T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1235.1 | | JAMIN::prnsy5.lkg.dec.com::osman | Eric, dtn 226-7122 | Fri May 30 1997 11:13 | 14 |
|
I altavista'd for
+giraffe +sleep
and quickly found the answer !
(I'll leave it as an exercise for the browser)
/Eric
|
1235.2 | | BUSY::SLAB | Audiophiles do it 'til it hertz! | Fri May 30 1997 13:02 | 4 |
|
Eric must have upgraded his CPU recently ... the last AltaVista
query he ran took over three years to finish.
|
1235.3 | | BUSY::SLAB | Audiophiles do it 'til it hertz! | Fri May 30 1997 13:16 | 4 |
|
Oh, and Eric, "AltaVista" is a noun and I'd appreciate it if you'd
use it as such. 8^)
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1235.4 | So what's the truth? | QUARRY::reeves | Jon Reeves, UNIX compiler group | Fri May 30 1997 13:43 | 33 |
| From the first page of that search's results, we learn:
"giraffes sleep for about 5 minutes at a time and total only about 20 minutes of
sleep each day."
http://loki.ur.utk.edu/ut2kids/zoo/giraffe.html -- credits Knoxville Zoo.
http://wwwcoh.modlang.arizona.edu/inst/edp512/imes/zoofacts.html (no source given)
"Giraffes sleep standing up."
http://www.sfzoo.com/html/map.zebra.html (San Francisco Zoo)
"Adults ... lie down for the first time in the evening when everything is quiet to doze
with one eye open all the time, alternating between the right and left. ... The giraffes
get up about every two hours ... With the interruptions, the
total time a giraffe lies down amounts to 7 to 9 hours per day. However, they only
attain a deep sleep for several minutes each time."
http://www.uthscsa.edu/univrel/hotline/giraffe.htm (Texas Science Hotline)
Along with fiction, jokes, and a safari ad. Plus one dead link. From HotBot's
first page:
"Giraffes only sleep deeply for a few minutes at a time. Sitting on the ground,
they bend their long necks down until their heads rest on their hind haunches."
http://www.agirlsworld.com/amy/wildside/gir2.html -- source not credited.
And deeper in the AltaVista results:
"Another myth is that they never lie down. In fact, they often lie down to
sleep, with head and neck lying across the flanks, although these sleeping
periods tend to be brief - one to twenty minutes."
http://www.oddy.co.za/tank/giraffe.htm -- source: Oakland Zoo
So the answer from the net is: they either stand up, lie down, or sort of
curl up in a ball, with two zoos in the Bay Area contradicting each other.
Yup, great source of definitive information.
|
1235.5 | | PCBUOA::BAYJ | Jim, Portables | Fri May 30 1997 14:21 | 55 |
| Anyone that treats the internet as a reliable information resource is
making a big mistake. An old saying applies: the man with two watches
never knows what time it is.
If you can't find the information, then you know you don't know the
answer. But if you find it on the web, you never know if you have a
correct answer, or something bogus and incomplete.
I hope when teachers let their students use the web for research, that
part of the lesson is to confirm the information from reliable sources.
OF course, that implies that the teachers already know that the
internet is a questionable resource.
jeb
(While I'm fuming mindlessly, I really resent this idea of treating the
internet as ubiquitous. Certainly more people are "on-line" than ever
before, and probably most people reading this conference are doing so
on a device that supports internet access.
But in the first place, it seems a shame to always answer a note in the
notesfile with the quip "use the internet". It sounds a lot like those
one line replies "Me too!" or "thank you" that have no information
content and waste everyone's time. Can't we just put a note in 1.* that
says "it is assumed that anyone asking a question in this conference
either didn't have a more suitable resource, or actually desired to
have the question answered HERE", and let it be done with?
At this point I'd say that a high percentage of the questions in this
conference might be answered (though "answered" might be stretching it
a bit) on the web. So? I like to think that there is a certain
intangible quality that differentiates the Notesfiles from the web, and
even though I can use AltaVista as well as the next person, I usually
prefer the group discussions that ensue to the solitary surfing of the
web.
Secondly, information on the web is, as I mentioned above, not
officially sanctioned in any way, but moreover tends to be fleeting,
and often incorrect, much like newsgroups. As the previous reply has
demonstrated, not only is the information inconsistant, but most likely
a week or a year from now, the same search would find totally different
information. One of the advantages of Notesfiles is that, while the
information may become dated, it is at least static.
This is my vote to cool it with the web references, unless a reference
is specifically asked for. On the other hand, if you intend to do the
work in the first place, the least you could do is share the results of
it while its staring you in the face, in which case a pointer, though
it may be invalid the next time someone tries to use it, would then be
appropriate.
Hey, what a concept. A new way to lie. "Guess what! Bob Palmer just
resigned! Really! I saw it at http://not.the.truth.com! Can I help
it if that site is offline right now?")
|
1235.6 | | ENGPTR::MCMAHON | | Fri May 30 1997 14:37 | 8 |
| "Me too!"
"Thank you!"
"I agree!"
oodles of 8-)
|
1235.7 | | NETCAD::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG2-A/R5 226-7570 | Fri May 30 1997 14:38 | 5 |
| A thought: maybe giraffes sleep differently if they have been raised in
captivity than if they were born in the wild, or if they are now living in
the wild. That might explain some of the discrepancies in the Web postings.
Joke: How do giraffes sleep? I don't know, but it sure is expensive to
buy a mattress for them.
|
1235.8 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Fri May 30 1997 16:49 | 1 |
| How do giraffes swim?
|
1235.9 | | PCBUOA::BAYJ | Jim, Portables | Fri May 30 1997 17:18 | 2 |
| They don't need to.
|
1235.10 | | DECWET::ONO | Software doesn't break-it comes broken | Fri May 30 1997 18:46 | 8 |
| re: .3
Actually AltaVista is a trademark and should normally be used as
an adjective, as in AltaVista Search or AltaVista Firewall.
Not to start a trademark usage rathole.
Wes
|
1235.11 | | BUSY::SLAB | Audiophiles do it 'til it hertz! | Sat May 31 1997 01:24 | 4 |
|
So how can "AltaVista" be a trademark if it's not supposed to be
used alone?
|
1235.12 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sat May 31 1997 11:48 | 3 |
| Because alone it doesn't identify anything.
STeve
|
1235.13 | | BUSY::SLAB | Audiophiles do it 'til it hertz! | Sat May 31 1997 20:27 | 3 |
|
A non-answer if I've ever heard one. 8^)
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1235.14 | Using AltaVista as a trademark: | QUARRY::reeves | Jon Reeves, UNIX compiler group | Mon Jun 02 1997 03:26 | 15 |
| "I did an AltaVista search for giraffes, and all I got was this
lousy bunch of conflicting references." (The key is that AltaVista is
always an adjective.)
Which is a chance to mention my favorite one, which I found after the
last posting:
"Giraffes usually sleep standing up but do lie down occasionally."
http://www.sazoo-aq.org/giraffe.htm [San Antonio Zoo]
So now we have three zoos contradicting each other. These are zoos, not
just random sites (though I found plenty of those, too), so presumably
even if you called the zoos you'd get these conflicting answers (though
you might be able to get them to qualify it, like "in the wild they don't
lie down because of predators" which another site hinted at).
|
1235.15 | | EVMS::MORONEY | vi vi vi - Editor of the Beast | Mon Jun 02 1997 11:38 | 10 |
| re .11:
Because trademarks are (legally) supposed to be adjectives, which need a
noun to describe.
(Alpha computer, OpenVMS operating system, Big Mac hamburger etc.)
Granted, 99.9% of the general population use them as nouns, but the distinction
is important in protection of trademarks (the 0.1% are trademark lawyers and
advertizing and technical writers :-) )
|
1235.16 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 02 1997 11:55 | 3 |
| "Have you driven a Ford lately?"
Steve
|
1235.17 | did I learn bad info? | EVMS::MORONEY | vi vi vi - Editor of the Beast | Mon Jun 02 1997 12:13 | 1 |
| Fascinating.
|
1235.18 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Mon Jun 02 1997 13:10 | 3 |
| .9
That is not an answer to the question in .8.
|
1235.19 | | JAMIN::prnsy5.lkg.dec.com::osman | Eric, dtn 226-7122 | Mon Jun 02 1997 14:47 | 5 |
|
One of those references said giraffes snore too ! I thought
that was interesting.
/Eric
|
1235.20 | any zoologists around? | DOOSJE::HERTA | For something fulfilled this hour, loved, or endured | Tue Jun 03 1997 07:38 | 17 |
| Re: .16
> "Have you driven a Ford lately?"
Isn't that an omissive metonymy?
Looks like I was wrong about this having to be easier than explaining the
origin of the world. Is anyone going
1. to a zoo,
2. on safari,
3. a zoologist wiz,
....
where they might get a qualified answer?
I guess that is one of the problems with internet: you might find an answer
to a question, but it's hard to challenge the answer or ask for further details.
At least Notes keeps the communication full duplex.
Herta
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1235.21 | | JAMIN::prnsy5.lkg.dec.com::osman | Eric, dtn 226-7122 | Tue Jun 03 1997 11:47 | 4 |
|
If you're merely afraid that the web answer isn't accurately
representing the zoo, you could email or phone whomever's name
is on the web entry.
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