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Granny Next:"You don't have Aornis in your head without picking up some tricks, you know"
Does this mean we'll be getting a semimnemomorphic Thursday at some point? Even vaguely. Can anyone else see this getting silly? Or recommend how to implement the word semimnemomorphic in everyday conversation?
I don't know if it's semimnemonomorphic or simply good at confusing people. Like her whole Landen/tea scene thing (I'm assuming you remember LIAGB). Maybe it's just subtle intelligent manipulation. Although mnemonomorphic thursday would be very cool.
I felt semimnemomorphic as my coworker told me something I had done, but had no conscious recollection of doing....or maybe it's simply amnesia??!!
Best Regards,
~Antonio Salieri~
Now wouldn't that be fun to see in TN5? Thursday as a semimnemonomorph would open up some interesting questions, though it Jasper was smart (as he is) he wouldn't use it too much, but instead spend a little time on Thursday thinking about the moral issues of using the power.
Of course, if TN5 takes place before TN4, then this wouldn't work.
In reference to Boffin's post: No, but I do believe insanity is a quite commonly used defence........at least for that whole business with a "confession."
Best Regards,
~Antonio Salieri~
Andy, you have NO idea how much you just made my day with "TN<pi>"! (Does that mean that if there's a book between LIAGB and WOLP we can call it "TNe"?)
Oho, so you're one of those electrical types, are you? (Using j instead of i, I mean.)
But here's the problem with using mathematical constants for naming the books: nothing in Thursday's world is constant. I mean, with all this time travel and warped space and things, not to mention access to other dimensions, how do we even know that <pi> has the same value?
(Anyway, enough out of me or everyone else will want to kill us for talking too much math…)
Of course, if you use Nextian mathematics, pi is equal to 22/7, making all your circle needs rational and easily divisible.
j=-i. You square either of them and you get -1
Yes, I am an electrical type. As in someone who studied electronics, not as in I'm a robot. I can still remember more fourier transform stuff than I want in my head though. Can still do RSA encryption on paper, and will.
We do use nextian maths around here, by the way. How else are we gonna fly off on 5 tangents consecutively?
Speaking of pi(e), I wouldn't mind some apple. Or cherry maybe. I like the idea of using TNpi as a title. Maybe instead of the "Samuel Pepys fiasco", the book could be about Thurs. rescuing Mycroft and Polly from "The 7% Solution", since Mycroft is the one who invented Nextian mathematics. Or maybe I'm just thinking way too much about this....Oh well!
Best Regards,
~Antonio Salieri~
I wouldn't mind a whole Thursday book on math, but I'm afraid it might turn off other fans. But maybe the mathematically inclined among us could collaborate on a comprehensive discussion on Nextian Mathematics?
And don't forget the polyhedron that will fall over on any side it lands on.
I'm personlly intrigued by whether the equation compression that Prof Mycroft comes up with is mathematically feasible. There's no real reason why it shouldn't be, but it's gonna be a pain, or possible boil down to the trusty old "hundred monkey" method.
For reference, Mycroft came up with a way of compressing values to create a quite short equation, for a large number, which, when calculated, gave the numeric values, which translated to a suitable set of letters and symbols, which was, I believe Sleepy hollow, but I'm probably wrong.
But the use of ^ means a lot of data can be generated quite easily. The trick is finding the equation in the first place......