Ada Lovelace and Her Legacy 139
nightcats writes: Nature has an extensive piece on the legacy of the "enchantress of abstraction," the extraordinary Victorian-era computer pioneer Ada Lovelace, daughter of the poet Lord Byron. Her monograph on the Babbage machine was described by Babbage himself as a creation of "that Enchantress who has thrown her magical spell around the most abstract of Sciences and has grasped it with a force that few masculine intellects (in our own country at least) could have exerted over it." Ada's remarkable merging of intellect and intuition — her capacity to analyze and capture the conceptual and functional foundations of the Babbage machine — is summarized with a historical context which reveals the precocious modernity of her scientific mind. "By 1841 Lovelace was developing a concept of 'Poetical Science', in which scientific logic would be driven by imagination, 'the Discovering faculty, pre-eminently. It is that which penetrates into the unseen worlds around us, the worlds of science.' She saw mathematics metaphysically, as 'the language of the unseen relations between things;' but added that to apply it, 'we must be able to fully appreciate, to feel, to seize, the unseen, the unconscious.' She also saw that Babbage's mathematics needed more imaginative presentation."
Lord Byron (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Lord Byron (Score:5, Informative)
I must confess I think of lord Byron chiefly as Ada Lovelace's father. I know the name, but can't name a single thing he has done.
He wrote some poems, had lots of sex with people of various genders, and fought in the Greek War of Independence.
Re:Lord Byron (Score:5, Informative)
Wasn't he also present on the famous rainy holiday when Mary Shelly wrote Frankenstein?
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He was the guy that brought the cheese dip.
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One he wrote was "England, With all Thy Faults I Love Thee Still", which makes me chuckle every time I read it. It's still absolutely spot on.
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And swam the Hellespont.
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Harry 'Breaker' Morant: "This world is a comedy to those that think, a tragedy to those that feel."
George: "Did you write that, Harry?"
Harry: "No, no. It was a minor poet called Byron."
Peter Handcock: "Never heard of him!"
Harry: "I did say he was a minor poet."
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He did live large chunks of his life outside of England. An ex-pat poet.
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All that and he had a bear? Oh, man, I never knew that Putin was such a copycat!
Re:Lord Byron (Score:5, Funny)
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Let Byrons be Byrons.
ultimate sales job (Score:2)
All they needed was steampunk Space Invaders.
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Surely you mean Pac-Man [smbc-comics.com].
Re:I am sure the women in the crowd will like this (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I am sure the women in the crowd will like this (Score:4, Interesting)
Lovelace is sometimes loosely described as the first computer programmer. She did produce an elegant set of tables showing how the engine could calculate Bernoulli numbers, but based on equations supplied by Babbage. Lovelace's originality lay in her conceptual definitions of the engine's mathematical functions, and her brilliant speculations on its design possibilities, going far beyond anything Babbage himself articulated. She wrote: “We may say most aptly that the Analytical Engine weaves algebraic patterns just as the Jacquard-loom weaves flowers and leaves.”
Overall, the article is somewhat insulting, implying that "the only contribution a woman can make is to bring her imaginative, creative views to the table when she copies men. Put her in marketing." The article doesn't quite say that, but it is the natural conclusion from what the article says.
Far Out Man (Score:1)
"By 1841 Lovelace was developing a concept of 'Poetical Science', in which scientific logic would be driven by imagination, 'the Discovering faculty, pre-eminently. It is that which penetrates into the unseen worlds around us, the worlds of science.' She saw mathematics metaphysically, as 'the language of the unseen relations between things;' but added that to apply it, 'we must be able to fully appreciate, to feel, to seize, the unseen, the unconscious.'
Of course, that was when laudanum was commonly used.
S
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No, Adolf83 was reserved for writing /. beta
Meanwhile, in an alternative universe... (Score:3, Informative)
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I am confused and yet intrigued at the same time. What the heck am I looking at?
Inevitable (Score:4, Insightful)
Who would have predicted that a Slashdot story that mentions a woman from the 19th century would inevitably whining comments about feminism and dicksucking jokes?
You guys are just the best.
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Yeah, probably get those revisionist scumbags PopeRatzo and AmiMoJo posting in the comments too
And a lot of Anonymous Cowards with the aforementioned "whining comments about feminism and dicksucking "jokes".
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They were, for a while at any rate, modded up. You can't blame the ACs for that.
Why is it (Score:2)
That I never see Ada Lovelace's name alone.... It is always that she is some guy's daughter.
Don't her achievements allow her to stand alone in history?
Does she always have to be tied to some dude to give her legitimacy?
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She's really more of an interesting footnote than an influential figure in computer programming and is largely unknown outside of computing circles.
Her father, OTOH, is one of the best known authors in the English language.
Confused (Score:2)
At first I though "WTF is Slashdot talking about a porn actress's legacy", then I realized: ADA Lovelace, not LINDA Lovelace.
*Totally* different legacy, although the quote still works:
"...that Enchantress who has thrown her magical spell around the most abstract of Sciences and has grasped it with a force that few masculine intellects (in our own country at least) could have exerted over it..."
Role models matter (Score:1)
Admittedly Ada Lovelace is a role model for anyone (especially women), but it was interesting to read the article and find that her mother, Lady Annabelle Byron, was gifted in geometry and know as the "Princess of Parallelograms." I think that's a message to everyone, especially mothers, as to just how strong a positive role model can influence a child. Maybe this is a realization that if we want more women in IT, it's women that have to step up and convince their daughters that mathematics aren't solel
My daughter is named Ada (Score:2)
Fuck you guys. (Score:4, Insightful)
First post: Intentionally confusing her with porn actress.
Second post: Her dad was cool - here's some cool stuff about him!
Third post: Meh. She didn't really do anything noteworthy.
etc.
Fuck you guys. Stop living up to the worst stereotypes of geeks and nerds.
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Fuck you guys. Stop living up to the worst stereotypes of geeks and nerds.
Now go and tune in to the other thread to see how the very same slashdotters will tell us that sexism is dead and actually women have it better anyway and maybe they just don't want to go into tech.
Hells Bells slashdot (Score:2)
Well, having that post modded insightful rather than "troll" is a new low for shashdot[*].
She was the first person to figure out that a number crunching computer could do more than just crunch numbers. This seems easy and obvious now, 70 years on from the Church-Turing thesis, and when such fundamental insights are baked into every electronic product around us. Such insights are much much harder to come by when you're the first person ever looking at something.
Imaginary programmer for an imaginary computer?
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The problem is that you describe a number crunching machine as the first instance ever of number crunching and that is clearly not that case. There are much older examples of using math and mapping that to something else. Also, at that time there were already other examples of machines that could do something besides number crunching. This was a real example as opposed to just a mathematical construct or element of fiction.
There seem to be too many eager white knights here.
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The problem is that you describe a number crunching machine as the first instance ever of number crunching and that is clearly not that case.
No I didn't. Learn to read.
There are much older examples of using math and mapping that to something else
Quite possibly, but that's not the point I was making. You need to learn to read.
Also, at that time there were already other examples of machines that could do something besides number crunching.
Yeah there were machines to do all sorts of things. Like steam trains
Re:hurrrudururrururur (Score:5, Insightful)
With stuff like this, we wonder why women complain or feel harassed?
Ada Lovelace had an unmatched intellect combined with imagination and creativity, and especially given the era she lived in, is worthy of great admiration. Show a little respect instead of being a d--k yourself.
Re:hurrrudururrururur (Score:5, Interesting)
In that era, upper class women often dappled in (higher) mathematics, with womans magazines often having mathematical puzzles.
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One day, hopefully, you'll get to see why this position is a little simplistic. Yes, criticise anyone for any reason; sounds fair. But sexism is quite prevalent and one side is starting with a disadvantage.
Here's another example from a slightly later period - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmy_Noether. If you're completely - completely - happy that we're all now on a level playing field criticise away.
Otherwise, let's take gender out of it and try to get over the general geek thing of I'm-some-hot-shot-IT-g
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What mashing?
Re:hurrrudururrururur (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree they aren't being respectful, but then again why should they?
Well, for one thing, when you express yourself like a crude fool, you shouldn't be surprised when people perceive as one. As for Ada Lovelace - why should you respect her? You mean, you don't already know? Or is it that you can see past the fact that she expressed herself in the style and terms that were regarded as appropriate for her time? Read a few books of contemporary authors, and you'll see. Well, perhaps not, but at least you'll then have had the opportunity.
Many of her views on the nature of science and perhaps especially maths, were spot on - it isn't enough to know the equations or how to write code; to really understand, you need imagination and intuition - here's a quote that's attributed to Einstein (you do respect him?):
âoeImagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.â
And "intuition" is just another word for "abstraction": the process of "summing up" the essence of a class of concepts into a single, new concept - which lies at the very heart of mathmatics. Take natural numbers: a number is the essential quality that is common to all sets that are equivalent under isomorphism (in the category of sets: bijections). When we understand an abstraction without having to go into technical details like this, we call it intuition. So, don't scoff at imagination and intuition.
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And "intuition" is just another word for "abstraction":
Not according to my thesaurus.
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I'm enjoying the irony of an explanation of the power of imagination and intuition being rejected because a word "isn't in my thesaurus".
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Intuition gives you a hint at the solution, but you still need to do all the steps along the way to get a proof. Using intuition by itself is pointless.
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"Unmatched" is clearly meant as a superlative. Perhaps to Babbage's own mind she was unmatched and used that word. By your logic, no one is unmatched and you should be equally outraged now matter to whom the word is applied, male or female.
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With stuff like this, we wonder why women complain or feel harassed?
If someone said something like this about me, I wouldn't feel harassed or complain. But I'm not a woman. I usually complain about things like having seven bosses all telling me to do opposite things.
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A silk handerchief?
Re:hurrrudururrururur (Score:5, Insightful)
With stuff like this, we wonder why women complain or feel harassed?
I feel genuinely put upon when I hear guys say things like this.
So, I'm going to say this in every thread where I encounter this statement.
I am a woman. I do not feel harassed. Stop fucking speaking for women and let us stand up for ourselves if it is necessary.
Please do not presume to speak for me, and further, please look up the definition of "harassed", because even if the above statement was insulting to all women (it isn't), it certainly does not count for the dictionary or legal definitions of "harassment".
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With stuff like this, we wonder why women complain or feel harassed?
I am a woman. I do not feel harassed.
Look, Whitney, you are not every woman. Many women do complain and feel harassed. I'm getting the idea that you're actually a man in disguise. Welcome to the internets, I guess.
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I am a woman. I do not feel harassed. Stop fucking speaking for women and let us stand up for ourselves if it is necessary.
So only the individual being wronged has any standing in defending against aggression. Sorry, in my experience that gives a free hand to all kinds of exploitation and aggression, since many people -- maybe a majority -- people do not stand up for themselves when necessary, but that doesn't mean they deserve that treatment. We should celebrate those who are willing to step in and help others, not scold them.
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What makes you feel that you, personally can speak for all of woman kind? Sounds like double standards to me.
Every Ada Lovelace thread has a peculiar feel to them with unpleasant undertones. You always get people belittling the work and getting modded up, far more than in threads about male luminaries. I don't really care if you don't care about that.
Re:hurrrudururrururur (Score:4, Informative)
Also, you are not an idiot who is unable to recognize and ignore a retarded troll comment that's already been modded -1.
This is why I find women (ahem) like Brianna Wu insufferable. When faced with yes, truly horrible sounding things that no human should say to another, instead of ignoring it or laughing at it, she flees from her home in "mortal terror." Given that saying horrific things to strangers is par for the course on the internet, no reasonable person could possibly take that seriously. If .01% of rape and death threats made over XBox Live were followed through the streets would be ankle deep in blood. Has it ever happened? No. Does that mean it's okay to say such things? No, I think very poorly of anyone who says such things. But I think worse of those who respond.
To be genuinely horrified and offended by stupid things said by morons on the Internet is a strong indicator that you are very stupid. To pretend to be horrified and offended by stupid things said by morons on the Internet to garner sympathy and attention from others is to be a manipulative lying weasel deserving derision.
Only a fool or a weasel would react to "if you were around back then maybe she would suck your dick! turns out there really IS a reason to have women in IT!"
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With stuff like this, we wonder why women complain or feel harassed?
I feel genuinely put upon when I hear guys say things like this.
So, I'm going to say this in every thread where I encounter this statement.
I am a woman. I do not feel harassed. Stop fucking speaking for women and let us stand up for ourselves if it is necessary.
Please do not presume to speak for me, and further, please look up the definition of "harassed", because even if the above statement was insulting to all women (it isn't), it certainly does not count for the dictionary or legal definitions of "harassment".
I'm sure you and many others can and do fight your own battles. But I fail to understand your attitude. I guess you feel that men should just stand idly by when women are denigrated and treated as objects?
Well, here's the thing you overlook. When men act poorly, it reflects badly on other men. So as a male I have EVERY right to speak up in such situations.
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I am a male, and I don't really care what you think, but I am utterly disgusted when I hear males make such repulsive remarks. If you don't want to be tarnished by association because of feminists, then I also don't want to be tarnished by association of being the same gender as misogynist cretins.
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Re:hurrrudururrururur (Score:5, Insightful)
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But if you can't even take a joke, then you don't belong in the workplace.
Ah yes, the classic "harmless banter" argument.
You probably don't believe that there's any such thing as bullying at school, just a bit of lighthearted physical pranking, right?
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Hi chipschap, welcome to the internet! If this is your first time here, please be aware that there will be individuals, sometimes dubbed 'trolls', that will say intentionally inflammatory things to try and get a response. What's worse, they actually are actually encouraged by folks wasting precious time addressing their commentary. Please refrain from giving them extra visibility by responding to their drivel, as I wasted time reading the comment that inspired yours, rather than something that adds to th
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I understand what you're saying here, about not feeding the trolls, but some things are just too much and deserve to be put down.
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Yes I was going to post something similar to this.
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Gamergate went off the rails and turned into an argument about feminism in gaming, but a few stalwart people kept shouting futilely "it's about ethics!". Gamergate was like Watergate, far bigger than the small trivial event that started it. What went down during gamergate was real harrassment not made up stuff. It was an opening to let the troglodytes of the world speak their mind and get away with it.
Re:Deep Throat (Score:4, Funny)
Me too! Deep Throat was a classic! The way she... uh... wait -- Ada? Ada Lovelace? Uh, I mean, wow, yeah, math... and stuff.
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Yeah, except for that pesky not being able to vote or own property issue...
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Or be allowed to teach at a university even if they got the education somehow.
Re: She was lucky (Score:2)
Poe's Law in action :-P
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A Victorian woman was sovereign over all of England [Queen Victoria]. Who needs the vote when you have the power? Who needs property rights when you are the guarantor for all property?
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It's bullshit when someone says that men have all the power based on the position of a few men, it's equally bullshit to say women were equal based on the position of one woman.
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She had as much power as the (all male) Parliament let her have. You might want to brush up on "Constitutional Monarchy".
Also, read the original post "women", not "woman". One woman having nominal power does not equal "women treated better than today". But you knew that, and were just trolling, I'm sure...
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The United States prides itself on landing a man on the moon.... and yet neither you nor I will ever get that chance. Isn't life so unfair?
Re:She was lucky (Score:5, Informative)
On the first issue of voting that needs to be seen a wider context. Most of the British population where unable to vote during Ada Lovelace's lifetime (she died in 1852). Specifically until the Representation of the People Act 1867, only around 15% of the adult males in the United Kingdom could vote. Even with the Representation of the People Act 1884 around 40% of adult males in the United Kingdom could still not vote.
On the issue of property you are flat out wrong. Women where also allowed to own property for the entirety of Ada's lifetime. The one restriction was that when they married their property became that of their husbands to do as they saw fit under the doctrine of Coverture. That did not start changing until the Married Women's Property Act 1870 and was not completed until the Married Women's Property Act 1893.
It was not uncommon for wealthy women to not marry for this very reason.
The situation in Scotland was different, because Coveture was a Norman thing introduced by Henry II. There where separate married womens property acts that covered Scotland.
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Specifically until the Representation of the People Act 1867, only around 15% of the adult males in the United Kingdom could vote.
And that changes the fact that women were totally unable to vote back then vs today exactly *how*?
The one restriction was that when they married their property became that of their husbands to do as they saw fit
Oh, such a tiny technicality, that! So, in other words, *not* flat out wrong, but right for 90%+ of women at the time.
On the first issue of voting that needs to be seen a wider context.
No, it doesn't, as the CONTEXT is the simple OP statement that Victorian women were treated better and had less patriarchy than today. Both of which points are still bullshit, and your typical /. pedantry changes it not one bit.
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You should read the book "No Votes for Women", on the movement of women who opposed the passage of the Amendment which gave women the right to vote. The following excerpts from the book shed light on how women back then had preferential treatment under the law and an excess of privileges compared to men already according to these women:
"Catharine Esther Beecher, daughter of Lyman Beecher, the preacher and revivalist, feared that woman suffrage heralded an imminent national crisis challenging the “most
Re: She was lucky (Score:1)
+1 Troll :-P
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I don't even know what the OP is gibbering about with his modern day patriarchy.
Sarcasm.
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"Information" is an awfully big word to apply to your chosen narrative tactic.
Rule 34a: if there's a thing, there's straw of the thing.
This can be broadly demonstrated with just two words: straw manginas.
Q.E.D.
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There is nothing in the passages you quote to explain why the right to vote shouldn't apply equally to men and women, regardless of the particular balalnce of financial rights and responsibilities between the sexes.
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There is nothing in the passages you quote to explain why the right to vote shouldn't apply equally to men and women
Possibly you missed this part: "how women back then had preferential treatment under the law and an excess of privileges compared to men already". The purpose of the quote is to highlight the historical revisionism rampant around the role of women in the past.
And obviously I don't think that women shouldn't be allowed to vote, but I also understand that among the reasons for the delay in their suffrage, many women didn't want to be drafted. Eventually they got what they wanted, the right to vote without the
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In places like Ireland where no draft existed, men and women got the right to vote at the same time.
Oh like England when women got the vote later and there was no conscription at the time when men were given the vote?
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The UK is an interesting case. The simple fact was that at the start of the 20th century, most men also did not have the right to a parliamentary vote. While Mrs. Pankhurst and her supporters were fighting for their right to vote, the overwhelming majority of young men sent to the trenches in 1914 lacked any political franchise. Further, while other groups supported universal adult suffrage, such as the Labour movement, the suffragettes advocated a separate bill for wealthy women with property; women such a
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Usually when presented with this information feminists and manginas go into full meltdown mode
You have some peculiar fantasies. I'll believe you when you actually post evidence of "full meltdowns".
PS what's a mangina?
but it's only one part of the entire picture.
Touche my man, touche.
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Except we are talking 1840's England, not 1890's America. Very little of what you said has any relevance, particularly as far as property rights of married women (of which there was NONE).
Anyway, by the way you try to insult feminists, etc. it's clear what your opinions are. I'd imagine you also think that slaves had it better back then because they were valuable property?
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See my response to a similarly ill educated zealot in this same thread. And some further education for you, the Victorian era persisted until 22 January 1901.
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Except we are talking about Ada Lovelace, who lived IN ENGLAND and died 50 years before that.
But sure, when your argument is already irrelevant might as well throw an ad hominem in there as well, couldn't hurt...
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So I'm just curious as to how successful her "imaginative" approach to mathematics has turned out. ...
Yes, it is used in higher mathmatics and engineering. The "dry" math equations are only useful once you figure out what might apply and how to "position it". For that you need something closer to what she was describing. But they use different technical language, these days, which did not exist then.
I am confident, though, that she could do quite well with math. After all, they used to do puzzles in math after lunch, just for fun.
If you try to use only the dry math, it will happily lead you off into a swamp