• littleblue✨
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        49 months ago

        Yeah, if the mood called for that wavy, reach-for-the-sky dance that caterpillars do. On the other hand, if the mood called for a thick, rigid caterpillar, throbbing with pent-up intention, you might want to reconsider the parties you attend.

  • GingaNinga
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    799 months ago

    scientists work their asses off, its nice to have a little fun and make the endless hours all worth it.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Not exactly the same but I remember starting my software engineering course and having to remote into the university servers to write code. All the servers were named after Red Dwarf characters. Being a career changer, as soon as I saw the server names I had this calming feeling that I’d finally found my people and everything was going to be ok.

    • FuglyDuck
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      9 months ago

      My dad was never at university, but he was a unix admin for ages. his naming conventions for clusters?

      Star Wars characters.
      Red Dwarf Characters.
      Star trek characters.
      Asimov’s robots.
      and apparently, his annoying bosses. (For the troublesome clusters.)

      • @[email protected]
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        289 months ago

        I’ve heard it’s a “pets vs cattle” thing. When you have a small fleet of distinct servers, you name them. When you have a thousand interchangeable boxes, you give them systematic IDs.

        Or you scale up to a franchise with a large enough cast. I wonder if anyone uses One Piece character names for servers?

        • FuglyDuck
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          219 months ago

          It kind of also depends on how you interact with them- some clusters are interacted with by admin as a single entity; those got names even if they technically represented lots of rackspace; or the hardware that’s running specific groupings of services.

          Like a databases. (Darth Vader was reserved for databases that logged and tracked errors… aka other systems that were, uh, rebellions.)

          • @[email protected]
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            59 months ago

            You give systematic id’s to completely interchangable things. You give unique names to unique things.

            If you name a formal thing (like a physical computer) by its function you have failed at naming. And are probably a manager who doesn’t see that one day you’ll need many things of almost the same function and to tell them apart. Or that one thing will have many functions.

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          To anyone reading this and not getting it. When your pet gets sick you take care of it (named special servers/other machines). When a cow in the feed lot gets sick you…replace it.

  • drail
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    9 months ago

    Physics is a mixed bag with this stuff. Gell-Mann came up with the name quarks after a line from Finnegan’s Wake because Joyce referenced them as coming in three. It was a nonsense word inserted just to rhyme with Mark, Park, etc, so its pronunciation in physics isn’t even correct, but it was fun and physicists were just having a good time with it.

    Three quarks for Muster Mark! Sure he has not got much of a bark And sure any he has it’s all beside the mark.

    Then we got the strange/charm and top/bottom (which was originally the beauty/truth, so bullet dodged there) so the quarks really got all the fun names. Strong Force physics in general gets the good stuff: Axions were named after a detergent because they helped “clean up” the strong CP-violation problem of the standard model. Fantastic, no notes.

    Neutrinos (my field of study), had so much potential for fun, stupid naming that was squandered. The neutrino was originally proposed with the name “neutron” by Pauli, but then the actual neutron was discovered and observed first, so the name got pinched. To remedy this, the electron neutrino was dubbed “neutrino” or little neutron (they didn’t know that other flavors of neutrino existed). Meanwhile, the muon neutrino was originally supposed to be the neutretto (before they realized that the neutral leptons were related by the different particle generations), so we could have had a world where each generation of neutral lepton was just another combination of neutron + diminutive italian suffix.

    1. Neutrino
    2. Neutretto/neutronetto
    3. Neutrello/neutronello

    Then, when the mass eigenstates were confirmed, we could have diversified and gone with big suffixes to indicate that neutrinos have mass.

    1. Neutroni
    2. Neutrachione/neutronachione
    3. Neutrozzo/neutronozzo

    But noooooo, particle physics decided to just give neutrinos the lamest possible names, electron/muon/tau neutrinos for flavor states and m_1/m_2/m_3 neutrino for mass states. I am ashamed of my predecessors for what they’ve done.

    Don’t even get me started on the J/Psi debacle…

    • @[email protected]
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      209 months ago

      The time derivative of position is velocity. The derivative of velocity is acceleration. Derive again and you get jerk. Then it’s snap, crackle and pop.

      (For those too young, these are the names of those characters they use to sell Rice Krispies)

    • @[email protected]
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      99 months ago

      TIL I’ve pronounced quark wrong my whole life (rhyming with park).

      Though I’ve heard it done that way elsewhere - perhaps it is also considered acceptable at this point.

      • drail
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        29 months ago

        Gell-Mann said it sounds like “quart”, Joyce rhymed it with Park, it is a silly word and the pronunciation is as fluid as you desire.

    • @SpaceNoodle
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      79 months ago

      Wait, how is “quark” supposed to be pronounced? Not like the Star Trek character or the German cheese?

      • @TheTetrapod
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        39 months ago

        I pronounce it with the a sound I’d use in “warp”.

      • drail
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        19 months ago

        In physics- Like “quart” with a k In the Joyce novel- rhymes with park.

              • @captainlezbian
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                19 months ago

                Kinda yeah, though with the a-schwa transformation not quite complete. As I describe this I’m realizing it may be influenced by my accent which is similar to the tv American accent but with a bunch of dropped sounds.

    • @OccamsTeapot
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      59 months ago

      My favourite is the barn. Hmm what should we call this 10^-28 m^2 cross sectional area? Ten times less than a billionth of a billionth of a billionth of a square metre. Hur hurr wow it’s so BIG it’s like hitting a barn door, let’s call it a barn.

    • littleblue✨
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      29 months ago

      So… It seems that you feel let down by your predecessors in physics’ inability to tell the future… Hunh. Odd, that.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    #transcription

    fuckingflying

    I hate linguistic anthropology. Why? One of the most influential experiments in linguistic anthropology involved teaching a chimp asl. One of the most influential linguistics is named Noam Chomsky. You know what the chimp’s name was?

    Nim Chimpsky.

    Fucking monkey pun.

    And this is in textbooks, in documentaries, everywhere. And everyone just IGNORES THIS GOD AWFUL PUN cause of how important the experiment was. But

    BUT LOOK AT THIS SHIT. FUCKING NIM CHIMPSKY. I HATE THIS WHOLE FIELD.

    dendritic-trees
    Its not just the linguistic anthropologists.

    There’s a group of very important genes that determine if your body develops in the right shape/organization… they are called the hedgehog genes, because fruit fly geneticists are all ridiculous. The different hedgehog genes are all named after different hedgehogs. And then someone decided to get clever and name one "sonic hedgehog’ because this is just what fruitfly geneticists do.

    Well sonic hedgehog controls brain development, and now actual doctors are stuck in the position of explaining to grieving parents that their child’s lethal birth defects or life-threatening tumors are caused by a “sonic hedgehog mutation”.

    And this is why no one will invite the fruit fly people to parties.

    error-404-fuck-not-found
    Biogeochemical scientists, upon discovering the complex mechanisms that govern the storage and use of molecular iron on our planet, decided to call this cycle “the ferrous wheel”. We groaned about that for at least five solid minutes.

    callmegallifreya
    The phenomenon of sneezing when exposed to sudden bright light is called an Autosomal-dominant Compelling Helio Opthalmic Outburst. ACHOO Half a byte of data is a nibble.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        Ferrous means iron. When they say Ferrous wheel, it means how the iron is stored and used in the biosphere and lithosphere. It is a pun on Ferris Wheel, which is an amusement park ride.

    • @rtxn
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      29 months ago

      TIL that “cocksucker” has a wiktionary entry.

  • @adenoid
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    349 months ago

    The predicted outcomes of sinus surgery for chronic rhinosinusitis may use the SNOT scale (sinonasal outcome test)

    • @captainlezbian
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      39 months ago

      Relevant username. Also wow sinonasal is hard to read correctly, I got sinusoidal a few times

    • littleblue✨
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      69 months ago

      To be fair, that was coined by Larson and then adopted by the scientists, whereas the previous examples were coined by those in the field, specifically.

  • @Daft_ish
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    309 months ago

    Half a byte being a nibble is too cute to hate.

    • VindictiveJudge
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      159 months ago

      There was an early trend of giving tech stuff fantasy terms, too. Programs that do something for the user being wizards and programs that do things when triggered being daemons, for instance.

  • @I_Has_A_Hat
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    259 months ago

    Meanwhile, in immunology:

    “Can we have fun names?”

    “NO! Now shut up and keep isolating proteins and cell markers!”

    • @[email protected]
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      99 months ago

      The stupid terminology in immunology made me hate it so much, even though the actual mechanics are fascinating. At some point my brain just reached saturation with all the CD proteins. Enough is enough!!!

  • @[email protected]
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    239 months ago

    Fun fact (not really) about Nim: he and the other ASL chimps were HORRIBLY abused. Basically every single one of them.

    And it was all for nothing, not a single bit of evidence shows that teaching chimps ASL worked and allowed any form of actual communication.

    Yes, even Koko.

    https://youtu.be/e7wFotDKEF4

    • @Dasus
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      99 months ago

      Well, communication is definitely shown.

      But… “speech”, “language”, “sentient thought”? That’s the subjective bit, imo. Communication is easy.

    • Bizzle
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      189 months ago

      Thanks for giving us your two bits

    • ✺roguetrick✺
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      9 months ago

      I appreciate that some fucking guy recorded himself reading that goddamn article and his accent makes Cox Zucker completely indistinguishable from cock sucker.