pet peeve thread
#541
Posted 2013-August-10, 02:12
#542
Posted 2013-August-10, 07:30
barmar, on 2013-August-10, 01:27, said:
However, with that said, the increased prevalence of high technology has caused many jargon terms to spread to ordinary language. There was a time when "mouse", "desktop", and "menu" were techie jargon, now they're commonly understood by practically everyone under 40. "URL" is pretty close behind. On the other hand, computer users don't typically need to deal directly with "virtual memory", so that jargon hasn't become mainstream, and probably never will.
It can get tricky. I, and I think many others, lie somewhere between insider and outsider. I am enough of an insider to have helped many in my age group (definitely not under 40) with computer issues. But I can't talk computerese w/o sounding like an idiot. Yesterday's very satisfactory encounter is a case in point. I had some files that I needed to edit. For reasons I won't bother describing, these had to be live in a rather complex tree structure, not one of my making. Moreover, the tree structure had evolved over time and the previous tech guy was not someone I found it easy to communicate with. Then everything went through a further and substantial restructuring, and now who knows where these files were. I found some but not all of them, and the ones I found I no longer had permission to edit. Clearly I needed help and I am pleased to say that I got it. I could do the Linnix stuff to navigate the tree and edit the files once I knew where they were, but the system was (very) large and finding them on my own was simply out of my league. Now maybe I am mis-using the term tree here. Or other terms. I don't know. It was good to be dealing with someone who was flexible about such matters.
The guy found my files, moved them to a sensible place, told me the path where they now were, and restored my editing permissions. I could take it from there. Well done, but earlier experiences have not always been so satisfactory. The current tech specialists are both competent and communicative. Such folks earn their pay!
This example perhaps is not exactly an issue of jargon, but it does fit into the larger issue of communication and of reasonable expectations.
Boy Scouts used to be expected to help old ladies cross the street. Perhaps this should be updated to helping us navigate the computer world.
#543
Posted 2013-August-11, 05:48
But I kind of remember when I first learned the word "tenace". I felt the need to use it when talking with other bridge players, to demonstrate that I was one of them. I'm sure it marked me as a wannabe, since it turns out that it's not commonly used in conversation, but mostly only in technical writing about bridge. These types of nuances take experience to learn, and that's how you can tell the difference between people who learned the language from books and those who are really community members. And it's the misuse by newbies that I suspect is the most grating. When you hear one of these newbies talking like this, your inclination may be to say, "Go away, kid, you bother me."
#544
Posted 2013-August-11, 07:34
Along these lines: Listening to the Spingold commentary on vugraph, there was a point where declarer could make the contract by forcing lho to cover a Jack with the Queen, and then picking up the ten from rho. There was no clear reason for doing so. The commentator was saying 'What's that called? It's, oh yes, a backward finesse".
Exactly. It's the analysis that counts, not the terminology. he was perfectly capable of spotting the needed play, and analyzing that in this instance there was no clear reason to take the anti-percentage play. Recalling the correct term was put in its proper and minor role. Jargon users often reverse these priorities.
For example, I once (probably often, but I recall this particular time) failed to make a surrounding play. My partner gave me a lecture including careful development of terminology. Well, I knew the terminology, my mistake was in not recognizing the position.
#546
Posted 2013-August-11, 10:02
#547
Posted 2013-August-11, 18:10
#548
Posted 2013-August-12, 10:07
Fluffy, on 2013-August-11, 10:02, said:
lol euros
bed
#549
Posted 2013-August-12, 12:42
Fluffy, on 2013-August-11, 10:02, said:
This is in accordance with the prescription that everyone is a winner. It is a cousin to the online practice of typing gtp after declarer, who has nine tricks on top, goes down in 3NT with imp scoring.
#550
Posted 2013-August-12, 17:05
#551
Posted 2013-August-12, 20:22
Fluffy, on 2013-August-11, 10:02, said:
After playing in South Africa for 3 years I was amused to find I had made the rank of Pretorian (Praetorian?). Upon returning to North America, I found out 7 months later that I could convert these points and add them to my acbl record at the rate of 5 SA pts = 6 1/4 acbl masterpoints plus 25% for points won in national events........ if I did it within 6 months.
That makes me a shmuck.
What is baby oil made of?
#552
Posted 2013-August-12, 22:36
dwar0123, on 2013-August-12, 17:05, said:
#553
Posted 2013-August-12, 23:18
Antrax, on 2013-August-12, 22:36, said:
Facts would just get in the way of a good argument. Life gets more boring if everyone just geeks out with their smartphones.
#554
Posted 2013-August-13, 01:11
Antrax, on 2013-August-12, 22:36, said:
Pet peeve: People who think that the internet is filled with facts.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#555
Posted 2013-August-13, 01:34
George Carlin
#556
Posted 2013-August-13, 01:37
http://www.bridgebas...902-vocabulary/
George Carlin
#559
Posted 2013-August-13, 08:16
#560
Posted 2013-August-13, 20:05
Antrax, on 2013-August-13, 02:57, said:
You can fact find porn? Is that a fact.