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-   -   Persistent, Niggling Questions (http://www.fiveminute.net/forums/showthread.php?t=1410)

Nate the Great 06-01-2012 03:26 AM

http://www.actsofgord.com/Chronicles/chapter36.php

Summary:
A father wants to rent a video game for his son. It must have:

1. No violence.
2. In fact, no conflict. You can't damage another character.
3. You can't even instakill monsters with no visible gore.
4. Your character can't die in any circumstances.
5. No racing or competition of any kind.

PNQ1: Is there a console game besides Tetris that meets these criteria?
PNQ2: With moral standards like this, why does this father let his son have a console at all?

Nate the Great 06-26-2012 02:57 PM

PNQ1: Why do YouTube viewers keep asking for stuff that's in the description?
PNQ2: Should YouTube force all descriptions to be "expanded" by default until you log in and tick the box that says "I agree to always check the full description before asking a question"? Only then will descriptions be minimized by default.

Sa'ar Chasm 06-26-2012 03:14 PM

YouTube comments are what happen when you take a broad cross-section of society and carefully remove any trace of intelligence, common sense and civility. It cannot be explained, merely shunned.

Alexia 06-27-2012 09:18 AM

*surfaces for a brief appearance* I concur with Sa'ar :)

Zeke 06-28-2012 06:57 AM

Lexy! Good to see you. Stay a while.

Alexia 06-28-2012 02:46 PM

You may find me lurking :P It's either that, or do some work...

Nate the Great 06-29-2012 02:41 PM

In listening to the Tom Lehrer song "New Math", I started wondering...

PNQ: Aside from base-10 and base-2, are any other bases actually used by anyone.

I mean of the bases from 2 through 10. Sure, sometimes we use something akin to base-12, but only in an abstract sense. Schoolhouse Rock proposed two new symbols (dek and el) to represent "ten" and "eleven" in a base-12 counting system, but we'd never use them to convert Imperial units or traditional British currency.

So yeah, what point was there in teaching other bases to kids? Even the base-2 calculations we have to do seldom require pencil and paper, we use base-2 for the benefit of the computers, not ourselves.

Zeke 06-29-2012 11:54 PM

Hex! Programmers use hexadecimal all the time. Its usefulness stems from the fact that it's basically shorthand for binary.

Teaching arbitrary bases is important, just nowhere near as important as the New Math tried to make it. (Same goes for set theory.) Historically, not every civilization has used base ten. The Babylonians used base 60, the Mayans base 20, and so on. It's good to have some introduction to the concept.

Nate the Great 06-30-2012 02:05 AM

Yeah, but there's absolutely no reason to attempt teaching other bases to children before high school.

Zeke 06-30-2012 10:03 AM

I might hold out for junior high, but we basically agree. And it was even sillier at the time New Math was actually developed -- computers were nowhere near as important as they are today, and programming is really the only field where knowing other bases is of practical importance. (Yes, this means that before computers came along, other bases were just a curiosity. That's still true of all bases except 2, thanks to one of the great insights of the last century: if you can represent everything with 1s and 0s, you can do it with open and closed circuits.)

That said, I <i>love</i> mathematical curiosities. There's quality time to be spent at Wikipedia looking up different bases and their obscure applications. Did you know a couple of cultures have used base 8 because they counted by spaces between fingers, not by fingers themselves?

NAHTMMM 06-30-2012 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zeke (Post 78634)
Did you know a couple of cultures have used base 8 because they counted by spaces between fingers, not by fingers themselves?

That I did not. :)

Sa'ar Chasm 07-01-2012 07:55 PM

Quote:

That said, I love mathematical curiosities. There's quality time to be spent at Wikipedia looking up different bases and their obscure applications.
Says the math major. :P

Actually, I discovered today that I count music in base 4. Most musical phrases are 4 or 8 bars long, and the melody is usually with the flutes or clarinets or trumpets or saxes or French horns or anywhere except the trombone, so I tend to get a lot of long stretches of rest measured in multiples of 4 bars. I count 4 bars on 4 fingers of my right hand, then increment a finger on my left hand and start over. That gets me to 16, and if the rest goes even longer (I've seen it go up to 40), I'll stick my left thumb out and do everything over again (32 bars).

Sometimes I think composers hate the low brass. Then I switched to stage band, and it was awesome (and freaking *hard*).

Nate the Great 07-02-2012 01:16 AM

So Jennifer Lopez is starring in a Carmen Sandiego movie...

PNQ: Who would you cast as the greatest fictional thief in modern history?

Elsewhere on the web I saw speculation about Catherine Zeta-Jones, which makes more sense than J.Lo.

The thing to keep in mind when casting Carmen is the fact that you have to balance beauty, cunning, humor, pride, and a bunch of other things. Can Lopez do that?

Nate the Great 07-03-2012 04:07 PM

Not really a PNQ, just a general request for tech support.

I have a USB keypad that I want to use as a remote control for Windows Media Player. Nothing fancy, just play/pause and previous/next track controls. Does anyone know of a program that would let me do this?

Zeke 07-03-2012 10:13 PM

If you're using WMP 12, there are still <a href="http://www.blogsdna.com/3716/keyboard-shortcuts-for-windows-media-player-12-on-windows-7.htm">keyboard shortcuts</a>, but some of them only work if focus is in a particular pane. If that's not enough, try AutoHotkey. It seems to be the keyboard equivalent of StrokeIt, my beloved (if unfortunately-named) mouse gesture program.

Sa'ar: I'd somehow forgotten you play an instrument. Which one is it?

Nate the Great 07-03-2012 11:12 PM

Sorry, should've specified. Windows Media Player 11 on Windows XP.

Sa'ar Chasm 07-04-2012 02:48 AM

Trombone. I actually didn't play for all the years I was in Ottawa (grad school and tutoring are something of a time-hog), but I went back to the City Band when I moved to Kelowna. I thought I'd be worse than I turned out to be, but I actually remembered what all the little squiggle marks on the page went, and my upper range hadn't atrophied as much as I'd feared.

And then Canada Day was the last concert for the year. Still, six weeks of playing is better than no weeks, especially after 9 years of letting the horn rust.

Zeke 07-04-2012 03:32 AM

The shortcuts in 11 are <a href="http://www.shortcutworld.com/en/win/Windows-Media-Player_11.html">about the same</a>. Otherwise, try AutoHotkey.

Nate the Great 07-05-2012 02:19 PM

http://www.startribune.com/local/161389685.html

A new development is being built using smaller lots than were originally intended. The claim is that today's homeowners want to spend less time and money on lawn maintenance.

PNQ: If a person wants to buy a house with less lawn maintenance responsibilities, why not buy a townhouse or condo where they don't have to worry about lawn maintenance at all?

Zeke 07-05-2012 03:48 PM

Houses have other advantages over apartments and condos. You don't have to take an elevator, you can park your car right there, you don't have to share laundry machines, etc. Maybe the answer for these people is Astroturf.


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