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12:20 AM
@Adriaan Apologies, I did a self-stalk just now in chat to see what people are saying, if anything... I understand, it irks me when people unnecessarily brag about their accomplishments, but I'm addressing the CEO of Stack Overflow, a fellow MBA, who doesn't know me - and I want to get his immediate attention. He should expect that I can speak his language. When the time comes to talk up your qualifications, I exhort you - don't hold back for fear of people thinking you're full of yourself.
@AndrasDeak I have a lot of graduate-level credits, and that's what's required, in the US, to be a lecturer/adjunct professor. I like teaching from time to time. I have taught at Columbia, NYU, and Yeshiva. I may well be teaching undergrads at CUNY this coming year as I'm starting back on the MS in Statistics they accepted me for originally 7 years ago. Teaching takes up a lot of time, so I don't anxiously pursue those gigs... and once I've taught the class, I'm bored and I want to move on.
 
@AaronHall hehe, welcome :D
In my experience you have to teach something twice to learn it properly
 
@AndrasDeak Does teaching myself first count?
 
no
the key step is forming a coherent enough picture to impact knowledge on others with no information at first
That is not typocally ensured when you're on your own
 
12:36 AM
well I've taught Python over and over, so maybe I'll just stick to that from now on, it requires a lot less work when it's the same material...
 
@AaronHall I guess it's a terminology thing...here "professor" both implies 10+ years experience and tenure.
Especially unqualified "professor"
 
I think we use "Full Professor" here for disambiguation.
 
Ah. Never heard that before.
 
I was confused when I was a graduate student and I got called "professor" by the dept. chair's admin when asked to proctor an exam with the other students. I guarantee you the dept. chair ok'd that detail...
He was very particular.
 
Sounds like you were a "part-time adjunct"?
 
12:44 AM
Yes, but given the limited number of characters and that I was trying to cram in as much information as possible, I dropped that part from my self-nomination.
 
> In the U.S., the word "professor" informally refers collectively to the academic ranks of assistant professor, associate professor, or professor. This usage differs from the predominant usage of the word professor internationally, where the unqualified word professor only refers to "full professors."
It sounds like the meaning is indeed much more loose, but mostly reserved for tenure-track positions
 
We're talking the same language-ish.
 
Okay, thanks for clarifying :)
 
In retrospect I wish I had phrased it "instructor" for the benefit of the international users.
 
That would have been much better in my opinion
Clearer I mean
 
12:50 AM
For schools, locally, it's a matter of marketing. I taught at a 2-year business school that wanted me to call myself "teacher" because they also did remedial high school classes and felt that was more approachable for their student body.
The other 2-year business school preferred "professor" because they wanted the students to feel like they were attending a prestigious school (even though it really wasn't).
Regardless, after Columbia called me a "professor" I never stopped using it.
 
Yeah
 
Yeah, if I had it to do again I'd say "instructor" because it wasn't worth the miscommunication.
 
Well, time for bed here. Good night!
 
ok, cheers, goodnight!
 
 
8 hours later…
8:39 AM
@AaronHall thanks for clarifying and taking the time to stop by. As I said, I agree with the contents, but a simple "As a fellow MBA I think (..)" might have sufficed.
As to the professor thing: apparently in Spain every teacher is "professor", from kindergarten to uni. I was a tad surprised when I heard that the first time.
 
The latin roots of doctor and professor both mean to teach.
It's funny because when I go for a physical checkup I don't usually get any lectures.
"Is there a doctor on the flight?" "Yes, but I left my lecture notes at home because I'm going on vacation and really need to unplug..."
 
 
4 hours later…
1:34 PM
@AaronHall Yes indeed "teacher" is "profesor" in spanish, which is where the Uni-title comes from. As Andras mentioned, in Europe generally Proffesor is that super title that you need to earn after 10 or 20 years of work post-PhD. Probably the cause of confusion. In any case, Thanks for that answer in meta. Most people are (reasonably) upset, and I think you are giving the CEO a clear message in the language that CEOs most understand
@Adriaan ha! You take the words from our language (well..... Latin....) and then you are suprised of what they mean! You are the ones who modified their meaning!!!
:P
Likely higher education back in the day used the Latin for teacher to address the Professors because education was all in Latin. Then the name stuck as if it was a honorary title
 
Our Latin teacher wanted to be addressed as "magister"
 
that is "master" I think, where, again, the uni title comes from
Its not that common anymore, but in spanish it was common to call the teacher "maestro"
Same meaning as in English here, "he is a master of the sword" etc. You'd call a teacher that because they are masters of knowledge
 
2:21 PM
Guys I am looking for some paper/book that discusses the following phenomenon: a measurement system operates under the assumption that the data it produces is over-determined. However, if measurements are correlated to a large degree, it might not be possible to recover the desired quantities
Is any of you familiar with anything like that?
 
2:40 PM
@Adriaan thats fucking badass
 
3:23 PM
@Dev-iL You mean that if your measurement is good, the value is bad?
souds counter-intuitive
 
@Ander not sure if I ever sent you these guys, but was listening last night for the first time in a long time and thought of you
as in, you would like them... I think.. hard to say, they're kinda weird!
 
:*
I will have a listen!
 
3:36 PM
nice 😀 it's okay if you don't like
 
 
1 hour later…
4:38 PM
@AnderBiguri nah that's not what I meant.. More like: if you think that having M equations is enough to recover N<M unknowns, this is not necessarily enough, as equations might not be sufficiently heterogenous
Purely from an information-theory standpoint
 
 
2 hours later…
7:01 PM
@Dev-iL thats what ill-posedness is
if you can describe that system of equations as linear, then the condition value of the matrix will give you that
@ballBreaker it was alright. Not particularly amazing, but alright
 
7:31 PM
hey guys
 
hello
 
@AndrasDeak have you seen that meagar cahnged his username to default?
You know what happened?
 
whoah, no
 
is still diamonded
 
7:44 PM
yeah
 
Sam
8:03 PM
Hey @AndrasDeak do you use the :PluginInstall package manager with Vim by any chance?
 
Hey, no. I mostly use bare vim
 
Sam
OG
 
@AnderBiguri yeah after a relisten today that was kind of my opinion as well, lost some of it charm over the years I guess
 

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