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2005 Oct 25 (Tue)
Phalanx Flanks and Dogs Are Drags
Recently I've been listening to podcasts like crazy during work. It not only helps me catch up on news, editorial pieces, and great songs, it also has allowed me to learn more about the great culture that is Perl via Perlcast. The guy, Josh McAdams, who does Perlcast sets up interviews, talks about the latest news, discusses aspects of the language for beginners, and also highlights modules that many other Perl users have found useful. Besides all that goodness, he segues in and out of the podcast with music he has selected from garageband.com. Anyway, just that alone has made the podcast a great experience! The song that I'm getting addicted to right now is called Sun Years by Scotland Barr and The Slow Drags. Just thought I'd share the goodness :) Another great thing about Josh McAdams, at least for me, is his Southern accent. For example, he was talking about a project called Phalanx, and it sounded like "flanks" to me (is there a connection between the words?). I have always pronounced it (ever since playing Civilization, that is) like ['fele?ks], with the stress on the first syllable. He, however, in Perlcast 9, sounds like he pronounces it ['fle?ks]: only one syllable, albeit with a lot of consonants (soundclip). Nothing wrong with it (of course), but I just thought it was interesting because it made me try to think of words that I do that to (i.e., that I drop a vowel). The only one I could think of of the top of my head was philanthropy [f?'lan?r?pi]/['flan?r?pi]. The schwa is present when I'm speaking more carefully, but that's not that often. ;) The similarity I saw was that both had the same onset cluster [fl] and similar codas: a nasal followed bya voiceless consonant. Other than that, I guess it's just that he drops an unstressed vowel between a fricative and a liquid regularly, whereas I just do it intermittently. It just sorta caught me off-guard because for me I've never heard "phalanx" pronounced with the first vowel unstressed/dropped. Also, another fun one for me was when I was first trying to find the band's name for the above-mentioned song. To me, it sound like he's saying Scotland Barr and the Slow Dogs (soundclip). I don't know where he grew up, but I have an aunt who lives in Louisville who sounds nothing like him, so I don't think he's from there. Anyway, this one I can't wrap my head around. How is "drags" pronounced "dogs" to my ears? I gotta think about it more. Ahh, language is great :) 2005/11/26 09:59 Josh McAdams 2005/11/26 20:34 David 2006/01/09 18:41 Chris Hubbard 2006/01/11 01:17
[all posts in /ling/] [permanent link] 2005 Oct 10 (Mon) After work yesterday, I went to my first perlmongers meeting. (well, I actually went to a meeting at UCSD in August to hear Damian Conway speak, but that was sorta a special occasion). I met some interesting people (Joel, Bob, Billy, Cathy with a 'C', and Amil) and even tho' we didn't talk about Perl all that much, it was just an all-around enjoyable good time. Anyway, what I really wanted to write about is that I've learned about a new website, thedailywtf.com, and decided to check it out today. Today's post was not showing "wtf" code, but still about people writing ridiculously stupid code. The post is about a problem a Dutch bank is having with its ATM matchines.: the machines don't allow people with the number "7" in their pin to access their accounts. Who says "7" is a lucky number? ;) [all posts in /tech/] [permanent link] 2005 Oct 05 (Wed) my dad just showed me an e-mail he received from someone else, and i thought i'd pass it along: If your eyes follow the movement of the rotating pink dot, you will only see one color, pink. However, if you stare at the black "+" in the center, the moving dot turns to green. Now, concentrate on the black "+" in the center of the picture. After a short period, all the pink dots will slowly disappear, and you will only see a green dot rotating. It's amazing how our brain works. There really is no green dot, and the pink ones really don't disappear. This should be proof enough, we don't always see what we think we see. ![]() 2005/10/07 00:53 Jen Chen 2005/11/18 13:39 Nancy 2005/11/18 14:19 David 2005/11/29 13:12 David
[all posts in /tech/] [permanent link] 2005 Oct 04 (Tue) Sometimes while I'm driving I notice (as I'm sure others do) the different parks, interchanges and highways named after people. During last summer, when I always carried a small notepad to jot notes onto, I wrote down these two lines:
[all posts in /] [permanent link] 2005 Oct 02 (Sun) Another thing via /. about a couple of German students whi invented mugmats which calcutate when a (beer) mug needs to be refilled. They must have had a great time "testing" the product out. :) [all posts in /] [permanent link] 2005 Oct 01 (Sat)
Luke 2:14
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