Message boards : Number crunching : Problems and Technical Issues with Rosetta@home
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Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
Also schadenfreudeAlthough I enjoy schadenfreuding, I would never describe it as such. Doesn't everyone watch fail videos on Youtube? |
Tomcat雄猫 Send message Joined: 20 Dec 14 Posts: 180 Credit: 5,386,173 RAC: 0 |
"Workunits waiting for validation: 1607599" I guess we'll have to wait after Thanksgiving. |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
"Workunits waiting for validation: 1607599"I had to look up what that was. It's in November? |
Tomcat雄猫 Send message Joined: 20 Dec 14 Posts: 180 Credit: 5,386,173 RAC: 0 |
"Workunits waiting for validation: 1607599"I had to look up what that was. It's in November? Ah, Thanksgiving day is today where I live. Second Monday of October. I'm going to assume there is no holiday today where Rosetta is based at. |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
Odd, from Google it's some kind of thanks for a harvest, I thought it would be fairly fixed (Like Easter, first Sunday in the month or whatever it is)."Workunits waiting for validation: 1607599"I had to look up what that was. It's in November? Here we are, USA/Canada November 24: https://www.calendar-12.com/holidays/thanksgiving/2022 It's celebrated in other countries? Hang on, aren't you Canadian? |
hadron Send message Joined: 4 Sep 22 Posts: 68 Credit: 1,559,185 RAC: 196 |
An accent is fine, but no, cockney rhyming slang is ridiculous.Then neither are Geordie or Cockney, but they are both dialects of English -- as are the very many dialects spoken in North America.And BTW, "nada" is a Spanish word, but in common use in the Western world. Most people understand its meaning.I don't speak Spanish apart from conio, pinga, soldado, comminierda, and fascista. And American isn't a language. What is ridiculous is someone who claims there is only one "pure" version of a particular language -- usually the one that that person speaks. OMG, you would be lost in Canada, with all words that were lifted straight into Canadian English from one of the many indigenous languages. BTW, if you don't like the use of "nada" in English, what's your take on things like "brehmsstrahlung" or "apropos"?Brehmsstrahlung is scientific. Science uses words from many languages and must be precise. Apropos I would never use, sounds like something a lawyer would say. They're stuck on Latin. So what was wrong with calling it "braking radiation", which is the precise English translation of brehmsstrahlung? And apropos is hardly Latin, it is French. |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
What is ridiculous is someone who claims there is only one "pure" version of a particular language -- usually the one that that person speaks. OMG, you would be lost in Canada, with all words that were lifted straight into Canadian English from one of the many indigenous languages.Actually my grandfather grew up in a cockney area (but didn't speak like that). If I spoke like that I wouldn't have called my version the correct English. My mother's side is all Yorkshire, and I can speak with a Yorkshire accent but don't. I find it amusing. "Put wood in 'ole there's a draft!" (Would you mind closing the door, there's a terrible chill coming across the room) or a prefix to that, "wast tha born in barn lad?" (self explanatory). Or Glaswegian.... "See you? Gonnae nae dae that? Yer scratchin the paintwork on ma car! If ya do that agayn I'll phone the poliss and y'll be lifted! This is a respectable area!" (Usually in an area which isn't respectable and the car in question is a 30 year old Lada Riva). https://quickmarket.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/4-19.jpg Jesus that one is 24 years old and on sale for a grand and a half! I was expecting 100. So what was wrong with calling it "braking radiation", which is the precise English translation of brehmsstrahlung?I most likely would if I worked in that field. A German word that long is not easy to fit in a sentence without getting your tongue in a twist. And apropos is hardly Latin, it is French.It sounds Latin, and I've never heard it used in the UK. Just goes to show I don't use that kind of thing. |
Dark Angel Send message Joined: 9 Jul 08 Posts: 9 Credit: 1,755,388 RAC: 0 |
So is there going to be any response from Admin regarding the 1.7 million results and climbing locked in pending? |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
There is no admin in here, we've only seen a scientist. I'm sure without validation, the science results aren't available, so someone will kick it soon. |
srettie Volunteer moderator Project developer Project scientist Send message Joined: 10 Jul 17 Posts: 9 Credit: 50,961 RAC: 0 |
I'll see about talking our Rosetta@Home team tomorrow. Sorry for the delay on this. |
bluestang Send message Joined: 28 Jun 18 Posts: 2 Credit: 3,760,338 RAC: 0 |
Good news, as I'm tired of reading posts from this Pompous Arse and his perfect English! |
Stevie G Send message Joined: 15 Dec 18 Posts: 107 Credit: 838,868 RAC: 799 |
@Peter the HucksterWow, you actually admit you would say "Ferrari" and not "car", yet you would call you NVME an "SSD"? You really haven't grasped this simple concept at all. And BTW nada isn't a word in English. Maybe you meant nothing. Quite true. Even the Scottish phrases The Huckster disparages were not from the language of their ancestors nor of the pre-Saxon residents of Britain. Modern media -- TV and radio-- have homogenized the English language beyond what people 300 years ago would recognize. Taylor Island and Smith Island, in the middle of Chesapeake Bay within the state of Maryland were settled by British people around 1608. They spoke the Elizabethan English of their period. Being isolated islands with little connection to the mainland, these farmers and fishermen had no access to TV until the 1960s. As a result of their isolation, the 20th century residents of those islands spoke the closest thing to Elizabethan English found anywhere in the world. There are recordings of them speaking so you can hear when it sounded like. But, now, access to TV and radio has caused that form of the language to disappear. People speaking today sound pretty much like other American living in Maryland and Virginia, although their way of life is disappearing. .Also, the islands themselves are disappearing, eroding away due to sea level rise. The would survive another 50 years. S. Gaber |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
Good news, as I'm tired of reading posts from this Pompous Arse and his perfect English!At least you spelt arse correctly. I'm tired of Americans confusing buttocks with donkeys. |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
Even the Scottish phrases The Huckster disparages were not from the language of their ancestors nor of the pre-Saxon residents of Britain.Neither do you speak like the amoebas you evolved from, what's your point? Modern media -- TV and radio-- have homogenized the English language beyond what people 300 years ago would recognize.I guess that's why I keep saying I guess. Taylor Island and Smith Island, in the middle of Chesapeake Bay within the state of Maryland were settled by British people around 1608. They spoke the Elizabethan English of their period. Being isolated islands with little connection to the mainland, these farmers and fishermen had no access to TV until the 1960s. As a result of their isolation, the 20th century residents of those islands spoke the closest thing to Elizabethan English found anywhere in the world. There are recordings of them speaking so you can hear when it sounded like.I cannot locate these recordings, do you have a link? |
Greg_BE Send message Joined: 30 May 06 Posts: 5691 Credit: 5,859,226 RAC: 0 |
As for your critique on American English, it's obvious that you do not understand how languages work. They evolve. Isolation causes change. How do you think the English language came to be? It incorporates words, phrases and idioms from many other languages. Latin, Greek, French, German, Spanish. That's what makes it universal.America just failed to evolve. <<-- says who? You? |
Greg_BE Send message Joined: 30 May 06 Posts: 5691 Credit: 5,859,226 RAC: 0 |
Good news, as I'm tired of reading posts from this Pompous Arse and his perfect English!At least you spelt arse correctly. I'm tired of Americans confusing buttocks with donkeys. LMAO, an ass vs an ass. But both have a hole. Or right and right and write? |
Tomcat雄猫 Send message Joined: 20 Dec 14 Posts: 180 Credit: 5,386,173 RAC: 0 |
Odd, from Google it's some kind of thanks for a harvest, I thought it would be fairly fixed (Like Easter, first Sunday in the month or whatever it is)."Workunits waiting for validation: 1607599"I had to look up what that was. It's in November? Yes, I'm in Ontario, Canada. Thanksgiving is the second Monday every October here. |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
<<-- says who? You? Says the entire internet. Just look up IQs, youtube videos of idiots, etc. <--- Well take Dutch then literally translated foot path, Better than sidewalk, but not distinguishable from one nowhere near a road. but then to use some stuff from UK English...boot? really? That's what you put on your feet. Trunk? Really? Elephants use those. Fortnight? Two weeks is more clear. And I have to say some of the UK dialects really take some concentration to figure out what they are saying. Thanks for confirming you can't count to fourteen in the USA. <<---Its a US thing. Pretty sure there are some things in UK English that are equally strange. Americans don't actually know. Some say gotten is *instead* of got, and some say it's past historic or something, and they use got and gotten in different contexts. It's a part of our language style? To triple the words needed? I was trying to open a laptop! I don't want waffle! Why do you guys always say Thank You, Thank you very much all the time? Just stick with one thank you or just one thank you very much. How about all the 'Bye' you say before hanging up? I say "thanks". I say "bye". Never heard longer versions like you mention, unless perhaps someone had just been given a million pounds. <<-- You swear allegiance to the flag, not to the president, not to the king. Allegiance to a piece of cloth, it gets better and better. We use 'In God we Trust' on the money, not any monarch or president. I prefer real beings that actually exist. This is another reason the world looks down on America, the high percentage of deeply religious nuts. Most christian countries are giving up on religion, it's just the extremists like muslims that continue to take it seriously. When being sworn in court, it is 'So help me God' You have to answer to God on these matters. Courts are way behind in everything, it wasn't long ago they stopped using Latin. I wonder what would happen if you refused to swear on the bible in court on the grounds you're an atheist? I wouldn't like to try it. Maybe if I'm nothing to do with a case and just a witness who doesn't mind pissing off the judge. God Bless the United States when used by a politician is the most stupid thing they could say. It's a catch phrase. They don't mean it. It sounds good. We don't say "god bless". We sometimes say "for god's sake" without meaning it, since the only other alternative is "for fuck's sake". <<-- Because English is invading their language by the younger generation. Same here in Belgium and Netherlands, heavy English influence in the language. But the base language still exists and is used. I can understand that but not why they don't just use the existing French words for fast and food so vite aliments. ARGH! I tried to get that from my Google Home, and it spoke with an American accent in French! Couldn't understand a word! It normally talks to me with an English accent. |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
LMAO,You laughed your donkey off? an ass vs an ass. But both have a hole.One has more holes. But what's funnier is you refer to entire people as ass - even when not being rude. For example "get your ass over here". What about the rest of them? Yes ok, Americans are mainly ass because they eat so much. Or right and right and write?That is silly, but at least we differentiate an animal from a body part. |
Mr P Hucker Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 1600 Credit: 11,845,183 RAC: 8,097 |
Oops I missed a part of that page saying you're earlier, should have asked my Google Home, it got it right. So you have an earlier harvest despite being further North? Maybe the yanks ate the first one and had to start again.Here we are, USA/Canada November 24: https://www.calendar-12.com/holidays/thanksgiving/2022Yes, I'm in Ontario, Canada. Thanksgiving is the second Monday every October here. Your name is in English and Chinese, do you consider yourself Canadian? |
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Problems and Technical Issues with Rosetta@home
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