Page 136 of 189 FirstFirst ... 3686126134135136137138146186 ... LastLast
Results 4,051 to 4,080 of 5648

Thread: What's messing with your Groove?

  1. #4051
    Quote Originally Posted by Flixy View Post
    Then again, if it melts and freezing again, getting to a parking spot gets less safe and easy.
    Sometimes but not always true. Ice is a challenge, but at least there's a physical space to put your car - less so if there is piled up snow everywhere. We had about as much snow as Chicago recently, but it all melted over the weekend before the cold snap (which itself was rather pathetic compared to Chicago)... parking is relatively easy compared to when there's snow everywhere.

    I do agree that if you only get a partial melt it can be quite a bit worse since you've still got the piles, but not everything is covered in sheets of ice. Ah, winter.

  2. #4052
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    first off, a cold front moving through setting record lows doesn't exact abide by average weather models.
    There are only few situations where the temperature rises before sunset. Of course if the winds turn it can be possible.
    Secondly, even if these temps were normal and predictable for a low at pre-daybreak, that would mean getting up at around 4:30am, when I don't have to be at work till noon. so yeah...fuck that.
    You have sunrise at 4:30 in winter? I don't believe you! Lets ask Google:

    Sunrise in Orlando 8. Jan 2014 07:19
    http://www.timeanddate.com/worldcloc...omy.html?n=867

    That's just about 3 hours difference, fuck yeah
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  3. #4053
    and how long does it take water to freeze at barely freezing temps?
    "In a field where an overlooked bug could cost millions, you want people who will speak their minds, even if they’re sometimes obnoxious about it."

  4. #4054
    Depends, on amount, humidity, wind...
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  5. #4055
    heres a hint, an ice cube in a freezer, which is generally set to 0F (more than 30F colder than the low for me) takes ~4 hours.
    "In a field where an overlooked bug could cost millions, you want people who will speak their minds, even if they’re sometimes obnoxious about it."

  6. #4056
    There is hardly any wind in a freezer, is there?

    The freezing warning of my car goes on at 4°C, nuff said.
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  7. #4057
    Quote Originally Posted by earthJoker View Post
    The freezing warning of my car goes on at 4°C, nuff said.
    this doesn't justify your explanation of getting up at 7:19 in (a possible low of) 32F weather to frost the front yard... at all. Do you understand the type of wind required to freeze a yard in minutes at that temp?
    "In a field where an overlooked bug could cost millions, you want people who will speak their minds, even if they’re sometimes obnoxious about it."

  8. #4058
    Let sleeping tigers lie Khendraja'aro's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    In the forests of the night
    Posts
    6,239
    So, I think I already ranted once about this math remedial course I've been forced to teach.

    I just did the corrections for the single exam we were to write. An utter disaster.

    The pupils were unable to:
    - insert the correct values into simple formulas
    - then enter said formulas into their calculator
    - didn't realize that they sometimes had to convert units of measurement (like: dm into cm and similarly difficult stuff)
    - were unable to read: "Calculate the volume of a half of a solid ball." All, save for one, calculated the whole volume.
    - forgot to carry the "x", a "minus" or similarly dropped stuff all over the place
    - realize that the diagonal of a box cannot be 1000 times larger than any side of the box
    and other stuff.

    Please remember, this is a 10th grade I'm talking about.

    As a result, 7 pupils got a simple failing grade and 5 got a "hopeless" failing grade. Out of 25.

    Seriously, there are so many problems here that I'm unable to tackle them all.

    This was one of the simple problems:

    Solve for x: 3x+1=4
    6 pupils didn't solve that one.

    The two most difficult ones:
    a) Three people win 1,260,000€ at the lottery and divide the money thusly that the second person gets double what the first person got, and the third person gets double the amount of the second person. How much money does each person get?
    b) The diagonal of a rectangle is 6 cm long and divides the right angle at a ration of 6:3. Create a sketch and calculate the length of both sides.
    When the stars threw down their spears
    And watered heaven with their tears:
    Did he smile his work to see?
    Did he who made the lamb make thee?

  9. #4059
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    this doesn't justify your explanation of getting up at 7:19 in (a possible low of) 32F weather to frost the front yard... at all. Do you understand the type of wind required to freeze a yard in minutes at that temp?
    Sorry for the confusion. But what I meant, is that there is no reason to spray at midnight. The water you spray will freeze some time close to the morning. Doesn't matter if you spray it at midnight or 10pm or 2am.

    And actually, the water will freeze immediately if you but it in a bucket and place it outside over night. It will freeze because the yard is cold.
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  10. #4060
    We actually call this 'Blitzeis' over here. It happens when it rains on the cold ground.
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  11. #4061
    Senior Member Flixy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    6,435
    A bucket of water will freeze immediately? I'd like to see that. Of course if you spread it out and the ground is very cold, it'll happen pretty quick (or if it are small droplets in freezing cold air). Isn't rain in those conditions often supercooled and therefore freezes on impact?

    Blitzeis is a cool name though

    Edit: nevermind, mis read your post about the bucket.
    Keep on keepin' the beat alive!

  12. #4062
    Quote Originally Posted by Flixy View Post
    Edit: nevermind, mis read your post about the bucket.
    I wrote it on my mobile so it was not very verbose. I explain it again.

    If you put a bucket full of water outside over night, only the top of it will freeze. The rest will still be liquid but it will be cold, very cold. If you put this very cold water on the even colder floor, there is not much of temperature change involved. But of course you still need to freeze it. But part of the water will immediately evaporate now that it is spread out over the ground. The evaporating water will cool down the rest of the water, so it freezes very fast.

    And just to prove that I don't make up things: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Blitzeis
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  13. #4063
    Senior Member Flixy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    6,435
    Yeah, i got that when I read it again
    Keep on keepin' the beat alive!

  14. #4064
    So OG did your plan worked?
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  15. #4065
    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    Morons like my sister, the ER physician? Lots of people have jobs that don't allow them to sit at home when it's cold outside.
    Then she knows full well that a Weather Emergency Declaration means crucial hospital personnel can't leave when their shift ends....and that on-coming shifts can rely on EMS vehicles, or even National Guard, to pick them up at their front door (so they don't have to put themselves at risk trying to get to the hospital).

    Why in the world would your sister be looking for parking space, or trying to shovel her way out of snow drifts?

  16. #4066
    Quote Originally Posted by Khendraja'aro View Post
    So, I think I already ranted once about this math remedial course I've been forced to teach.

    I just did the corrections for the single exam we were to write. An utter disaster.

    The pupils were unable to:
    - insert the correct values into simple formulas
    - then enter said formulas into their calculator
    - didn't realize that they sometimes had to convert units of measurement (like: dm into cm and similarly difficult stuff)
    - were unable to read: "Calculate the volume of a half of a solid ball." All, save for one, calculated the whole volume.
    - forgot to carry the "x", a "minus" or similarly dropped stuff all over the place
    - realize that the diagonal of a box cannot be 1000 times larger than any side of the box
    and other stuff.

    Please remember, this is a 10th grade I'm talking about.

    As a result, 7 pupils got a simple failing grade and 5 got a "hopeless" failing grade. Out of 25.

    Seriously, there are so many problems here that I'm unable to tackle them all.

    This was one of the simple problems:

    Solve for x: 3x+1=4
    6 pupils didn't solve that one.

    The two most difficult ones:
    a) Three people win 1,260,000€ at the lottery and divide the money thusly that the second person gets double what the first person got, and the third person gets double the amount of the second person. How much money does each person get?
    b) The diagonal of a rectangle is 6 cm long and divides the right angle at a ration of 6:3. Create a sketch and calculate the length of both sides.
    The more interesting question there is how these people managed to make it to 10th grade.

    Related article: http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/09/us/nca...html?hpt=hp_t2
    Last edited by Loki; 01-09-2014 at 09:00 PM.
    Hope is the denial of reality

  17. #4067
    Quote Originally Posted by GGT View Post
    Then she knows full well that a Weather Emergency Declaration means crucial hospital personnel can't leave when their shift ends....and that on-coming shifts can rely on EMS vehicles, or even National Guard, to pick them up at their front door (so they don't have to put themselves at risk trying to get to the hospital).

    Why in the world would your sister be looking for parking space, or trying to shovel her way out of snow drifts?
    Just because they closed the schools due to cold doesn't mean the rest of the city didn't still more or less work. People came and went to their (important) jobs like normal. The roads weren't particularly unsafe, they were just cold. My sister definitely doesn't need to waste the time of EMS just to get to work. Jeez.

  18. #4068
    http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/09/us/nca...html?hpt=hp_t3

    Someone finally takes the time to do the research to prove what we pretty much already knew, and this is how people react

    (CNN) -- The death threats, Mary Willingham expected.
    More shocking is that the University of North Carolina is now disavowing her research as a whistle-blower -- research that showed between 8% and 10% of the school's football and basketball players are reading below a third-grade level.
    UNC issued a statement Wednesday night saying it did not believe Willingham's account of a basketball player who could not read or write.
    It went on: "University officials can't comment on the other statistical claims mentioned in the story because they have not seen that data. University officials have asked for that data, but those requests have not been met."
    As well as questioning UNC many times about the story before publication, CNN has also detailed Willingham's research.
    And purported e-mail exchanges obtained by CNN since August show that Willingham did share her findings at least twice -- once with Executive Vice Provost James W. Dean Jr., and once with a member of a university committee on academics and athletics.
    In addition, Willingham says her research on the students in the athletics programs that make money for the university was done based on screenings that the university itself paid for. And, she says, she has gotten permission from the university several times since 2008 to access those findings to continue her research.
    "It's already available to them," Willingham said. "It's in their system. ... They have all the data and more. It belongs to them, and they paid a lot of money for it."
    Women who blew whistle and what happened next
    Last year, when CNN asked UNC for comment on Willingham's research, officials initially denied knowing about it, and said: "Such analysis is not part of her job duties at the university."
    Then, after being shown the e-mails, a spokesperson admitted that Willingham did share her findings and did have permission from the university to do the research in the first place, and said a meeting with Willingham was being scheduled.
    Apart from Wednesday's statement, UNC has not responded to CNN's request for an explanation.
    In the meantime, Willingham said she has heard from one branch of the university -- the Department of Public Safety.
    Since CNN's report, Willingham said she's gotten four death threats, and more than 30 other alarming messages.
    "Not people who disagree, people who put in the subject or body (of the e-mail) straight-up hate speech," she said.
    But there have also been notes of support from several other academic advisers around the country, Willingham says, and they make it worth the trouble.
    "I've been getting more and more nice notes from high school teachers and literacy specialists across the country saying 'Thank you.'"
    A formal incident report hasn't been made yet, but university police said: "We are looking into it and making effort to reach out and investigate the nature of the threats."
    "It's really OK," Willingham said of the threats, "because I'm telling the truth."

    There is something very wrong with how this country deals with sports
    "In a field where an overlooked bug could cost millions, you want people who will speak their minds, even if they’re sometimes obnoxious about it."

  19. #4069
    Senior Member Flixy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    6,435
    I for one don't see why universities are in the sports business to begin with. Over here they offer sports accommodation and pro sporters can get special treatment to combine the two, but it doesn't run any pro sports teams (all sport associations are supported by uni but run by students). We do compete in robot football, solar races, etc., but that's actually related to the uni's activities.
    Keep on keepin' the beat alive!

  20. #4070
    Let sleeping tigers lie Khendraja'aro's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    In the forests of the night
    Posts
    6,239
    Quote Originally Posted by Loki View Post
    The more interesting question there is how these people managed to make it to 10th grade.

    Related article: http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/09/us/nca...html?hpt=hp_t2
    Well, it's sort of an integrative school. Which might be a good idea if they actually had the infrastructure for it. But they just dumped me into this class (I didn't have a reliable list of my pupils for 3 weeks), told me: "Do some maths with them" and that's about it.

    Quote Originally Posted by Flixy View Post
    I for one don't see why universities are in the sports business to begin with. Over here they offer sports accommodation and pro sporters can get special treatment to combine the two, but it doesn't run any pro sports teams (all sport associations are supported by uni but run by students). We do compete in robot football, solar races, etc., but that's actually related to the uni's activities.
    Well, over here you can actually study Sports. But getting into that field is very hard: Besides having very good grades, you also need to demonstrate your proficiency in 19 different sports in a test. And you only may fail one.
    When the stars threw down their spears
    And watered heaven with their tears:
    Did he smile his work to see?
    Did he who made the lamb make thee?

  21. #4071
    hehe, just noticed i posted the story loki linked too.

    My son is currently doing the math you gave examples of right now in 7th grade, and sadly is/was making the same mistakes you're complaining about. What is it with negative numbers that make people go stupid?
    "In a field where an overlooked bug could cost millions, you want people who will speak their minds, even if they’re sometimes obnoxious about it."

  22. #4072
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/09/us/nca...html?hpt=hp_t3

    Someone finally takes the time to do the research to prove what we pretty much already knew, and this is how people react

    (CNN) -- The death threats, Mary Willingham expected.
    More shocking is that the University of North Carolina is now disavowing her research as a whistle-blower -- research that showed between 8% and 10% of the school's football and basketball players are reading below a third-grade level.
    UNC issued a statement Wednesday night saying it did not believe Willingham's account of a basketball player who could not read or write.
    It went on: "University officials can't comment on the other statistical claims mentioned in the story because they have not seen that data. University officials have asked for that data, but those requests have not been met."
    As well as questioning UNC many times about the story before publication, CNN has also detailed Willingham's research.
    And purported e-mail exchanges obtained by CNN since August show that Willingham did share her findings at least twice -- once with Executive Vice Provost James W. Dean Jr., and once with a member of a university committee on academics and athletics.
    In addition, Willingham says her research on the students in the athletics programs that make money for the university was done based on screenings that the university itself paid for. And, she says, she has gotten permission from the university several times since 2008 to access those findings to continue her research.
    "It's already available to them," Willingham said. "It's in their system. ... They have all the data and more. It belongs to them, and they paid a lot of money for it."
    Women who blew whistle and what happened next
    Last year, when CNN asked UNC for comment on Willingham's research, officials initially denied knowing about it, and said: "Such analysis is not part of her job duties at the university."
    Then, after being shown the e-mails, a spokesperson admitted that Willingham did share her findings and did have permission from the university to do the research in the first place, and said a meeting with Willingham was being scheduled.
    Apart from Wednesday's statement, UNC has not responded to CNN's request for an explanation.
    In the meantime, Willingham said she has heard from one branch of the university -- the Department of Public Safety.
    Since CNN's report, Willingham said she's gotten four death threats, and more than 30 other alarming messages.
    "Not people who disagree, people who put in the subject or body (of the e-mail) straight-up hate speech," she said.
    But there have also been notes of support from several other academic advisers around the country, Willingham says, and they make it worth the trouble.
    "I've been getting more and more nice notes from high school teachers and literacy specialists across the country saying 'Thank you.'"
    A formal incident report hasn't been made yet, but university police said: "We are looking into it and making effort to reach out and investigate the nature of the threats."
    "It's really OK," Willingham said of the threats, "because I'm telling the truth."

    There is something very wrong with how this country deals with sports
    That's pretty screwed up but still no where near as alarming as the lack of physical activity today's kids are doing.

  23. #4073
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    hehe, just noticed i posted the story loki linked too.

    My son is currently doing the math you gave examples of right now in 7th grade, and sadly is/was making the same mistakes you're complaining about. What is it with negative numbers that make people go stupid?
    I was doing it in first grade in Russia.

    Quote Originally Posted by Khendraja'aro View Post
    Well, it's sort of an integrative school. Which might be a good idea if they actually had the infrastructure for it. But they just dumped me into this class (I didn't have a reliable list of my pupils for 3 weeks), told me: "Do some maths with them" and that's about it.
    My point is that these students must have passed 9 years worth of math classes to get to this point. How does a student who can't do simple algebra pass 9th grade?
    Hope is the denial of reality

  24. #4074
    Senior Member Flixy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    6,435
    In the ever-continuing quest by GE to squeeze more money out of this place, while ignoring recommendations from the technical staff, they have now fucked up scheduling, and let someone go whose job was pretty important, which has been dumped on others but some stuff is falling between the cracks. Combined, this creates frustration, things go wrong, which also costs money BTW, and since my workplace is next to the coffee machine, it's like I'm moonlighting as a therapist by simply sitting here while others blow off steam about frustrations and stuff that goes wrong.
    Keep on keepin' the beat alive!

  25. #4075
    My feet. They've always messed with my groove, to some degree or other. Having flat feet didn't matter much in water sports, in fact it probably helped to have a broad toe width in the water, like flippers. But swimming abilities don't matter much in a walking world. Especially not for women in the fashion world. And shoes. Even slippers. My kids gave me some memory foam slippers at Christmas, and keep asking it they're wonderful treats for my feet.

  26. #4076
    Senior Member Flixy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    6,435
    My favorite bar is closing which sucks even more for one of my friends since he works there. And even more for the owner, of course.
    Keep on keepin' the beat alive!

  27. #4077

    I hope it will not get too bad here in Cairns.
    "Wer Visionen hat, sollte zum Arzt gehen." - Helmut Schmidt

  28. #4078
    Fucking snow sucks.
    We're stuck in a bloody snowglobe.

  29. #4079
    local weather guy was freaking out because the panhandle was reporting a 10th an inch of ice.

    I'm in short sleeves with the windows open
    "In a field where an overlooked bug could cost millions, you want people who will speak their minds, even if they’re sometimes obnoxious about it."

  30. #4080
    I heard that schools closed in Georgia and S. Carolina because of half an inch of snow (and 40F weather). WTF people?
    Hope is the denial of reality

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •