Also, you can tell it's not gonna have a happy ending when the main guy's all bumpy.

Tara ,'First Date'


All Ogle, No Cash -- It's Not Just Annoying, It's Un-American

Discussion of episodes currently airing in Un-American locations (anything that's aired in Australia is fair game), as well as anything else the Un-Americans feel like talking about or we feel like asking them. Please use the show discussion threads for any current-season discussion.

Add yourself to the Buffista map while you're here by updating your profile.


Betsy HP - Jan 03, 2003 10:32:10 am PST #1179 of 9843
If I only had a brain...

Yes, billytea, but do bonobos have postcodes?


sumi - Jan 03, 2003 10:32:16 am PST #1180 of 9843
Art Crawl!!!

Whew! That explains why there isn't one. Thanks Billytea.


billytea - Jan 03, 2003 10:36:58 am PST #1181 of 9843
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

Yes, billytea, but do bonobos have postcodes?

That would be a no. The bonobo is only found in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which I suspect right now barely has a postal system, let alone postcodes.


Fiona - Jan 03, 2003 11:01:09 am PST #1182 of 9843

I'm just irritated by the binders.

No no no. I have worked with both. US binders are the stuff of the devil. Three holes, spaced out? You always manage to miss one! And the quality of the binders is usually terrible (cheap and plasticy). Give me a good sturdy European two-hole punch any day.

And don't even get me started on "US Letter" and "Legal"....


John H - Jan 03, 2003 1:57:24 pm PST #1183 of 9843

Just for the note, we now have an Irish Buffista, who we could have asked about the postcodes. It's Jars, who's in Dublin.


Jon B. - Jan 03, 2003 2:26:30 pm PST #1184 of 9843
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

The ratio given by the sides of an A4 piece of paper. It has the nifty property that if you cut the paper in half crossways, the sides of the new (half-sized) pieces of paper are in the same ratio.

So the silver ratio is the square root of two, then. t /math geek


billytea - Jan 03, 2003 2:27:16 pm PST #1185 of 9843
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

So the silver ratio is the square root of two, then.

Correct, or rather (by convention) its reciprocal.


Tom Scola - Jan 03, 2003 2:33:29 pm PST #1186 of 9843
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

How can the square root of two be a ratio if it isn't a rational number?


billytea - Jan 03, 2003 2:40:42 pm PST #1187 of 9843
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

How can the square root of two be a ratio if it isn't a rational number?

A ratio doesn't have to be the ratio of two integers. There's no real problem with them being irrational numbers.


Karl - Jan 03, 2003 7:30:23 pm PST #1188 of 9843
I adore all you motherfuckers so much -- PMM.

The `golden ratio' isn't rational, either. [IIRC, it's (1+sqrt(5))/2.]