Letters to the editor, March 2008This a traditional letter column. You are encouraged to write a letter of comment on anything that you find worthy of comment. It will (may) be published in this column along with my reply. As editor I reserve the right to delete material; however I will not alter the undeleted material. E-mail to me that solely references the contents of this site will be assumed to be publishable mail. All other e-mail is assumed to be private. And, of course, anything marked not for publication is not for publication. Oh yes, letters of appreciation for the scholarly resources provided by this site will be handled very discreetly. This page contains the correspondence for March 2008. Return to index of contributors
From: Robert Carroll Good Day, I was just looking at your site, and I have a number of people within our network looking for Bar Stools. I do not work as a lead broker or a referral agency. I’m simply looking to direct my clients to one company’s site that can provide a good product. So far your site looks like it’ll make a strong fit for my people. I can be reached at xxx-xxx-xxxx. Methinks you have me confused with someone else. There are some who say that much of the material on my website reads as though it were composed on a bar stool, but I have never heretofore been regarded as a source of bar stools. Be that as it may, you have my best wishes for the successful seating of the inebriates in your network.Return to index of contributors
From: Chip Hitchcock The old stuff on programming/SE/CS/… is interesting in both what it includes and what it leaves out. For instance, here’s the 2nd and 3rd(?) sentence from the quote at the top of http://richardhartersworld.com/cri/2008/programming.html It is the theoreticians who lead the way in the development of new computing technology and methodology. but the theoretical The foundations were well in Here it is March 13 and he hasn’t spoken up; is he feeling unwell, or perhaps just waiting for the Ideal moment? Now, now, the mangled prose you cite is not mine – I was quoting from someone else. It would have been quite improper of me to have translated it to grammatical English, and probably impractical as well. I am sure you realize that Peter is a guardian of my editorial propriety and would not have made any such improper suggestion.Return to index of contributors
From: Peter Neilson Mr Harter, Was it Mark Twain who wrote that story? I rather think it was, and I’m not going to bother looking it up. It’s merely the theme for what follows… At this website: http://www.haverford.edu/physics/songs/roberts/cyclo.htm and at this one: http://www.haverford.edu/physics/songs/roberts/roberts1947.htm can be found the words and a recorded performance of Arthur Roberts’ song, The Cyclotronist’s Nightmare. I pass this information on to you in the hope that it might leave my brain. To understand why, listen to the mp3 of the song, and you may discover that the chorus needs the same treatment the Twain gave to Punch, Brothers, Punch. There is a hidden agenda in all of this which may not come to light for a few months.
Ominously, This is very scary. The evial one used to sing that song in his laboratory. It has been said that the only thing more disturbing than physicist’s humor is mortician’s poetry. I know it has been said for I have just said it. I await developments with trepidation.Return to index of contributors
From: Melissa Hirschi I am Bill’s daughter-in-law and I just wanted to drop you a line and let you know Bill Hirschi is who wrote the Bra Poem. He is an extremely talented cowboy poet and has written many, many other cowboy poems told only to close family and local social gatherings. “The Bra” no doubt is one of my favorites, but Bill has composed so many others that are just as awesome and better, (none of them ever being published). He seems to have a gift of going out and working with the cattle and horses, his wife, family and friends and then coming home sitting down and writing down the events of the day with a little of his humor thrown in and making it a hit for all of us lucky enough to hear it. Bill has written poems on many different subjects ranging from bra’s to Christmas and even some very special ones, dealing with the more serious side of things. People who hear him give his poems usually wind up with at least a few tears rolling down their cheeks either from laughter or from the touching spirit Bill has when he speaks. I think that’s what has made him so unforgettable to all those who have heard him including those like Waddie Mitchell. Bill is and always has been a true cowboy thru and thru. Nothing about him is fake or made up. He writes about things he has lived and things he has seen, and I personally love him for it! Thanks a lot, Melissa. There are a lot of wonderful things that circulate through the internet without proper attribution. It’s nice to get these things right. Your father is a wonderful poet – maybe you could get a collection of his poems printed up and present them to him as a Christmas present. What do you think he would think of that?Return to index of contributors
From: Niels Martin Hello, May I suggest our website for a possible inclusion on your website at http://www.tiac.net/cri_a/piltdown/links.html
Our website: http://www.monsieur.info Please feel free to get a link back immediately using this form: http://www.monsieur.info/add.html To link to us, you may use the following information:
Website: http://www.monsieur.info This has to be one of the more unusual requests for a link that I have received. I don’t quite think that it would be appropriate for the Piltdown page, but I will mention it in my correspondence column.Return to index of contributors
From:David Gill Mr. Harter, I differ with your response to Mr. Hagar regarding the eligibility of George Washington to become President of the United States. General Washington was eligible because he was a citizen at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, not because he was born in Virginia. The U.S. Constitution sets out four requirements to become President of the Republic. The most commonly recognized are to be a natural born citizen (or a citizen at the time of adoption of the Constitution – a loophole I anticipate to be rarely used today), have attained 35 years of age and have lived in the United States for the previous 14 years. The fourth requirement is somewhat more elusive, but I anticipate that a person of your capacity will quickly intuit the requirement. Regards, David Gill I don’t have my copy of the constitution and its interpretation immediately hand. You are right in that he was eligible because he was a US citizen at the time of his election. But how, precisely, did he become a US citizen? IIRC the United States existed first as a congress of states and then as government of sorts under the articles of confederation. It seems to me that at that time the citizens of the United States were citizens by virtue of being citizens of some individual state, in Washington’s case Virginia, and that citizenship by virtue of birth.Return to index of contributors
From: Paula Bright-Weiss Dear Sir, I just wanted you to know what happened to me tonight. I was searching for the Rainwater Basin Wetland Management District and the Funk Waterfowl Production Area. I found the information I was looking for but continued to look at other waterfowl production areas just for fun. This led me to The June Harter Waterfowl Production Area. I found this very interesting because I was in Highmore this fall for an auction with my Dad. Then I clicked on a link that led me to your web site. I started reading about you and realized you graduated with my father, Richard Bright. I called him. I also sent him the web address. It is so neat to start one place and end up somewhere so unexpected. I am sure I will return to you home page often. Sincerely, Paula Bright-Weiss Thanks very much for writing. As you might have noticed, my web site is eclectic, covering a wide variety of odds and ends. Not nearly as much has been done with making the public aware of my mother’s Waterfowl Production Area as I would like – it is a natural area for birdwatchers and nature walkers to visit.Return to index of contributors
From: Ryan Rosenau hi Now that’s what I like, a quiet gentleman.Return to index of contributors
From: Peter Neilson Hunt for that word on your web pages. Fair enough. I found two entries. How many did you find?Return to index of contributors
From: Peter Neilson You have asked yourself this question: “But what, the skeptic says, do we do want to do something special such as retrying with a smaller size or using an alternative less memory intensive algorithm?” The Grammar Police suggest that you had an unchecked storage allocation failure while writing that question. You might have intended, “…do we >do when we want to do…,” but the excess of Dewey’s doo-doo remains. I take it that this is a case of of the foggy, foggy do.I leave the refactoring of the paragraph to the author. I did a bit of refactoring, and shall have it up anon. I haven’t bothered to translate it into English, that being beyond my poor capabilities.Have you ever considered the question of the development of a general test harness for testing test harnesses? Googling for “testing test harnesses” produces no valid results. That’s a good question. The obvious objection is that anything that tests a test harness should be in the test harness In reply, clearly the test harness test tests the test coverage of test harnesses, i.e., it is testing the test harness testing. Those that do not pass the test would be detested. I will include this subject in my agenda of projects to be completed in the latter half of this century.Return to index of contributors
From: Peter Neilson What are eespects, as mentioned in your afterword? I am surprised that you ask. As should be obvious respects are repeated spects. As should be obvious to anyone knowledgable in computer science, eespects are electrical engineering spects.Return to index of contributors
From: Peter Neilson Mr Harter! After reading certain contributions to your lettercol, I feel grave, not amused. I must be a snark, not a pundit. Several possibilities suggest themselves: 1. The general quality of your website is dropping, in spite of our joint effort on correcting grammar and spelling. I am not certain whether it is possible for the general quality of my website to have dropped. 2. My ability to appreciate good humor has been ruined by years of subscribing to Joe Ross’s re-toiled jokes. Don’t blame Joe for the quality of his jokes. He gets them from various mailing lists and reprints them. I suspect his sources do the same thing. There is a huge stock of these stories that circulate endlessly. Joe is not famed for his sense of humor, but he does essay an attempt at wit now and then. When he does the results are, ah, quite oritingal. 3. ARL is absorbing Joe’s joke-telling abilities through the luminiferous aether. It’s a good guess, but quite incorrect. As you may know the evil one has been jaunting off to Asia, first to China and then to Japan. Since his latest return he has been going through withdrawal symptoms and is quite disoriented.Return to index of contributors
From: Roger Hagar
Hello there … any answer we will appriciate I hope this helps, To be eligible to be President you have to be a native born citizen. What this means is that you were born in the United States – this not only includes the various states, it also includes posessions and territories.Return to index of contributors
From: Peter Neilson Mr Harter! Your mother’s webpage has a newspaper article and a dedication brochure. The typographical errors in each are no doubt of historical necessity, but I’ll point them out disregardless. The news article contains both the word camoflaged and the word camoflauged. One trembles at the thought of being camoflauged. The brochure contains not only the word “Lookjng” but also this paragraph: “In 1907 Mary came north, and the couple began life together in Hyde County. Life in those days was hard. Their initial quarters were a one building with a lean-to used as a kitchen; the kitchen ceiling was an oilcloth tacked over the stringers. They persevered. In 1910 they built a story and a half ranch house, and in 1913 they built a big new barn.” One surmises that “a one building” ought to have been “a one-room building” or perhaps simply “one building”. The Grammar Police also recommend that the story and the half ranch house be combined into a story-and-a-half ranch house. History is meant to be rewritten; it was never true in the first place. You and I know that the errors you pointed out existed. I fear that all my other readers will not, since I mean to correct them before posting your letter.Return to index of contributors
From: John Kennedy
At 05:29 AM 2/18/2008 -0800, you wrote:
HELLO SIR/MADDAM SO I WILL BE GLAD FOR ME TO HEAR FROM YOUR RESPOND BACK FROM YOU AS SOON
AS POSSIBLE THANK YOU VERY MURCH AND ONES HEAR FROM YOU I WILL GET BACK TO
YOU WITH MY ORDER OKAY? BEST REGARDING Sorry John, I don’t carry cattle chutes. With luck, maybe one of the other people you wrote has them.Return to index of contributors
From: Anthony R. Lewis, PhD, FN Dear Mr. Harter, perhaps you have already heard this… A man who owned a Chinese restaurant awoke in the night and, feeling amorous, nudged his wife and whispered “how about some sixty-nine?” To which she replied: “Why you want chicken with broccoli at three in the morning?” Keep up the good work. I hadn’t heard it nor had I read it. It’s a completely different version of a very old joke.Return to index of contributors
From: Meredy Amyx >Hi there–to answer your question at long last: no, I don’t think John had anything to do with the Densa quiz. He came up with Densa, and the idea of Densa spawned a lot of things of various origins. I’d been in Mensa for some time when Densa was born, and I knew it well. If there’d been anything like Densa around, I’d have known it. It was John’s brain child. But he never tried to hang onto it, and anything could have happened to it from there. The fact that it seems obvious after the fact doesn’t mean it wasn’t original when he introduced it. Thanks for the followup. It seems likely enough that John was the first. I think that you and I would agree that there must be somebody who thought of it first. On the other hand, I once wrote a little fiction that suggested that not all would agree with that thesis.Return to index of contributors
From: Peter Neilson As you know, one is always admonished in one’s science education to present measurable scientific information. “If it’s not numbers, it’s not science.” Well, here’s a number for you… I have just learned of a study that shows that 71.58% of the statistics that are quoted in papers, studies and on the internet are simply made up out of thin air!!! This (scientific) information may be of help to you in your discussions with creationists. It would were it not for the error bars on that interesting statistic. If I am not mistaken (and I so seldom am in these matters) the error range is (-71.58%, +28.42%). Still creationists are not wont to admit error and, at least the dryer ones, are never found in bars, so perhaps it doesn’t matter.Return to index of contributors
From: Tom Davis do you happen tohave plans foran “operational” Mongoose Box? Alas, no I don’t, and it is the sort of thing that I should have. Judging from my google search, there is surprisingly little material on mongoose boxes on the internet. For example, there isn’t an entry in wikipedia. If I come across some plans or if I decide to go ahead and build one, I will let you know.Return to index of contributors
From: Bassam Saeed Hi, Is there absolutely no difference is the operations of ++i or i++ Yes there is, but it depends on the context. In the following statements there is no difference:Return to index of contributors++i; i++;This is because the value of i is not used in these statements. Consider these statements:x = ++i; x = i++;In both statements i will be one greater after the statement is executed. In the first statement x will have the value after i is incremented; in the second statement x will have the value before i is incremented. As a practical matter, you should only use pre and post decrement operators in simple and clear cut ways; the rules governing their usage in complicated expressions are baroque.
From: Anthony David Dear Sir/Madam, Firstly, I would like to introduce myself to you, I am Anthony David, I am work with Crown Royal Windsor Plc, here in London. I am looking for a dependable individual that I can trust, someone who is wiling and honest enough to carry out this transaction with diligent to the best of his/her ability. I normally travel to Holland to purchase a Product Called RHINOMUNE®Injectable.The RHINOMUNE®Injectable is for vaccination of healthy horses 3 months of age or older as an aid in preventing respiratory disease caused by equine herpes virus type 1 (EHV-1). RHINOMUNE is prepared by growing an attenuated strain of EHV-1 on an equine cell line. The RHINOMUNE®Injectable contains 10 bottles in a carton. Each bottle contains 25ml. RHINOMUNE®Injectable product is recommended to be used for horses only. These products are rare and in high demand here in Britain, it was introduce to our company by a Chinese friend, Mrs. Christina Tan a veterinary in Holland, who gave me a sample for test on my last visit to Holland. I have searched to a conclusive point that this said product is specifically found in Holland. Now this is the deal, my company has issued an LPO for the purchase of this product in large quantity (My company will in turn sell the purchased products to other retailer here in London), since I am the marketing manager of my company, the letter has been issued directing that I should get the products in question. But I want to do is get a dependable person that will stand in as the seller of this products, and the reason I am looking for such person is simple. The actual selling price from the dealers in Holland is $2,700 per pack (my company is not aware of this, they believe it is sold for $5000) while it is sold here in Britain at the rate of $5700 to Veterinary Companies. Meanwhile I don’t want my boss to go directly to the dealer because the company has allocated $5000 per pack to purchase the product ( we stand a chance of making $2,300 from every pack we sell to my company, while my company would be making a total of $700 per pack from selling the product to other veterinary companies) My appeal to you is for your assistance, to get the product from the dealers then re-sell to our company at the stipulated price as stated above; thereafter the profit will be shared base on 60/40% percentage. I am unable to travel for now after a bad vehicle accident; I have no intentions on losing out in profit as I need it to pay up my hospital bills. It has seriously drained me. With that I was hoping that a reliable person can assist me in supplying my company.
Regards, I appreciate the offer, Anthony, but I rather fancy that if I were to take you up on your offer it would be me that would be a horse’s ass.Return to index of contributors
From: Anthony R. Lewis, PhD, FN Mr. Harter–this has probably been around for a while. Tony I wondered why the baseball was getting bigger. Then it hit me. Police were called to a day care where a three-year-old was resisting a rest. Did you hear about the guy whose whole left side was cut off? He’s all right now. To write with a broken pencil is pointless. The short fortune teller who escaped from prison was a small medium at large. A thief who stole a calendar got twelve months. When the smog lifts in Los Angeles, U.C.L.A The math professor went crazy with the blackboard. He did a number on it. The professor discovered that her theory of earthquakes was on shaky ground. The dead batteries were given out free of charge. A dentist and a manicurist fought tooth and nail. A bicycle can’t stand alone; it is two tired. A will is a dead giveaway. A backward poet writes inverse. A chicken crossing the road : poultry in motion. With her marriage she got a new name and a dress. A grenade fell onto a kitchen floor in France, resulted in linoleum blownapart. He broke into song because he couldn’t find the key. A calendar’s days are numbered. A boiled egg is hard to beat. If you jump off a Paris bridge, you are in Seine . When she saw her first strands of gray hair, she thought she’d dye. Bakers trade bread recipes on a knead to know basis. Acupuncture: a jab well done When I seek a chap who will relate humourous puns I seek a pundit.Return to index of contributors This page was last updated March 21, 2008. |