
Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more
Stick to the rules, worldwide
REQUESTS to āadhereā to instructional signs are spreading. Hugh Carter was told in Toronto, Canada, that he āmust adhere to traffic personnelā (14 December 2013). Now Henry Shipley informs us that carriages run by Arriva Trains Wales contain no-smoking signs with the rider that āFailure to adhere to this notice may result in prosecution.ā What a quandary: risk arrest or get well and truly stuck on a train?
Packets of barbecue flavour Arnotts Shapes biscuits announce āBiscuits not actual sizeā. Philip Ross wonders: do they ever achieve actual size, or are they Schrƶdingerās biscuits?
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Trying train translation
SIGNS on Arriva Trains Wales are, naturally, bilingual. We asked a famous web search engine to translate the Welsh rendering of the āFailure to adhereā¦ā notice, āGallwch gael eich erlyn am beidio ag ufuddhauār hysbysiad hwnā. Prosaically, it replied: āYou can be sued for failing to obey this notice.ā But by the pricking in our thumbs ā and remembering the same translation engineās camel/beauty mix-up (21/28 December 2013) ā we mildly suspect that this may be correct only by accident: is it right to ask allwch chi helpu?
Average performance
AVERAGES continue to mean trouble ā and the example that Matt Ashmore sends is at a rather higher level than the BBCās report that ānearly half of the co-educational state-funded schools⦠are actually doing worse than averageā at countering gender bias in science subjects (4 January).
The UKās House of Commons Select Committee on Education was . Committee chair Graham Stuart asked: āIf āgoodā requires pupil performance to exceed the national average, and if all schools must be good, how is this mathematically possible?ā
Gove replied: āBy getting better all the time.ā And to the rejoinder, āSo it is possible, is it?ā insisted: āIt is possible to get better all the time.ā Stuart then asked: āWere you better at literacy than numeracy, Secretary of State?ā only to receive the strange reply, āI cannot remember.ā
Feedback accepts that it is possible for all schools to be better this year than last yearās average. But we suspect that if results were āgetting better all the timeā in this way, the minister would be inveighing against grade inflation, or even railing against the Flynn Effect, which is the steady rise in unadjusted IQ scores (8 September 2012, p 26).
A tweet in time
TIME travellers: are they about to have existed? How could we tell? Feedback shares the pleasure of other commentators at the innovative method reported in a paper āSearching the Internet for evidence of time travellersā by Robert Nemiroff and Teresa Wilson of Michigan Technological University, at .
The authors hypothesised that time travellers from the future might, either to tease us or by accident, refer in social media to events that have not yet occurred. Rather than enter into the resource-intensive and will-to-live-sapping enterprise of reading the whole internet, they searched for Twitter hashtags such as and , looking for any that popped up prematurely. They found none.
Never too late
THE Time Tweet study above replicates, in a sense, the possibly more elegant search initiated by Emily Singerās to the first and only Time Traveler Convention, held at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on 8 May 2005. As we noted on 14 May 2005, were you to be a time traveller, whenever you read this wasnāt too late to remind you to attend, though youāll have to change the past in which you didnāt.
Beyond briefer blogging
MEANWHILE, reports that Facebook is āā , or even āā, reached us just as we gathered courage to refer to the site without explaining what it was. Apparently itās cooler to use Twitter (a āmicro-blogging serviceā, Your Honour).
This prompted a contributor to a discussion site () to for āblurtā ā a nano-blogging service characterised by a maximum of eight characters per message, plus an optional three-character suffix. The internet name is already taken, so one might have to fork out for a top-level ādot blurtā domain, alongside the new-ish-fangled ā.nameā addresses.
Name, rank and title
FINALLY, research papers sometimes have titles that just jump out at you. Consider āā in the January issue of Evolution and Human Behavior. Said ābastardā men take extreme risks, apparently making other men consider them physically larger. The Crazy Bastard hypothesis holds that they take such risks to signal to other men that they are formidable competitors, writes anthropologist Daniel Fessler of the University of California, Los Angeles.
The aggressive title, designed to draw the attention of journalists looking for easy news stories, thus appears to Feedback to be an example of what it describes.