Sunday, March 31, 2019

April Fooling: 2019 Edition

It is April 1st in some timezones, so I'll be starting a round-up of some of the jokes that I see.

Eve Armstrong has posted a fake paper on arXiv. (While I am sometimes amused by the April Fool's Day papers that appear on the arXiv, what I don't understand is how some of them get to go on the arXiv, while a few of my real papers have actually been rejected from the arXiv.)

Theresa May looks set to become the next Cambridge vice-chancellor after stepping down as Prime Minister. (Tip of the cap to Carola-Bibiane Schönlieb.)

Here is a summary of some of today's pranks. I like the new depicted 50-pence coin. :) The bottom of the article includes a gallery of famous hoaxes (including some great ones), but sadly they missed out on Sidd Finch.

A Two-Sentence Paper in Physical Review

Yes, that's right: the entire paper is two sentences. There are various short abstracts (with a couple that consist of just one word) — such as those described here, here, and here — but this is the first time that I have seen an entire paper that is this short.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Visual Illusion: Starry Night Edition

Very cool!


What Happens in Lake Arrowhead Stays in Lake Arrowhead

Today I'll be heading off to Lake Arrowhead for a few days for the "Data Analytics for Climate and Earth (DANCE):
Causality, patterns and prediction" workshop. I can DANCE if I want to. (I can leave my friends behind.)


Thursday, March 21, 2019

A Mathematical 'Table of Ease' from 1557

Note: "squares of zenzicubes"!

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Matrices of Chocolates (and Delicious Missing Data)

Hmmm... this seems like a great way to demonstrate linear algebra and matrices. And then to demonstrate matrices with progressively more missing data... (Delicious missing data.)

Saturday, March 16, 2019

What Happens in Tarrogona Stays in Tarragona (2019 Edition)

Today, I'll start my plane journey to Tarragona for the 2019 Complenet conference. This will be my first time at Complenet.

My assigned duties at the conference are threehold:
(1) give the first invited talk;
(2) chair one of the sessions;
(3) and help keep track of which talk first uses the Karate Club network (because the Karate Trophy will be present, and the person who holds it can't attend all of the talks because of conference organizing duties)

Thursday, March 14, 2019

Customizable Ducks in \Latex

Here is another of today's discoveries in my efforts to figure out how to incorporate emoji into \latex.

Emoji and \Latex: Bowser, Peach, Mario, and the Dynamics of Love



Update: I should have zoomed in more to show a higher-quality screenshot. Here is one, where you can see that the graphics are rather clear.

Monday, March 11, 2019

Snarky Network-Science Venn Diagram: Version 1.0

And here's Version 1.0 of a Venn diagram for network science.

I'm sure that this one too can be improved. (I think this one needs more significant improvement than my mathematics one.)


Update (3/12/19): Franklin Kenter pointed out correctly to me that a four-set Venn diagram requires three dimensions, so let's say that what I drew is a "Venn-like" diagram, given that I am missing some of the intersections. (My positioning of the different sets was one that gave me the intersections that I wanted.)

Snarky Mathematics Venn Diagram: Version 1.01

This is my Version 1.01.

I'm sure that it can be improved.


(I was, of course, inspired partly by this Venn diagram.)

Update: One of my friends caught a grammatical error, so I fixed it for Version 1.01. That is the only difference between Versions 1.0 and 1.01.

Update (3/12/19): Franklin Kenter pointed out correctly to me that a four-set Venn diagram requires three dimensions, so let's say that what I drew is a "Venn-like" diagram, given that I am missing some of the intersections. (My positioning of the different sets was one that gave me the intersections that I wanted.)

Sunday, March 10, 2019

Life Imitates Jurassic Park

Naturally. That had to be done. ;)

(Tip of the cap to Richard Prather.)

"How do You do Math so Well?"

Yes, YES, and YES!!!!


(Tip of the cap to UCLA mathematics.)

Friday, March 08, 2019

Academic Paper on Evil Laughter

With this new study, soon they'll take over the world!

(Also, Evil will always triumph, because Good is dumb!)

Wednesday, March 06, 2019

Dystopian Lego Art


Monday, March 04, 2019

Beautiful Geometric Art by Saskia Freeke

Saskia Freeke has been creating and posting daily geometric art on Twitter, and I particularly like the one that she posted today.

Go and check out her work!


Sunday, March 03, 2019

What Could Possibly Go Wrong (1840s Edition)

Wow.

Also, look at the follow-up tweet in response.

(What could possibly go wrong? 1840s edition)



(Tip of the cap to Sydney Padua.)

Ancient Doodles Around the World

This, along with Stonehenge, is another thing that I would do just to mess with people if I had a time machine.

Oh wait...

(Tip of the cap to math prof.)

Friday, March 01, 2019

Dividing By Zero on a Mechanical Calculator



(The Pet Shop Boys would be proud.)

Highlighting Lead Junior Scientists in SIMODS

For the journal SIAM Journal on the Mathematics of Data Science (SIMODS), one of the things I did as a member of the editorial board was to suggest (based on having seen this in the journal Biology Open and really liking the idea) to our Editor-in-Chief (Tammy Kolda) that we could highlight lead junior authors with a Q & A once their articles are published. Tammy supported the idea, so we're doing it; and today the first such profile appeared in SIAM News online.

Course Nomenclature in our Imminent Data Theory Major