Random facts and fun
søndag 22. januar 2012
Quick vs. fast
Quick
is a measure of time; fast is a measure of speed. For example: "My car
did great at the drag races today. My quarter mile elapse time was a
quick 13.99 seconds, and my speed was a fast 102 mph"
fredag 20. januar 2012
Director's cut
A director's cut is a specially edited version of a film that is supposed to represent the director's own approved edit. 'Cut' explicitly refers to the process of film editing: the director's cut is preceded by the rough editor's cut and followed by the final cut meant for the public film release.
Director's cuts generally remain unreleased to the public because, as far as film is concerned, with most film studios the director does not have a final cut privilege. The studio (whose investment is at risk) can insist on changes that they feel will make the film more likely to succeed at the box office. This sometimes means a happier ending or less ambiguity, or excluding scenes that would give a higher age limit, but more often means that the film is simply shortened to provide more screenings per day. The most common form of director's cut is therefore to have extra scenes added, often making the "new" film considerably longer than the "original".
Source
Director's cuts generally remain unreleased to the public because, as far as film is concerned, with most film studios the director does not have a final cut privilege. The studio (whose investment is at risk) can insist on changes that they feel will make the film more likely to succeed at the box office. This sometimes means a happier ending or less ambiguity, or excluding scenes that would give a higher age limit, but more often means that the film is simply shortened to provide more screenings per day. The most common form of director's cut is therefore to have extra scenes added, often making the "new" film considerably longer than the "original".
Source
The T Puzzle
T- Puzzle link
This puzzle dates back to the beginning of the 20th century, and since then it was many times produced as an advertising puzzle.
The goal is to make of these four pieces a symmetric capital T. You're allowed to rotate the pieces as you wish and even turn them over, but they must not overlap each other in the final letter.
In fact there are two symmetric capital T letters that you can get from these pieces. Try to find both of them.
By the way, there is at least one more extra symmetric shape that can be formed from this set - isosceles trapezoid. Can you find it too?
This puzzle dates back to the beginning of the 20th century, and since then it was many times produced as an advertising puzzle.
The goal is to make of these four pieces a symmetric capital T. You're allowed to rotate the pieces as you wish and even turn them over, but they must not overlap each other in the final letter.
In fact there are two symmetric capital T letters that you can get from these pieces. Try to find both of them.
By the way, there is at least one more extra symmetric shape that can be formed from this set - isosceles trapezoid. Can you find it too?
mandag 16. januar 2012
Where is Spot? by Eric Hill
Eric Gordon Hill OBE (born 7 September 1927 in London) is a popular author and illustrator of children's picture books, best known for his character Spot the Dog. His works have been widely praised for their contributions to child literacy.
He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2008 New Year Honours.
(Source : Wikipedia)
He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2008 New Year Honours.
(Source : Wikipedia)
lørdag 7. januar 2012
"Entrée" used for main course dish in America
By the late 1800s, a typical formal dinner in the UK ran to about six
courses: soup, fish, entree, roast (or "joint" - no giggling), maybe
another savory course (often a pudding), and dessert. As you'll notice,
the entree wasn't the opening act. It was generally a "made" or highly
prepared dish - possibly meat and vegetables, maybe sweetbreads or
liver - as opposed to the more unadorned roast, but this distinction
could be blurry; in the earliest use of entree cited by the Oxford English Dictionary,
from 1759, the dish described is a roasted ham. So while one could
argue that the entree was the last of the preliminaries, it seems
equally defensible to see it as the entrance into a series of what we'd
now call main courses. Under main course, in fact, the OED
has "one of a number of substantial dishes in a large menu," and in
most cases the entree was clearly substantial enough to qualify.
This interpretation prevailed in the U.S., where British conventions
held sway, but as American menus became more streamlined in the early
20th century (old-school chefs were already griping about graceless,
hurried modern dining as of 1905) some courses got the ax. The roast
lost its automatic spot (possibly due in part to WWI meat rationing),
the additional savory dish fell away, and soon enough the entree had
gone from one of several main dishes to the last main dish standing.
Actually, there is indeed a good
explanation for why Americans do this. They got it from the English.
At some point in the
18th century, the English began using entree to mean "a
‘made dish’, served between the fish and the joint".
But in French, entrée
was defined as "qui se servent au commencement du repas" ("serving
as the
commencement of a meal"). So
the English got it wrong first, and that "wrong" meaning simply
stuck in America once it arrived here, while the French doubtless harangued
the English so much about misuse of the term that the meaning was corrected
in the U.K. (well, maybe not, but...).
In America the word eventually
came to refer not to the 'made dish' (which was often a ham) but to the main
course (usually a ham or some other meat).
An entrée (pronounced /ˈɑːntreɪ/ ahn-tray, French "entrance") is a dish served before the main course, or between two principal courses of a meal.[1][2][3]
The disappearance in the early 20th century of a large communal main course such as a roast as a standard part of the meal in the English-speaking world has led to the term being used to describe the main course itself in some areas.[4] This usage is largely confined to North America and use of the term would be considered unusual in British English, even though it is the first meaning given by some British dictionaries[5][6][7] but not others.[8]
The disappearance in the early 20th century of a large communal main course such as a roast as a standard part of the meal in the English-speaking world has led to the term being used to describe the main course itself in some areas.[4] This usage is largely confined to North America and use of the term would be considered unusual in British English, even though it is the first meaning given by some British dictionaries[5][6][7] but not others.[8]
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