notation that could at least be understood coherently by other mathematicians. (Laymen tend to struggle with it until today.) Add the political dimensions of being seen friendly to the French into the mix, well...


> ...these areas of knowledge were much more intertwined with philosophy and religion...

Indeed, consider Laplace to Napoleon "I had no need of that hypothesis", ca 1799.


https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46753364

  'Amelia': the AI-generated British schoolgirl, a far-right social media star (theguardian.com)
  45 points by pseudolus 6 days ago | flag | hide | past | favorite | 58 comments



Spurious Reddit comment on Gibson's Spook Country I plucked from googernaut while chasing (false(?)) memory of early/eerie depiction of ICE:

I think it's interesting that a Chinese-Cuban boy is helping a white man mess with America given those nation's history's together.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spook_Country#:~:text=Where%20...

<- loyalty transmogrified



Thanks! Maybe we can open up a stack connecting Surrey to Compton

https://archive.ph/2025.01.07-011400/https://www.politico.co...

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41499951

Lagniappe https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37433030

(& I'd thought it was a weird IP encoding)


Glad you enjoyed the music!

Zombie & ICE are back - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46850346


> (he had big ensembles)

Just tangentially, I wonder to what degree big ensembles help/hurt with getting touring visas? For instance, it's my understanding that the Red Army Choir didn't have much trouble getting US visas, but Billy Bragg did.


Hmm, I've seen both here in Australia.

The Red Army Choir (insert extensively meandering full name) were cheerful, swapped gifts, and sang our national anthem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_roE45-AIU

Billy Bragg, bless his soles, gave me a look of loathing when I handed off guitars to him and sound checked, and stomped off stage after his set loudly cursing "fucking yuppies".

To his credit and defence, it was Perth in the 1980s. Boom years for unprincipled scumbags with hovercraft money: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFOfd1QTW54 ... Kiss My Art indeed.


(tangential, but not really :)

Best explanations from a room of reasonable people

https://old.reddit.com/r/coolguides/comments/1ha0q7c/a_cool_...


C'mon, that makes us sound like we're incapable of subtlety and nuanced levelled response when in reality https://open.spotify.com/track/2bRgvNyVsN2IDeuQVpjCYP

Oh, that national anthem; I'd been expecting a rousing choral rendition of "Ya na perekure; idi na khuy"

Maybe Mr. Bragg just holds that anyone who believes in checking the sound for a gent, must surely be embedded deep in the establishment?

lagniappe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntuOEEh4BwU#t=196


https://archive.ph/yLiFE

Not strictly ICE but very brown names.

Will they be most susceptible to a Buddhist chaplain offering that the Inner Party has betrayed them ;)?

I read the Jew Steffi but I don't "live better" than bougie scum

Nice to know some west-slavs have retained their cultural heritage .. comparing with Polish lit, seems like KuK did some good after all ?

https://archive.ph/2026.02.02-142553/https://www.dw.com/de/f...

My defence of Zweig is that he moved from a damned monumentalist culture (KuK) to an even more monumentalist one (Brazil) :)

Was able to troll the flexhumble* Mann from beyond the EXIT !

*a function of age maybe? I hope not!


Maybe, or maybe ICE-as-ding-wie-scheint (& Donroe?) is just a sign that the descendants of Operation Condor supporters have started preparing to act domestically as well as in the near abroad?

I wasn't sure if Stefan-chan had found the no-longer-heim-weh too painful, or if he'd been suddenly confronted somehow with BR not necessarily being as new-world as it had appeared when he was fresh-off-the-boat, so I'm glad Mann went with the former interpretation. (and, for people who were raised on greek and latin examples, trolling from beyond the EXIT would've been nothing unusual?)

lagniappe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OxJKFEofL0 (could Sra. Oreiro be counted as an honorary [very-]west-slav, at least as part of the fin-de-siècle pan-slavic cultural heritage?)


Too expressive. (The MC is cute tho, also West Slavic?)

More of the slav here?

https://youtu.be/SHYZ_z0uGbs&t=27s


Ah trolling gone very wrong (albeit effective)

(I couldn't find a link to anecdata of inspired women shouting "Zombie!" at Nigerian soldiers)


Ah trolling gone right (at least as long as I'm an HN orator instead of laborator?)

I'd originally heard it as "M— Ä— Heu?", which sounds even less like the source language, but invites the pedantically accurate reply that no one mows hay: one mows grass.

"Beg to report, sir," said Schweik innocently, "I can't be called upon to zombie properly to-day, as they were all out of B R A I N S in the K.u.K. canteen this morning."

(It's somewhat interesting reading a heavily bowdlerised translation of Hasek after having read Zweig; for instance, I know enough about the sorts of young women who provided —for a modest fee— photos to their fans to make an educated guess as to the suitability of Lt Lukash' album for mixed company)



Back during the first "America First", there was a series of satire videos titled "America First ${COUNTRY} Second".

They're somewhat dated now, but still informative if you're curious about the rest of the world.

"Netherlands Second" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-xxis7hDOE was I believe the first second, but not only other european countries but many others globally (as well as a few regions and fictional countries) eventually produced one, easily found on YT.


Pedantry: not just the Spaniards.. they made the English pay too?

https://news.yale.edu/2015/09/22/living-artifact-dutch-golde...

America first. Because she's naturally exceptional at everything-- America is exceptionally unexceptional!!

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46826867

(I would add that the Dutch come really close, but are not nearly as tolerant of.. a certain sort of (individualist) bigot, so that makes them second in that particular ("Calvinist"*?) arena :)

*GoogAI tells you to look at the history of Geneva and Puritan New England, if you need closer refs..


I love clipping coupons! (before clicking, I had been predicting something about https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_III_of_England , but it looks like his wife got him the job: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_English_and_Bri... )

Yeah, the way I heard the story is the dutch were too tolerant: the Puritans couldn't stand the idea of their kids growing up with such examples around, so they upped sticks and headed off to wander in the wilderness...


Tin-free take on JFK assassination:

Years later, that was reflected in the failure of New Englishmen to sync with the rest of the country

(But the success of old-English women in syncing with...

https://youtube.com/shorts/4H-bmxbi_JM

https://youtu.be/5MLuDpfTLBE

?)


I do the opposite (eg, I read HN via RSS), and definitely don't want to see all of the content.

My reader (newsboat) is good at showing items at-most-once, and (at least the way I use it) punts to a browser to display content on the rare occasions I have further interest. Does this count as sufficiently-non-email-clienty for TFA's purposes?


Oh, I don't want to read all of the items. I tend to mark 90% as read as a first pass.

But I want to see the headlines/first couple of lines for all of them, so I can decide which ones I want to read in detail.


I built my own feed hydrator (not my term, but love it) for HN that adds the opengraph info from the targe link along with points + comment counts, all cached in SQLite

Then it lets me filter with different criteria, the default is a ratio of points+comments that keeps the chaff out.


Stipulating that he did change accents, "just entirely made up" is a strong accusation, considering that linguistic accommodation is a thing. Compare Calpurnia's theory of code switching from ch.12 of "...Mockingbird": https://archive.org/details/dli.bengal.10689.12863/page/n134...

> “That doesn’t mean you hafta talk [AAVE] when you know better,” said Jem.

> Calpurnia tilted her hat and scratched her head, then pressed her hat down carefully over her ears. “It’s right hard to say,” she said. “Suppose you and Scout talked colored-folks’ talk at home—it’d be out of place, wouldn’t it? Now what if I talked white-folks’ talk at church, and with my neighbors? They’d think I was puttin’ on airs to beat Moses.”

Lagniappe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bj7J7vXCf5w


"Are those shy Eurasian footwear, cowboy chaps, or jolly earthmoving headgear?"

「色は匂えど 散りぬるを…」

l: http://jbr.me.uk/shevek.html



Somehow I went looking for MLE but wound up with Glaswegian: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jd7kHjsYNU

Assuming aeb-kun has ever done an unfeigned Glaswegian in the face of RP. He might beat PH's 10% enby!!

Or, even a fully enby gen Z HK-bred nurse working in London ("pinker than pink"?)

https://old.reddit.com/r/HongKong/comments/1hrsue7/is_mle_be...

At trolling the roadman chiv (of any multiculture at all), that is

Belated hidden fortress explication

https://www.indiewire.com/features/general/watch-the-hidden-...

1958 was a glourious anniversary


Trolling*-wise, I wonder if there's a cousin of the "Almost Politically Correct Redneck", an "Accidentally Woke Reactionary" perhaps?

(No, I don't get any memes via RSS. It'd be grand, though. Imgur post-acquisition [and for all I know, even pre? I had devtools turned on one day when I visited, and never went back...] is a tracking hellhole)

lagniappe: https://i.chzbgr.com/full/5718194432/h98546CBC/furred-world-...

* one way I can tell that I was born and bred in US of A: I'm the only person nervously laughing at the did-they-really-just-say-that during a VO Tarantino film in the local theatre...


<formal-vibing | vibe-formalizing>

It looks like you concluded they were being confrontational when they were only being expressive? Whereas the rest of the audience thought the movie was only being expressive? To what extent did that expose your erstwhile localization (to FR) while the old country had shifted in place? Do I miss anything else?

</formal-vibing | vibe-formalizing>

Meme merge

https://youtube.com/shorts/o-ZSHFeo5H4


I'm pretty sure Tarantino (sharing the culture in which I was steeped) meant to be confrontational, but probably the rest of the audience, being blissfully unaware of things "everyone knows" you're not supposed to actually say, thought expressive more than transgressive.

FWIW it was "Hateful 8" (2015), so I don't think the old country has shifted out from under me — unless it's either all been in the last decade, or younger audiences there are also not nervously laughing? Guess I'll have to make some inquiries...

Nervous laughter, as in: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/That%27s_Not_Funny,_That%27s_S...



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