Words thatcan be more than onepart of speech are used fairly infrequently. Ten in a row is a pretty good giveaway.
that:
adj (Not this one, that one)
dem. pron. (Look at that)
rel. pron. (birds that sing)
can:
noun (a can of whoopass)
verb (The boss is gonna can your ass)
modal (I can swim)
one
adj (one fine morning)
pron (the one that got away)
part
noun (part of speech)
verb (part the Red Sea)
adj (part man, part machine)
used:
verb (I used a hammer on the kitten)
adj (a used car)
ten
adj (ten fingers)
pron (ten in a row)
row
noun (ten in a row)
verb (row your boat)
pretty
adj (a pretty girl)
adv (a pretty good giveaway)
OK, that was a little snarky. Anyhoo, spammers can just extend the stream-of-random-words technique and create "sentences" that are syntactically kosher but semantically empty: Colorless green dreams sleep furiously. Hell, they don't even need to create sentences -- they can just pinch real, human-generated text from any old web site.
OK I'll bite. The dark spot in question's not at the center of the animation. Look north(?) of it, at the top of the blue loop.
Re:This study only concerns drafting tracks.
on
Game Theory at 190mph
·
· Score: 5, Funny
Truckers see more efficiency with a trailer than a cab, and do better with tandem trailers. They like to draft each other, saves fuel.
Not just truckers, but regular cars as well. When I'm on the freeway, I get right behind another car so we both can save a little gas. To let them know I'm there, I beep my horn and flash my high beams.
For some reason, though, everyone I do this to gives me the finger. Some people, I swear.
Fortunately, I eat a low-carb diet.
Before building it, remember that ' is feet and " is inches.
- that:
- adj (Not this one, that one)
- dem. pron. (Look at that )
- rel. pron. (birds that sing)
- can:
- noun (a can of whoopass)
- verb (The boss is gonna can your ass)
- modal (I can swim)
- one
- adj ( one fine morning)
- pron (the one that got away)
- part
- noun ( part of speech)
- verb ( part the Red Sea)
- adj ( part man, part machine)
- used:
- verb (I used a hammer on the kitten)
- adj (a used car)
- ten
- adj ( ten fingers)
- pron ( ten in a row)
- row
- noun (ten in a row )
- verb ( row your boat)
- pretty
- adj (a pretty girl)
- adv (a pretty good giveaway)
OK, that was a little snarky. Anyhoo, spammers can just extend the stream-of-random-words technique and create "sentences" that are syntactically kosher but semantically empty: Colorless green dreams sleep furiously. Hell, they don't even need to create sentences -- they can just pinch real, human-generated text from any old web site.ED! ED! ED IS THE STANDARD!!!
Why not hyperlink your cross-references?
Nice story. Also: nice bait-and-switch.
For an idea of the Slashdot effect, check out these stats for a site linked to by this article last December. Scroll down to Week 49.
The stats probably aren't overly accurate because they're generated by a web-based tracker, but you get the idea.
Finally having RTFA and learning that the black spot in the center is at J's North Pole, look south of it, not north. Hee.
OK I'll bite. The dark spot in question's not at the center of the animation. Look north(?) of it, at the top of the blue loop.
Not just truckers, but regular cars as well. When I'm on the freeway, I get right behind another car so we both can save a little gas. To let them know I'm there, I beep my horn and flash my high beams.
For some reason, though, everyone I do this to gives me the finger. Some people, I swear.
Didn't you just say the same thing nine minutes ago?