Comments by 82times

  • Actual quote from an email at work yesterday:

    "Let's get executed."

    The person, of course, meant "let us execute the plan we have discussed" but I can't help but think there is something under the surface. Oh, the quiet desperation of CUBE LIFE.

    June 20, 2009

  • I thought this word had more to do with counting. i.e., the rhythm of one's speech, thoughts, etc., but I think I'm way off base.

    I don't feel satisfied with the definitions I'm finding that all have to do with someone's face.

    Is this related at all to physiognomy?

    May 16, 2009

  • agreed with rolig here. I'd use at 'em rather than adam.

    Ha--interesting thread popped up when I searched the web for "up and adam" as a phrase:

    http://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/19/messages/169.html

    May 5, 2008

  • Neither Pat's nor Geno's were my favorite. To me, those represent a Platonic form, whereas the cheesesteaks I encountered were from reality. I especially liked the cheesesteaks from corner stores in my neighborhood--particularly Kimey's just south of the corner of 33rd and Spring Garden.

    March 8, 2008

  • I used to live in Philadelphia (33rd and Spring Garden) and sometimes I really really really miss getting a cheesesteak. Whenever I go somewhere on the west coast has a "good" cheesesteak, there is disappointment; it might be "good," but it is no "cheesesteak."

    March 6, 2008

  • I was recently happy to discover that there are a few of these in the bay area where I live! Must plan a day of labyrinth walking soon.

    labyrinth at Grace Cathedral Church

    labyrinths at Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve

    March 6, 2008

  • I was surprised to see this on CNN's election page attached to the image of McCain. Not that McCain's status as presumptive candidate is surprising, but that they chose this word. See also an annotated version of same image.

    I don't see TV--are they using "presumptive" on the news? I would like that.

    March 6, 2008

  • I had to look this one up today after reading it in What is the What. I'm gonna keep this word, I like it.

    November 11, 2007

  • yes. that is a more better wikipedia link. thank you. i understand what makes that kind of denim desirable.

    September 29, 2007

  • ok, i read the wikipedia entry on this but am still confused. when i see this word on designer jeans on eBay, does it mean they're like, from the edge of the roll? seconds? unsalable? all of the above?

    September 29, 2007

  • ahhhh. that's better. some true geekstas like me.

    September 29, 2007

  • me and my cube life gangsta homies just use ooo without the t.

    September 28, 2007

  • John, you're the closest with the container cultural reference. The / is the operative character here.

    /slap

    September 28, 2007

  • everybody's favorite font

    September 28, 2007

  • I'm curious who among this crowd will get the connection this word has to...

    /slap

    September 28, 2007

  • i just read you say *ramblehands* and I think that is great.

    September 27, 2007

  • I really love this word.

    Q: How was the Low concert last night?

    A: Man, I was rapt.

    September 27, 2007

  • that works pretty well. i think i'll use that.

    September 26, 2007

  • I'm looking for a word that means "a typo that changes the meaning of the surrounding idea."

    Its something I do all the time. Here's some examples from recent iChat logs:

    meant: I'm not gonna go there tonight.

    typed: I'm not gonna go here tonight.

    meant: you get an A for the trumpet

    typed: you get an A for the trumped

    meant: i like this one so far

    typed: i like this one say far

    meant: new york times

    typed: new your times

    Sometimes I find that its just a missed or mistyped letter, but other times its a word that I was going to write two sentences later, some kinda brain-bored-waiting-for-fingers thing.

    Does anyone else wrestle with this?

    September 26, 2007

  • Speaking of robots, did anybody else come across this freaky thing?

    It could be described as a roboerototocracy.

    September 26, 2007

  • oh yes, and homepwnership is part of my overt plan to become a memesta.

    September 26, 2007

  • "professor, what's another word for pirate treasure?"

    September 24, 2007

  • I love word (<== note the recursion indicated) because it is a one-word sentence.

    September 24, 2007

  • Tufte made up this word and I like it. I'd like to use them more as they are tha bomb.

    September 24, 2007

  • from library/information science: used as a model to describe information seeking behavior. I think this article is where the coinage comes from.

    I'm so totally amazed berrypicking has no Wikipedia article.

    September 24, 2007

  • I enjoy chaordic very much.

    I can see this being used as a system attribute that can be attained. i.e.,

    It was long theorized that yada yada some complex system was chaordic. but this could not proved until Professor von Smarty Pants determined an algorithm that could predict the change patters of any element within some facet of that complex system.

    September 22, 2007

  • I live in Silicon Valley, and am hence required by social contract to drink one of these every 90 minutes or so.

    Any bets on how soon the first baby named Frappuccino will be born? Howard Schultz, founder and chairman of Starbucks says “we’re still in the embryonic stage�? of business growth. (???)

    September 22, 2007

  • In terms of words, misuse I think is becoming a shakier idea. Meanings of words change fast, and if an intended audience understands a particular usage, is there a misuse? Do others feel that language is becoming more adaptable as time goes by?

    September 22, 2007

  • oh, meem, of course. there is no question about that. i'm just hoping i'm not part of the "widespread misuse." :!

    September 21, 2007

  • i feel like i just got dissed.

    September 21, 2007

  • Mystery, Mr. Ra. 82 is a very special number to me. It's not necessarily about doing something 82 times, but about recognizing the times and "stuff" that surround the symbol 82. And no, it doesn't represent the year 1982 in any way.

    Hopefully another deep-link reader like me will read this page one day and appreciate this very sentence.

    September 21, 2007

  • Annoying maintenance/labor/money costs of owning a home. You may own the house, but the house pwns you.

    Usage: Yeah, sure, you're building your equity or whatever, but you also have to fix plumbing, redo the roof, and mow the lawn. Homepwnership ain't for me, broseph.

    September 21, 2007

  • A digital gangsta who has a specific goal of spreading or popularizing a new unit of cultural information, and does so through a planned, concerted effort.

    Usage: "Meme" becomes a more significant term for the info-saturation age based on how agile and fanned-out our new ways of "telling" are. Write about a meme on a popular blogging aggregate website and a potentially huge audience receives it. This may well usher in the era of the memesta.

    September 21, 2007