Random Thoughts Part 4 - Split Thread

  • Thread starter Thread starter Evo
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Random Thoughts
Click For Summary
The discussion revolves around a variety of topics, beginning with the reopening of a thread on the Physics Forums. Participants express relief at the continuation of the conversation and share light-hearted banter about past threads. There are inquiries about quoting from previous threads and discussions about job opportunities for friends. The conversation shifts to humorous takes on mathematics, particularly the concept of "Killing vector fields," which one participant humorously critiques as dangerous. Participants also share personal anecdotes, including experiences with power outages and thoughts on teaching at university. The tone remains casual and playful, with discussions about the challenges of winter, the joys of friendship, and even a few jokes about life experiences. The thread captures a blend of humor, personal stories, and light philosophical musings, all while maintaining a sense of community among the forum members.
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #3,962
So my book found its way to the Polish edition of Newsweek :smile:

notka_Newsweek.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes dlgoff, Enigman, Borg and 5 others
  • #3,963
Borek said:
So my book found its way to the Polish edition of Newsweek :smile:
Moje gratulacje!
 
  • Like
Likes Borek
  • #3,964
Borek said:
So my book found its way to the Polish edition of Newsweek :smile:

View attachment 94179
Fantastic! Congratulations! I hope it becomes a best seller.
 
  • #3,965
Sophia said:
?
Is that the proper spelling? I'd write seriously. Well we learn new things all the time :-)
I was joking because it struck me as a hard word to misspell.
 
  • Like
Likes Sophia
  • #3,966
zoobyshoe said:
I was joking because it struck me as a hard word to misspell.
This happens to me from time to time at the keyboard: transposed letters.
Although I could not and don't want to claim it for me, it's problematic to beef about transposed letters because you never know whether you make fun of a dyslexic for whom it is a common mistake. Just wanted to mention.
.
 
  • #3,967
fresh_42 said:
This happens to me from time to time at the keyboard: transposed letters.
Although I could not and don't want to claim it for me, it's problematic to beef about transposed letters because you never know whether you make fun of a dyslexic for whom it is a common mistake. Just wanted to mention..
I knew from your posting history that you aren't. We have had a lot of dyslexic members and it is apparent in most of their posts. I certainly wouldn't make fun of them and, in fact, I once got very bent out of shape at a member who characterized dyslexia as "laziness."
 
  • Like
Likes Sophia and fresh_42
  • #3,968
zoobyshoe said:
I knew from your posting history that you aren't.
Damn. No more excuses for stupidity.
 
  • #3,969
fresh_42 said:
Damn. No more excuses for stupidity.
Well, WWGD was right: I just have OCPD about the spellcheck red underlining. Plus "seriuosly" sounded like someone giving the full, proper word, when most use the sloppy, easier to pronounce version: "aluminium," as opposed to "aluminum." I guess I didn't phrase my post so people made that connection.
 
  • #3,970
Borek said:
So my book found its way to the Polish edition of Newsweek :smile:

View attachment 94179
Wow - WOOT!11!
 
  • Like
Likes Sophia and Borek
  • #3,971
fresh_42 said:
My first thought was: You need glue. You need many gluons to do it. But the joke limps for they are broken at the molecule level. Therefore it's an electromagnetic problem. So why can't we defrag bus seats? Seriuosly, why can't we glue the polymer molecules again by applying a smart electromagnetic procedure?
No, I meant shifting people around so that there are no empty spots between people sitting, and all empty seats are along the same spot.
 
  • Like
Likes Silicon Waffle
  • #3,972
WWGD said:
No, I meant shifting people around so that there are no empty spots between people sitting, and all empty seats are along the same spot.
At 1:47.
 
  • #3,973
WWGD said:
No, I meant shifting people around so that there are no empty spots between people sitting, and all empty seats are along the same spot.
?:) How insightful!
 
  • #3,974
Borek said:
So my book found its way to the Polish edition of Newsweek :smile:

View attachment 94179
Congratulations!

-----
But did you ever pay the press to do that for you ?
(Just joking I know I ain't a classic salesman :DD)
 
  • #3,976
fresh_42 said:
Oh yes, I am excited to realize also why the moon looks ugly in actuality, far different from what most Asian stories describe for kids, i.e beautiful moonlight. It's because the Earth's gravity changes its shape with giant holes on the surface that no natural make-up cosmetics can ever likely suffice to fill up.
 
  • Like
Likes Sophia
  • #3,977
I finally got another copy of that book that had pages ripped out of it. Sometime later tonight I shall discover the secret of why they were suppressed, or alternately I will remain confused as to why they were torn out.
 
  • Like
Likes Silicon Waffle
  • #3,978
Finite Abel p-group is a directsum of its cyclic subgroups *zombie voice*
 
  • Like
Likes Silicon Waffle
  • #3,979
zoobyshoe said:
I finally got another copy of that book that had pages ripped out of it. Sometime later tonight I shall discover the secret of why they were suppressed, or alternately I will remain confused as to why they were torn out.
What was it about? I mean the book, not the torn out pages.
 
  • #3,980
fresh_42 said:
What was it about? I mean the book, not the torn out pages.
Murder mystery. "Wolves Eat Dogs," by Martin Cruz Smith. Part of a whole series featuring Russian police detective, Arkady Renko. A long, long time ago, one of his books, "Gorky Park" was a major Hollywood movie. It was the Soviet Union at that time. Renko has survived the transition and is still investigating murders in the post-Soviet era.
 
  • Like
Likes Silicon Waffle
  • #3,981
zoobyshoe said:
Murder mystery. "Wolves Eat Dogs," by Martin Cruz Smith. Part of a whole series featuring Russian police detective, Arkady Renko.
The missing pages would reveal that, in Soviet Russia, dogs eat wolves.
 
  • #3,982
Silicon Waffle said:
But did you ever pay the press to do that for you ?

I have no idea what my publisher did to get the review published (flattery? arm twisting? old boy society? or is just the book good enough?) - but I have reasons to believe it didn't involve money. Actually the narrative behind my confidence is probably worth a short story :wink:
 
  • Like
Likes Silicon Waffle
  • #3,983
Awesome achievement, Borek. Congratulations on the book and best wishes on your continued success! :bow:
 
  • #3,984
Ibix said:
The missing pages would reveal that, in Soviet Russia, dogs eat wolves.
Wolves drink beer. I now know the secret of the missing pages:

Arkady is sitting in a bar. A most interesting Hispanic man comes in with two beautiful women and orders a Dos Equis. The bartender says, "What's that?"

Arkady freezes as his mind goes back to the crime scene where an empty Dos Equis bottle was found under the victim's couch cushion.

A curious thing, because Dos Equis is not sold in Russia.
 
  • Like
Likes Silicon Waffle
  • #3,985
Borek said:
I have no idea what my publisher did to get the review published (flattery? arm twisting? old boy society? or is just the book good enough?) - but I have reasons to believe it didn't involve money. Actually the narrative behind my confidence is probably worth a short story :wink:
If it sells enough, it might get translated into English. Then we can all read it.
 
  • Like
Likes Borek, Ibix and Silicon Waffle
  • #3,986
Borek said:
So my book found its way to the Polish edition of Newsweek :smile:
:bow:
 
  • Like
Likes Borek
  • #3,987
zoobyshoe said:
Murder mystery. "Wolves Eat Dogs," by Martin Cruz Smith.
So now you're afraid someone is running around in SD with a perfect handbook (the torn out pages) for werewolves?
 
  • #3,988
fresh_42 said:
So now you're afraid someone is running around in SD with a perfect handbook (the torn out pages) for werewolves?
Not really. I was afraid someone might have been trying to censor this book.

However, now that I know what's on the pages that is unlikely, and it's still a mystery why they got torn out of the other copy. The WWGD hypothesis, that someone accidentally stained them so badly they thought it best to remove them is now first in line. And the ibix hypothesis, that someone's young child did it, is a close second.
 
  • #3,989
Or maybe somebody really likes Dos Equis?
 
  • #3,990
zoobyshoe said:
Not really. I was afraid someone might have been trying to censor this book.

However, now that I know what's on the pages that is unlikely, and it's still a mystery why they got torn out of the other copy. The WWGD hypothesis, that someone accidentally stained them so badly they thought it best to remove them is now first in line. And the ibix hypothesis, that someone's young child did it, is a close second.
There is another possibility: Urgent needs all of a sudden to get some paper ...
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 3K ·
89
Replies
3K
Views
159K
  • · Replies 53 ·
2
Replies
53
Views
6K
  • · Replies 2K ·
76
Replies
2K
Views
170K
Replies
11K
Views
560K
  • · Replies 2K ·
63
Replies
2K
Views
56K
  • · Replies 3K ·
112
Replies
3K
Views
360K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • Sticky
  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
6K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
1K