Start here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yL_-1d9OSdk
(The last question at the end, and the response, are a riot IMO.)
From there you can read the paper if you like:
http://isotropic.org/papers/chicken.pdf
(At least two of those references are to real papers, apparently.)
And if you decide that you want to know more about the person responsible, you then find this:
http://isotropic.org/
which has links to code for generating Celtic knotwork and models for Archimedian polyhedra.
Of course.
The noosphere is a wonderful place sometimes, really.
(The last question at the end, and the response, are a riot IMO.)
From there you can read the paper if you like:
http://isotropic.org/papers/chicken.pdf
(At least two of those references are to real papers, apparently.)
And if you decide that you want to know more about the person responsible, you then find this:
http://isotropic.org/
which has links to code for generating Celtic knotwork and models for Archimedian polyhedra.
Of course.
The noosphere is a wonderful place sometimes, really.
(no subject)
Date: 9 March 2009 21:32 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 10 March 2009 15:39 (UTC)OH MY GOD
Date: 10 March 2009 01:11 (UTC)Miraculously, most of the food (incl. eggs, as it happens) still went down the right pipe.
At first I was like, "oh this is dumb", but then I caught the citations to "C & C '98" and "Ch '00" right as the audience really started to lose it, and it only got funnier from there.
Re: OH MY GOD
Date: 10 March 2009 15:38 (UTC)Re: OH MY GOD
Date: 10 March 2009 16:51 (UTC)Chicken
Date: 10 March 2009 14:55 (UTC)I was recently at a talk where the speaker said something like:
"That is a brilliant question. 'Brilliant,' by the way, I am using in the technical sense. A 'good' question is one that I have thought about. An 'excellent' question is one to which I know the answer, and a 'brilliant' question is one for which I have a slide prepared. Brilliant question."
Re: Chicken
Date: 10 March 2009 15:39 (UTC)