Seriously, if you have a PhD candidate or are a PhD candidate working in black hole or neutron star X-ray binaries, invite me to be part of the committee? I'd like to feel once like I know stuff 😅
I remember when this story of two high school students discovering one or more new proofs of the Pythagorean theorem came out some years ago, but (frustratingly) without any substantive details on what these proofs were and why they were new. Now there is a published paper: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00029890.2024.2370240
The question of defining precisely when two proofs are "the same" (or whether a proof is "new" compared to existing proofs) is actually a very subtle and interesting one (see some discussion at https://gowers.wordpress.com/2007/10/04/when-are-two-proofs-essentially-the-same/ or https://mathoverflow.net/questions/3776/when-are-two-proofs-of-the-same-theorem-really-different-proofs). Here the authors take a largely syntactic approach: they are considering a proof to be "trigonometric" if it avoids the use of circles (or coordinates), but uses angles in an essential way. With these restrictions, they do find at least five proofs that do not obviously resemble any of the standard known proofs, for instance one that involves summing a geometric series.
In ptinciple there may be "semantic" ways to distinguish these proofs from other proofs, in that there may be exotic variants of Euclidean geometry in which one of the proofs in this paper is valid but other proofs are not, or vice versa. But even without having such a semantic way to make this distinction, this was a fun read and a reminder that even the most ancient and well-established foundational results in mathematics can sometimes be revisited from a fresh perspective.
This is a good resource for undecided or unmotivated voters, or people talking with same: comprehensive analyses of what the 2024 election means for science, health care, technology, education, nuclear weapons and more (issues, not horse race nonsense) https://www.scientificamerican.com/report/how-the-2024-presidential-election-will-shape-science-health-and-the-environment/
A reminder that more American child pedestrians (age 0-17) are killed by cars on Halloween than on any other day of the year. #CarsRuinCities
Saw a discussion on Bluesky about how web devs end up having no body of work as sites disappear, companies fold, and agencies shutter
This first happened to me in the 2000s. Almost every project, large and small, I've worked on since has disappeared. Even most of the ebooks I made for a publishers have been replaced. I've been doing this for almost thirty years and my body of work exists only as screenshots and vague memories
TIL: There is LaTeX coffee stains package and I think you should know this: https://www.overleaf.com/latex/examples/latex-coffee-stains/qsjjwwsrmwnc
Just canceled #Amazon & #amazonprime accounts after #JeffBezos canceled #wapo editors' presidential endorsement.
Removing the #amazonfiretv device next.
Are there recommendations for alternatives?
Devoted & patient #linux & #freesoftware user, but not a trained #software developer or #coder.
May choose #roku & curious about #opensource options.
#stopfascism #failingwashingtonpost #floss #foss #diy #gnu #raspberrypi #creativecommons #system76 #calyxos #community #democracy
If you, or someone you know, is into telescopes - this article has a nice breakdown of which ones to purchase.
https://www.space.com/should-you-buy-a-telescope-on-black-friday-cyber-monday
@hacks4pancakes My dad (also a boomer) has said this often. It's like people have forgotten how bad it can get if you go down this road.
@volodymyr @vicgrinberg @verbeeld @SnowshadowII I think I have a similar viewpoint. I frequently see the discussion on Mastodon couched as whether algorithms are good or bad, but I think that's a false dichotomy. This being software, of course any feed is algorithmic, and it's rather a continuum in terms of the complexity and transparency of the algorithms allowed and how their use is or is not controlled. This hasn't really been explored sufficiently yet to know what the outcome of different policies might be.
Unfortunately, the discussion around federation and bridging with other services and around search makes me suspect that culturally Mastodon is too phobic about this and related topics to usefully explore the solutions. I hope, of course, that I'm wrong.
Please take some time to read everything written in the link/personal share by @bastianallgeier - it is really worth your time. It is about his Grandpa being part of #Hitler #Nazi forces & how it made him an #AntiFascist. Read it. Then, please share it everywhere you can 🙌
https://mastodon.social/@bastianallgeier/113362870576727321
An #excerpt, to give you an idea of what is in article:
"I'm writing this down because my grandpa turned me into an anti-fascist with all my heart for the rest of my life. I'm not wearing black on an antifa demo to beat up some Nazis. I mean the deep conviction that fascism must never – and I mean never – return to power. I've witnessed his distorted reality. He was a fantastic example for how well humans can manipulate their own memories and the stories they tell – to protect themselves – to hide some brutal truths forever. You cannot argue with someone who's living in a different universe. It took a long time for me to understand that."
https://bastianallgeier.com/notes/grandpa
We need to learn more from lived experiences. We need to stop repeating the worst of historical evils. We can & should do much better!
@j_bertolotti This just makes me think of the article in Conservapedia that (once upon a time) criticized the theory of relativity under the apparent presumption that it had something to do with moral relativism, which was depressingly stupid but also kind of funny. (It looks like the current version still rails against it but for different reasons.)
If you've ever wondered if it's possible to run a broadcast television network on commodity hardware using open source software when you have no idea what you're doing, the answer is absolutely yes.
We're doing it right now! Or, at least, we will be tomorrow when they plug us in to the head-end.
We're running ffplayout on the server side, building our schedules by hand (new open source scheduler and media asset manager coming Soon ™️) and outputting to SRT and RTMP.
The RTMP stream is consumed by peertube, and then spit back out to our roku channel.
The SRT stream is consumed by a piece of hardware at the cable company (that we paid for, an Impulse 300D Network Decoder)which takes the SRT stream and just shoves it in to their head end.
The Impulse Decoder is the only piece of equipment in all of this that isn't a cheap rented VPS, and whatever it's running is the only time any of these videos touch something that isn't free software.
I just cast my #vote and I was told my registration had been suspended because of undeliverable mail.
1. My address hasn’t changed in close to a decade
2. I certainly did not receive a notice that I would be suspended
3. There is no reason why a voter registration card sent to my address would be returned as undeliverable
4. I still have a current voter registration card
I was able to vote after signing a confirmation of address.
So yeah, check your registration. That’s some fishy shit.
@volodymyr @vicgrinberg @verbeeld @SnowshadowII Of note: Bluesky currently has features to make it easy to follow user-generated feeds, which offers this sort of freedom. I've certainly seen academics who have tried Mastodon say that Bluesky provides them with a more useful tool for conversation and networking with their academic community. That being said, I'm not aware of true demonstrated federation of Bluesky (aside from just identity servers), so proceed with some caution there.
As you say, I think similar things could be done in Mastodon, but there is such a strong phobia around "algorithms" that such efforts to make relevant posts easier to find/filter tend to provoke fierce backlash. So it's more of a cultural problem than a technical one.
@nixCraft A curious game; the only winning move is not to play.
math, village priests, tragedy, politics, university admissions
Was reading the Wikipedia entry of Galois on his birthday. Perhaps a little reminder of what life was like when the village priest had significant political power over you, and perhaps also a reminder that we should not go back:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89variste_Galois
"On 28 July 1829, Galois's father died by suicide after a bitter political dispute with the village priest. A couple of days later, Galois made his second and last attempt to enter the Polytechnique and failed yet again. It is undisputed that Galois was more than qualified; accounts differ on why he failed. More plausible accounts state that Galois made too many logical leaps and baffled the incompetent examiner, which enraged Galois. The recent death of his father may have also influenced his behavior."
Sam Altman side by side with Aaron Swartz.
I can't stop thinking about it. One was prosecuted by the US for downloading copyrighted data from 1 source for noble purposes, and committed suicide to avoid prison. The other is widely celebrated for doing this on a much larger scale*.
Edited: *(and not for noble purposes)
@geonz My experience teaching physics at a university was that even the subset of students coming into a general physics class had radically different math skills. Dealing with those discrepancies was probably one of the biggest challenges. And in my experience students who had less preparation then reached the conclusion that they were "bad at math", because they were struggling relative to those whose schools had better prepared them.
Theoretical physicist by training (PhD in quantum open systems/quantum information), University lecturer for a bit, and currently paying the bills as an engineer working in optical communication (implementation) and quantum communication (concepts), though still pursuing a little science on the side. I'm interested in physics and math, of course, but I enjoy learning about really any area of science, philosophy, and many other academic areas as well. My biggest other interest is hiking and generally being out in nature.