Glasgow, Scotland
Absolute Zero Discovery Point
On this spot Lord Kelvin discovered absolute zero
https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/absolute-zero-discovery-point
Books by Lord Kelvin at PG:
Glasgow, Scotland
Absolute Zero Discovery Point
On this spot Lord Kelvin discovered absolute zero
https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/absolute-zero-discovery-point
Books by Lord Kelvin at PG:
Yep, just another merry prank?
National Institute of Standards and Technology
They have even fooled the NIST.
Okay, I am sorry, though I do agree with you that we should be skeptical of all information, not just that on the internet. This is not a spoof or prank it is a well documented part of history. They hide this information in books. Check out Project Gutenberg for a lot of them that you may find enlightening.
@jeffbronks @davecykl @gutenberg_org
I know that, if you read the whole thread you will see that I was mistaken and that Dave Cykl was not even talking about what I thought he was. I did not clearly read his comment or I would not have even referenced that link, because as you say, it has nothing to do with what he was talking about.
You will see that I have already apologized to him for jumping to conclusions and not paying attention to what he actually said before disagreeing with him.
Some times things on the Fediverse do not propagate as a whole, perhaps you cannot see the whole thread?
@jeffbronks @davecykl @gutenberg_org
No worries that happens a lot on the Fedi. Someday I suppose we will get used to it π
@jeffbronks @davecykl @gutenberg_org
If you notice, Project Gutenberg and Dave Cykl are on the same Instance. I am on a different Instance and you are on yet another Instance. To boot we are on two different types of Fedi Networks. It is not uncommon at all in this type of situation that only parts of the thread will propagate. If we were all on the same Instance this would likely not have happened, at least not the incomplete thread part π. I would have still put my boot in my mouth no doubt. Defending a fellow Mathematician and Project Gutenberg when they were not even under attack π.
@unusnemo @gutenberg_org @davecykl
Thanks. I see. And now I have found Reddit posts referring to the problem. It looks like it's an unavoidable feature of the Fedi architecture, so I will have to learn a new way of conversing.
By the way, I'm a fan of Project Gutenberg, having contributed as an editor as well as read their books. However, this isn't the first time that I've seen them make a credulous post on Mastodon. I suppose it follows from their principle of staying true to the source even when it's wrong.
@jeffbronks @davecykl @gutenberg_org
I have a passion for learning, which is why I do not mind being wrong. I have learned something. I often ponder 'what would I lose if technology took a nose dive?' So I have a keen interest in how we did things before we had this technology. I find so many books written in the 1700s and some times even earlier on Project Gutenberg that helps me answer these questions. It is okay if I never actually need the knowledge. I feel better having it π.
@unusnemo
Oh yes. In fact I read a bit about the history of absolute zero when this conversation started. It's fascinating to see how they estimated where the bottom of the scale was, and how they then refined that number over the centuries.
Of course, and thank you.