Anti-Fascist Reliability Engineer
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nrr.corvidae.org
Anti-Fascist Reliability Engineer
@nrr.corvidae.org
I get told "no" a lot. I studied actuarial mathematics in college. I pretend to be a yerba mate maned wolf on the Internet. Trans rights are human rights.

This is not an activism zone. Use @nrr1.618033989 on Signal for that.
I really, really missed this drug.

I can breathe through my nose again! I didn't snore myself awake last night!
November 16, 2025 at 3:55 AM
For Halloween next year, I'll just carry around a sign that reads, "Fast forward and rewind are unavailable during ads."

I think I've atoned enough for my past work to have a bit of a laugh at it.
November 15, 2025 at 7:57 PM
Ich wundere mich…

Es ist schon lange her, bis ich was auf Deutsch gelesen habe. Was für gute Bücher (die originell auf Deutsch veröffentlicht wurden, lieber keine Übersetzungen z.B. aus dem Englischen) habts ihr in letzter Zeit gelesen?

Romane, Sachbücher, ist mir ja egal.
November 15, 2025 at 5:46 PM
"Nate, why differential geometry?"

After having spent way too much time in numerical analysis, discrete differential geometry looks like fun to play around in. (Given some wacky PDE applications to graphs, why not poke at possible DG applications to same?)

Also, soap bubbles and ketchup.
November 15, 2025 at 4:33 AM
Well, I now have some faculty interest in a baby do Carmo reading.

The two other problem sets (on top of the take-home exam for the same course) were moved to next week, so I can mostly focus on fun stuff after I get that done.

That kind of had me sweating a bit.
November 15, 2025 at 3:15 AM
I've also decided that the treatment of local curve theory one typically finds in calculus texts is sadistic.

Why cover arc length and then proceed to develop the Frenet-Serret apparatus along with curvature and torsion immediately as if you hadn't?
November 14, 2025 at 6:46 PM
Montelukast, my beloved.
November 14, 2025 at 5:07 PM
The vibes are off today, so back into math land I go.
November 13, 2025 at 8:26 PM
Will this upcoming winter quarter be the first wherein I actually register for classes ahead of time instead of just showing up the first day of the term?
November 13, 2025 at 7:16 PM
It was raining again today, which meant that I needed to switch which bag I use to walk around campus.

Unfortunately, Laureline had decided to make it her bed just before I'd started packing up for the day. It crushed me to have to move her to one of the other bags.

Please think of her today.
November 13, 2025 at 4:11 PM
Apropos Japanese, want to see something vaguely cursed? (If you have even passing familiarity with Hungarian, you'll recognize this orthography.)

Kjó, 4-dzsini isito aujakuszokuga arimaszu.

今日、4時に医師と会う約束があります。
November 12, 2025 at 11:56 AM
Current catus

A thing that I do with the cats is stroke their foreheads with one of my thumbs, often after I've wet it.

Valérian has recently taken to doing the work for me: he wets my fingers himself by licking them and then rubs his forehead against them.
November 12, 2025 at 6:14 AM
Have you ever wondered where the word "skosh" comes from?

少し (sukoshi), which is Japanese for "a little."

「今日は少し肌寒いですね。」 It's a little chilly today, isn't it?
November 12, 2025 at 5:14 AM
Reposted by Anti-Fascist Reliability Engineer
Donate money to a food bank or food pantry, then give your extra cans and boxes to a mutual aid org, love fridge, free pantry, etc. in your neighborhood.

Money in formal channels takes advantage of scale, and whatever you can spare in informal channels reaches more neighbors.
spoke with the executive director of my local food bank today and got this really incredible line: "if you donate 1 can of green beans, we can give away 1 can of green beans. but if you donate a dollar, we can give away 6 cans of green beans"
November 11, 2025 at 9:44 PM
I'm working on a review of Karen Hao's "Empire of AI" that basically boils down to this: the thesis is beautiful and well-supported, but Geoffrey Moore might have a thing or two to offer in re crossing chasms. Most lay readers understand linearly, not in terms of the edges and vertices of a graph.
November 11, 2025 at 4:03 AM
Another possible bit of assigned reading in rhetoric this quarter was Ethan Mollick's "Co-Intelligence," and a striking number of responses on Canvas can be summed up as: This borders on hagiography.
November 10, 2025 at 1:34 PM
Current catus

Good morning. I'm awake because the boy stepped on my face on his way to flopping on my shins.

He's asleep enough now to be twitching but not enough to be snoring.
November 10, 2025 at 12:58 PM
My biggest misgiving about this place is that I can't troll the Lexus brand account into sharing my (feigned) enthusiasm for the annual December to Remember sales event.

Twitter had something special going.
November 10, 2025 at 5:26 AM
It's nice that there's an open source slider gadget for visualizing this now, but it has many years before it catches up with Mathematica. (Though, man, I really wish that were today already.)

corvidae.org/g/dac2509.ma...
I've sufficiently trolled the prof I'm reviewing calc with this quarter.

He asked about the parametrization of an osculating circle at a given point on a smooth curve, I had one at the ready, and I have him now strongly considering joining my reading of do Carmo next quarter.
November 8, 2025 at 7:40 PM
It looks like I'll be covering the first three chapters over eleven weeks and then working toward Gauss-Bonnet the next eleven weeks.

I may see if we can go more in-depth with the covariant derivative and touch on why modern diffgeo tends to be coordinate-free.
I might be doing a reading of (baby) do Carmo next quarter since he only requires multivariate calculus and some of the vector analysis that comes along with it.

I just fear that I'll lose people when we get to the first and second fundamental forms, but we'll see.

I want to get to Gauss-Bonnet.
November 8, 2025 at 5:13 PM
I hate to admit that the Look Around You episode on maths helped me develop and assert a core belief:

You absolutely should have a tool roll for your pencils, pens, markers, chalk, and erasers.

You can dispense with the Garry gum though.
November 8, 2025 at 6:28 AM
Consider: a Free Rasalhagenaar with an interest in (from a 31st-century perspective) very old telephony, having heard the news from Tukayyid, who pens a bit of fanfiction titled "A Temporary Equipment Condition: An Invasion Sent to Reorder."
November 7, 2025 at 9:33 PM
I've sufficiently trolled the prof I'm reviewing calc with this quarter.

He asked about the parametrization of an osculating circle at a given point on a smooth curve, I had one at the ready, and I have him now strongly considering joining my reading of do Carmo next quarter.
November 6, 2025 at 7:02 PM
I guess it goes to show how little we actually covered in diffgeo when I took it. We got to Gauss-Bonnet, sure, but we left off with the classical presentation of Mainardi-Codazzi and didn't bother absorbing the Christoffel symbols into the covariant derivative.

Coordinate-free is just nicer.
November 5, 2025 at 6:55 PM
I had forgotten how much of an utter pain in the ass it is to compute the unit vectors of the Frenet apparatus when the curve isn't parametrized by arc length.
November 5, 2025 at 6:49 AM