@julesh@mathstodon.xyz
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julesh

@julesh@mathstodon.xyz

Applied category theorist
Games, learning, control, complex systems, diagrams, syntax
Affiliations: MSP Group / 20squares / CyberCat Institute

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julesh, to random
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This is a hell of an opening line for a textbook

https://www.schneier.com/books/applied-cryptography-2preface/

julesh, to random
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A sort of compromise I can imagine for the economics of the tech industry is to add a new exit strategy for startup investors where they sell to the state, the company becomes a public corporation and loses its profit motive. The bar for this would naturally be incredibly high, this is for obviously-infrastructure things like Google Search and Twitter

julesh, to random
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Old people, not content with merely destroying the economy for young people, are now trying to actively murder young people

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julesh,
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Note that conscription in the UK ended in 1960, because of how many conscripts died in the Korean War. So you would have to be at least 83 years old to have experienced conscription. I will happily listen to the opinion of any politician who is older than 83 on this point since they are speaking from experience, any politician younger than 83 can fuck off and go to hell

julesh,
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You might think they were preparing for a war with Russia, where a conscript army would definitely be very useful for defending the varpourised radioactive crater where the UK used to be. But as far as I can tell they haven't actually said anything about Russia, the rhetoric around it is entirely about attacking young people

julesh, to random
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I just had an epiphany. The purpose of an review rebuttal is not to convince the reviewers to change their mind - which is obviously not possible except in vanishingly rare cases - it's to convince the programme committee that the reviewers don't know what they're talking about

julesh, to random
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Sample a 2d Gaussian with random covariance matrix

julesh, to random
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It's not just imagination, Englandandwales really is a conservative religious country compared to Scotland

julesh, to random
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I need my students to understand that to get away with openly committing blatant plagiarism you have to be a billion dollar megacorporation, which they are not

julesh, to random
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Obviously not everything can be understood with just category theory, although I'm starting to kinda suspect that everything can be understood with a mixture of category theory and statistical physics

christianp, to random
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On 20th June, I'll be in Glasgow for the workshop "Towards improving the accessibility of the mathematical sciences for visually impaired people", talking about my work on Chirun (https://chirun.org.uk/)

If any mathstonauts will be in Glasgow that day, it'll be nice to meet you!

julesh,
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@christianp There's probably enough of us who'd like to buy you a drink to give a small elephant alcohol poisoning

julesh, to random
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I'm a city kid and I've never seen any astronomy before... but the northern lights were so bright we could see them in central Glasgow

julesh, to random
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Beware the pipeline

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julesh, to random
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Please can somebody inform MS Word that the accusative form of "who" is "who" in modern English, it's not 1924 anymore and I'm not writing in German

julesh,
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@jer_gib @julesh I'm sticking with this one. If you listen to how people speak, including people of your generation and older and even in Oxford, you basically never hear “whom" in accusative position. Imagine somebody actually saying “I don't know whom you're talking about” out loud, it sounds incredibly jarring to me. I reckon the only version anybody at all actually uses consistently is following a preposition "to”, as though English had a dative case... and it's not 1024 any more

julesh, to random
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Someone should write "mathematics for the working category theorist", to teach a bit of algebraic topology to those of us who started out in functional programming

julesh, to random
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When you're an overworked academic but you also get to travel to conferences in exotic locations

christianp, to random
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A weird oversight: the email I get from Google Groups telling me that someone wants to join the group is in their preferred language, not mine.

julesh,
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@christianp Oh yeah, that bug's been around forever. Google Meet has the same bug too, calendar invites are in the sender's language

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