 Now we're live on SensorTube. We're live on Rumble. We're live on Twitch. Interesting. Let me pop out the chat on SensorTube. And we have the chat popped up on Rumble. And we're there. Sheryl, how are you doing? Sheryl, just a heads up. And Elder God, awesome. You guys are both in. Just to let you know there's some chaos happening in the background with family business and stuff. So I think I got it sorted out. But there might be, I might have to take a little pause if there's a phone call coming my way. It's related to everything else that I've sort of dropped hints at in the last few weeks. So we see math. We like math, real xenomorph. Indeed, indeed. We love math. We love math. Welp on SensorTube when we got first time on live. And it's math. Yes! Man, math is heaven. Really. Math is pure. Math is beautiful. Math is brilliant. Math allows you to meditate, relax. Math doesn't have any societal BS, any social norms. Math is absolute. It is just relaxing. Peter on SensorTube. Salut, salut. Let's do you a load of iron. Hello Chico and everyone. Salutations, Elder God. I'm watching not-in-half-fours versus personals. I'm a bit stressed, are you? I was, my stress level, on a scale of 10, it was at a 10. Just before I clicked go live because I'm dealing with some stuff in the background. But glad to be doing live. Glad to be doing the stream. Hopefully we won't get interrupted. If we do my apologies, I'll try to sort things out as fast as possible. I'll probably keep the stream going and just press mute. Lee S, how are you doing? Salut, salut. And gang, we have a comic book haul. We have a comic book haul. I had another haul come in, waiting for me at the post office for me to pick up, but I didn't have time to go get it. Higgs on SensorTube, how are you doing? Hello, I have some gun shots to watch the stream. Nice. Herbs and mathematics. What a beautiful day. Drugs, war, trading cars. Not exactly. We haven't had this one. Should we do a comic book haul? Okay, let's give people a little bit of time. Let's give people a little bit of time. I have an update to do regarding the math stuff. Okay, I only got some six degree of separation mathematics, I guess. One day I will let you guys know. Uncharted Ace, how are you doing? I'm going to do my little intro gang and make sure, you know, give people enough time to roll in. Again, if you want to know what this work is about, I'm on Patreon. Subscribe, star, sub, stack. We have a gilded server. You're definitely welcome to join us there, but for some reason gilded was down for me. Alligot was gilded down for you. It wouldn't let me log on and make my announcement that we're going live. I was there and then it kicked me out. So I think gilded was down just recently. We are live streaming on Twitch, Rumble, and SensorTube. Hopefully, I'm going to be live streaming on Bichute and Odyssey sooner rather than later. I would love to. I would love to. Yeah, check it out, Alligot. It just wouldn't let me. It was the last hour and a half was insane here. Swimming is my energy, the insanity that transferred over to gilded because I have that open a lot. We're not going to record this on a lapel, Mike, because it's mathematics. I was thinking about it, but I didn't have time to do it. But we do have a SoundCloud page where we upload audio as podcasts. We are on Twitter. We are on Mines. We are on Gilded. We are on Gab. We are on Substack Nose. We are on Getter and we're on True Social as well. That's tough there. So I went on True Social as well. Okay. And welcome to our live stream. Today is January 30th, 2024. I hope you guys are doing well. Let me take these guys down and I'll bring up all the chat and make sure all the chat is visible to me so I can stay on top of it. And let me do this. Joe. I've been saving a geometry pattern for next math stream for months. I thought it looked really interesting, but I just looked at it and it's actually really simple. I'm nice, assuming I actually got the right answer. Nice. Simple is good. Right now my mind is going a mile a minute. Going a mile a minute. Crazy stuff going on. The world is insane, gang. The world is insane. But we are not because we're doing mathematics. We're trying to bring a little sanity back to the world, right? How are we doing for time? We're about seven minutes in. Let's do our little comic book haul, gang. We got like 19 people on Twitch. We got like four people on SensorTube and we got like four people on Rumble. So I'm assuming some people haven't got notifications and it is math stream so some people might be a little allergic to mathematics or whatnot. So let me give you this. Let me give you a comic book haul. Working fine for you, eh? It wasn't for me. You know what? Let me try it again. I'm going to try it again, gang. Because if it's not working, I got another thing to sort out. No. You do not have permission to see this account. I don't know. It must have kicked me out. I'll have to find my password again or reset it. Contact team had meant to request permission. Join. Yeah, it's totally kicked me out. I don't know why, which is weird. I've never had that warning before, so I don't know what's going on there. Weird. Oh man, Chico, the kid who just started Algebra 2. So it ought to be an interesting, nice. What's involved in Algebra 2? People give me Algebra 1, 2, whatever it is and I never know what they're doing because I'm in a different part of the world. I think we just call it different things, right? Someone can ping the gilded chat. Yeah, yeah. Maybe. I don't know. I don't know. Gang, should we do a comic book haul? Let me tell you what I ended up paying for this thing. It's a nice haul. Well, it's a haul we don't have yet, and it's an important haul. I've been trying to get a hold of this for a while at a good price. Okay. And let me tell you what we ended up doing. We ended up paying ordered details. Okay. The item cost $17.50 Canadian. The shipping was $23 Canadian and it was $2, actually $5 tax. So the total cost $45. Okay. $45. Okay. $45. $45. This comic book haul. It was. We want comic book content. Let's count comics. It is going to be comic book content, believe it or not. Check this out. Here's the package. I won't show you this because I see a dress and stuff. I've been tracking those. The prices on the ones we got, the Chaval Noir, number one and number seven, they've been going up. They've been going up. Cute old man, Fazal, Mirel on censored tube. Batman and no Batman. However, however, however, however, let me crack this open. Okay. It's an easy way to crack this open. It's not. Newspaper package. Not bad. Seriously. Package. I want to throw these down. Okay. Let's check this out. Nothing else in here. Nothing else. Nothing else. Nothing else. Lots of newspaper. Lots of newspaper. So this was the box that was sent in and is for this. Training cards. But check this out. Check this out. This is like an official comic book called Keanu Weaver. What's an amazing Spider-Man number one? Go for it nowadays. Amazing Spider-Man number one or Amazing Fantasy number 15. Amazing Spider-Man number one. It depends on the grade. Mid grade Amazing Spider-Man number one would probably go for it's gone down in press from what I remember having checked into it a while ago. Controls and comic cards. Indeed. It's gone down a little bit. Don't quote me on this. I would have to check it. But I'm assuming Amazing Spider-Man number one mid grade five or six. Five or six would probably go for around 25 grand or so. Maybe a little bit less. Let's say 20 grand. Okay, maybe 15 to 20 grand. Okay, favorite manga. Highly recommend. Fable comics is pretty good. First time chap, arm, twitch. Trippy is me. I don't know what that is. Cheryl, my little pony. I knew it. My little pony goes for a fair bit actually. My little pony the first set. Controls and comic cards. It is comic cards. I have a binder for Marvel masterpiece card. Marvel masterpiece goes for a fair bit. Goes for a fair bit. It's high grade. It goes for a fair bit. But this isn't, before I answer this, Keanu Weaver. If Amazing Spider-Man, if it's graded 8.5 to 9.3, I'm assuming that's going for probably 40 Amazing Spider-Man number one. I graded at like, let's say 9. I would say that's going at least for 50, 60 grand. That would be my guess. Again, don't quote me on this. You can check on eBay. Check this out again. Eclipse comics. Eclipse comics. Comic book creators card. Cards. 110 of these. I've been trying to get a hold of these. One of the reasons is because they're comic book creators. The other reason is because when we're doing the comic book readings, I want to be able to pull out the comic card and show the creator and read the information, right? So check this out. And basically this cost $45 because $22.50 and $5. So the comics, these cost $17.50, but shipping and tax ended up costing like $27 together. What? Oh, you've never heard of these controllers. Check this out. Check this out. They were going for cheaper price before, but let me, I don't want to, I got to put these in a binder. They're not mint. Okay, but I didn't, I wasn't concerned about the mint for now. I wouldn't like to get a mint set later. It's not bad condition. They're pretty good. Actually, they're not bad. Check this out. So for example, here, I'm going to put these here. And yes, it's got Jack Kirby. It's got all, like it's got 110 creators. All the gods says amazing spot. I'm number one. I graded 9s going for 65,000 pounds, which comes out to US. It would be about 80 grand, right? About 80 grand. Joe Chicho, do you do any drawing, painting art? No, I don't. I'm brutal. I do stick figures, stickmen like Jeff Lemire. Just a quick look for Spiderman. I graded it. Oh, graded it 8 going for 65 grand. Check this out. Greg P. Russell, right? That's card number 109. Oh, these aren't in order. And then it's got the description in the back. Oops, like I'm shaking, right? Trying to hold it like that. Look at that. So it's got a whole bunch of descriptions. I don't know if it focus. I'm going to bring it closer, right? Come on. There we go. Writer, artist, colorist, rights left, draws left school. So left handed, I guess. Right? So pretty cool. And yeah, these aren't in order. Here's the list of all the creators checklist. And it's got 110 cards. See that? Here's a checklist. Famous comic book creators Will Eisner, Wally Wood, Walt Kelly, Neil Gaiman, Kurt Swan, Al Williamson, nice, Matt Wagner. Look at all the names you got there. Joe Simon, Larry, Marder. So that's all the 156. Bill Swinsky that did a lot of the eclipse cars we've looked at. Right? Oh my God, she just took my only support, the centralized system. And then take a look at this. Todd McFarland 57. Sam Keith, right? Oh, Bill Finger, Bill Everett, wow, wow, wow. Al Gordon. Look at that. Fred Kida, Mark Silvestri, Clive Barker. Cool. And this came out in 1992. 1992. Right? There's a bunch of blue ones here. Check this out. These are blue ones. I don't know what the blue ones stand for. And then the rest of these are yellowbacks. Blue ones are why are they blue? No, they wouldn't be deceased because there's Jack Kirby here. No, no, these aren't deceased. These are why would they be blue? Why would I would have to look this up? Why they're blue? 111532. Yeah, I don't know why these ones are blue. Right? So check that out. Mark Gullard. Walt Kelly. Look at that, Eric. Good. Norm Bruff Gull. Elder God, off topic, but I have already watched all the movies for own work. Pi was like, you already watched them all. Jim Starlin, nice. Rick Gary. Wally Wood, man, one of the saddest stories in comic books. One of the greatest artists in comic books, right? Gary Quatspitz. Higgs, do you get your collectibles at discount prices? I try to get a good deal. Joe Simon, look at that. John Bushima. Amazing stuff. Jim Shooter. We love Jim Shooter. A lot of people don't. He was crucial for comics. And then nice. Awesome. These are very, very cool indeed. Very cool indeed. And again, this is Eclipse Comics. Yeah, Eclipse Comics 1992 here. I'll show you the back of this. Will Eisner. Look at this. Will Eisner. Will Eisner. He's number one. Will Eisner is number one. Right? Will Eisner. Instrumental. And basically, a person that put out the first graphic novel, really. Super cool. Famous comic book creators, 1992 Eclipse Comics, Forestville California. Will was one. So the spirit, right? One of the greatest comic book creators ever. Two. Oh, those are repeats. So hold on. What's going on here? Oh, what? So check this out. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. I'm going to show you this. Let me show you this. Higgs on sensitive. I couldn't get into Lord of the Rings, but I watched Pie. Nice. Can we expect another card reading sometimes? Yeah, for sure we will be. I'm not sure when the timing will be on it, but we will be for sure. For sure. We're going to read all those sets that I've bought. It's just going to take time. Alex Smith on sensitive. What level of math do you tutor? Elementary, high school, intro calculus, little bit of stats. I need help with advanced algebra. Linear algebra, sure. Differential calculus, I'm not going to get into. Oh, I could do intro calculus. Integrals, no. Differential equations, discrete mathematics, some. Discrete mathematics, some. So check this out. No. Here. Watch this. This is card number three. Right? Gary Kowalski. Right? Card number three. Look at Conan, the barbarian. Right? Card number three. Right? And then these cards are in order. And then here's Gary Kowalski. Card number three. Right? So we have a blue one. Maybe it's an update? I don't know. Blue one in the back. So I'm not sure what the deal is with that. I would have to look into it. Because these cards are in order. Fantastic. These ones are in order. Right? It goes up. So great. I'm going to get out. I'm going to need to get a binder for this or some kind of case for them for now until I get the binder and put these in there. Right? Nice comic book haul. Really like it. Happy to have this. I've been looking for this for a while. It means we can get back into doing our comic book readings and hopefully pull out the cards of the creators and read the cards and then read the comics. That way I don't have to put everything into memory and take notes and whatnot. Right? So fantastic. So fantastic. Shino on Twitch. Hi, Chicho. I love your card. Thank you very much. I like doing it as well. Controllers and code. The less common blue back promos were sent to creators and distributed as content contest prizes. Oh, snap, crackle, pop. Great. That's awesome. So this is actually 110 plus one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10. So there's actually 120 cards in this. Very nice. I didn't know this. Thank you very much for controllers and control. There is a second set of 36 more more creators which was released in 1993. Oh, I gotta get those. Thanks for the info controllers and that's awesome. 12 hours and nine minutes to watch all movies. You sat down, you watched them all in a row? No, I look up. You timed them. Zimmy. 002. Hey, Chicho. Salutations, salutations. Cheryl. And eight. Eight of that is Lord of Rings. I know the extended version. Xenobot. Linear Algebra and MIT Style. Gilbert Strand. Fifth edition is a good one. Yeah. Linear Algebra is amazing. Alex Smith on sensitive. I have zero background in math beyond high school. How much time do I need to be decently equipped in the topics mentioned? I needed for grad school in engineering. What level of high school? If you got grade 12, I'm just going to put these down again. So that was our comic book called Fantastic. Very happy to have these. Okay. Again, 1750 for this deck plus $26 or so. Yeah, 26 bucks, 27 bucks for shipping and taxes. 22 bucks for shipping and five bucks for taxes, right? Nice. Let me put this here. Now, Alex, just to answer your question. You want to do, it has to be, you say high school math, but high school math varies depending on which high school you went to and what level high school you did, right? If you did grade 12, I probably forgot a lot of my high school math too, unfortunately. Okay. You need to get into calculus. Calculus is basically some of the stuff you mentioned is basically an introduction of time into mathematics. So you need to know functions, graphs, right? So calculus, linear algebra as well, integrals, differential equations, all of that is really functions, right? So you need to know your functions really well. That means polynomial functions, exponential functions, trigonometric functions, logarithmic functions, all types of functions. So you need to know grade 12 well to be able to graph functions, right? So what you end up doing, oh, why am I grabbing a permanent pen? I was about to grab a permanent pen. Watch this. Let me just answer this a quick speedy Gonzales for Alex. Basic, really quick. Think about this. If I give you a function f of x, any type of function, okay? Let's assume this is a poly function, poly, smooth, wavy, stuff like this. Let's assume this is your function, right? Let's assume this is your function. Coming out of high school, you should have been able to do this. Ready? Coming out of high school, you should have been able to find this point, this point, this point, this point, this point, and this point. So the x and y intercept. You should have been able to find out which way the openings are up or down, okay? And get n behavior of the function, okay? Which is basically this. In calculus, you learn to find the relative minimums and the relative maximums, these points as well. That's the first step you do. That's the first step you do. Gang, apologies. I need to take this call. I'm going to put this on mute. Are we back? Are we back? Are we back? We are back. My apologies, gang. My apologies. Family above all else, right? Family above all else, okay? Alex, I hope this answered your question. It seems I need like a, at least a six-month education three hours a day. Alex, funny, funny. Hopefully not. Maybe, maybe. That's where you need to start. You need to be able to graph functions and then you can get into the other stuff, like big time. Big time. Okay. Alpha Hedges, Allutations, HG, UK. We'll be back in a few minutes. Yes, thank you very much, Allah God. So, how's it going, guys? Don't do it. Don't never mind. Pa, pa, pa, pa. Oh, we've got questions coming in. Na fa yad, na fa yad. Meanwhile, anyone know any good, but clean joke? That doesn't fall. Coming around the corner. What doesn't fall? I'm just getting caught up with that. You know what? I'm just going to go down all the way down to the bottom of chat gang. I'm just going all the way down to the bottom of chat. Hopefully, that's taken care of regarding the family matters, but there is one other thing I wanted to do. I want to lay out for you guys. That same vigil did, they'll jump, they'll jump on the kitchen bench. Sal, Sal. No, he didn't, no he didn't. It was another matter that came up. Alex, okay, I hope I can make it. Any place you recommend for easy explanation, maybe con. Con Academy is not bad, but here. Alex, okay, let me give you my math videos. Okay, let me give you this. Hold on a second. Let me give you this. Let me give you this. I got a few hundred videos of math online. Okay, we're going to take it to Language of Math and ASMR Math. Okay, I'm going to give you two links here. One of these is called the Language of Mathematics. Oops, I'm on the wrong chat. This one is Alex, Language of Mathematics. These are a whole bunch of videos I put together a long time ago. And here is my ASMR math content. I think I've updated these ASMR math content. Okay, take a look at those table of contents. You're definitely welcome to message me personally. Okay, for example, if you're going to get into trigonometry, if you look at the ASMR, the second link I sent you, the trigonometry videos that you see there are probably the best first part of trig that you'll find online. It is, if you go through that, that gives you an introduction to trigonometric function and it's the best set of videos you'll find anywhere. Okay, as far as instruction goes, I still have to continue it, but that's an amazing intro explaining trigonometry to you. And in the ASMR math, it's just random stuff, but there's a lot of stuff with functions, graphing, linear functions, polynomial functions, and stuff like this. If you go into the Language of Mathematics, where the first link I sent you, if you go into a summary of series, solving equations, you want introduction, solving quadratics, quadratics, and stuff. If you know your basic algebra, you sort of want to start with series 3A and take it from there and it's all laid out and multiple links. So take a look at that stuff. Hopefully that'll help you out. If it does, great. If you need help navigating it, let me know. Drop me a line and I'll try my best to help you out to find your way through that. Okay, find your way through that. Up to the angle, go to the beach, because it was over 90 degrees. All the guys joke. Why did the up to the angle go to the beach? Because it was over 90 degrees. Yeah, series 3A, there's some random stuff that you'll write off. Not write off, but you already know. But you really want to be able to graph polynomials. You need to be able to understand linear functions. Y is equal to mx plus b and quadratics. Y is equal to ax minus p squared plus q. Because these functions are basically and cubic functions to a certain degree, right? Cubic functions, right? Y is equal to let's say a... I'm just going to give you the basic one, ax. I'll just give you this, ax cubed or something. That's just polynomial functions. Because this is a bunch of these guys multiplied together, right? So if you take a bunch of linear functions, let's assume like this. If you take a bunch of linear functions and whatever, something like this, you multiply them, you get something like this, right? So you need to sort of break things down to core building blocks. So factoring is important. Think of polynomial functions and every type of functions as different types of molecules put together by subatomic particles, okay? Built by this, okay? That's what you need to think about, okay? Really get the... Build it up from the bottom up. Build it up from the bottom up, right? Joe, Chicho. Something I've always wondered about some of your old math videos. The videos where you are drawing equations on an outside wall, where are you? Was that graffiti? Some people consider graffiti a couple of times I got stopped and I was kindly asked to remove them, right? And I was all over Vancouver. It was all over Vancouver where I was doing that. Alley's, skate parks, streets, sometimes streets, parking lots, under bridges, all over the place. Sometimes I was doing videos, the graffiti, as some of the sketchiest places you'd be. Some people would be really scared to do math videos there. Sometimes I'd be doing videos in an alley doing my thing, because it's beautifully, very unique setting. And there's crack heads everywhere. Crack heads everywhere, okay? Crack heads everywhere. That one I'm not going to answer. Okay, now again, remove them. So again, let me give you another thing that I want to show you. Okay, let me give you another thing I want to show you. As I mentioned, so let me erase this. Let me have a sip. Crazy times, crazy times, crazy times, crazy times. Alley got Joe. Chico wants to maybe do them again, but I'm streaming away from base as issues. Yeah, yeah, I need to get mega data to do it. This is cool. Lazy demon, salutations. Release the sal, release the sal. Sal's passed out. Banksy math graffiti, banksy math graffiti, if I want to think about it. Alex, would you say your level of understanding similar to someone with bachelors in math or higher? My Alex, just to let you know, my background, I got my degree in honors geophysics with a minor in mathematics. But I couldn't do a lot of the math that I learned back then. Like I've done applied mathematics, multiple differential equations and systems. Then linear algebra I found actually pretty easy. A lot of the stuff I did way back then, including stats and whatnot, I would have to really relearn a lot of that stuff to be able to do it. That's why I only say I can only do an intro to calculus, even though I got my minor in mathematics. Like one of the hardest courses I ever took ever was I studied 10 days straight for 10 to 12 hours a day. The final test took, I don't know, five hours? Half the class failed. I only got to 70% of the questions and the guy didn't scale it. With 70% I was able to get a 59 in the course and pass. Half the people that were majoring in mathematics failed it. So my math used to be super powerful. Now it's more functional. Functional. Which topic was that? That was applied mathematics. AP, applied mathematics. Extremely difficult course. And I had no right to take it because I didn't have the prerequisites of linear algebra. So what I ended up doing, I realized I don't know the linear algebra. What the hell am I doing in this course? I just needed it to get my math minor and I really wanted my math minor. So I taught myself linear algebra. I want to pull out a book and learned linear algebra and then was able to learn enough to be able to pass the course. And then the next semester I took linear algebra and I didn't even have to go to class. I ended up getting like 96% in the course because I read a book on linear algebra, taught myself linear algebra. And it was pretty cool. It was pretty cool. It was pretty cool. 420c graffiti. 420c graffiti. Again, as I mentioned before, you know, what we're talking about right now, I've built up a lot of content online. I started making math videos in 2007, instructional math videos in 2007, right? I'm just gonna, let me just do this. I struggle to study with ADHD, any tips. Do multiple things at the same time. Don't slow down to the level of centralized indoctrination centers. If you're like a bird, then maybe you have the capacity to process all the information. So instead of just doing one thing, do multiple things, right? So that would be my recommendation. Maybe it works. Maybe it doesn't. No medication like that. I basically can focus on small 15 minute intervals which reduces a four hour session into one hour or less, then do multiple things at the same time. But make sure they're related. Like for me, I wanted to science this, geophysics, and I did my math minor because I was doing chemistry, geophysics, physics, mathematics. Even though there were different courses, they had overlap. So it kept my interest going where I was doing multiple things, right? So that would be my little bit of advice. That would be my little bit of advice. Alex, let's see back in your days. It's harder to learn because no internet. Now I assume it's easier to learn, especially with many resources. It should be easier to learn. You just have to find the right resources. I know for my content throughout the year, especially when I was putting out a lot of math videos, the graffiti stuff, I had people contact me from across the world to ask my permission if they could use my math videos in their classrooms. They were teachers. And for me, it's an open source. Creative comments, share and share are like, right? And I always said, by all means, it's an honor. And I knew a lot of teachers from Africa to Asia to South America and stuff like this, that use my math videos, especially the graffiti style that I did from 2007 to 2011, 12 or something like this. They were using it in their classrooms to teach their kids, right? Their students. And I know a lot of teachers were using the methods, how I would explain things, to teach their students or parents were using my content to teach their kids if they were homeschooling, right? So yeah, in my day, to a certain degree, it was a little bit easier if you were able to find the right book to learn from because there's a lot of crappy books out there, a lot of crappy books out there. Well, oh, Geo, ever worked using ARC GIS? I'm currently trying to learn it. I didn't use ARC GIS, but I've done large jobs where we have to take the geophysics data we have and over if I'm thinking about the right stuff because I've forgotten a lot of terminology. I haven't done geophysics for like 25 years now, right? 24 years, right? We would take the data that we had have, you know, take it and overlay it on top of maps that they had for what do you call it? Locations, right? I guess it's called GIS, isn't it? I forget what it stands for, anyway. So they would overlay it and you would have layers on it and keep this in mind. This was over 25 years ago that we were doing this. So technology computers were a lot slower, right? They weren't as powerful. So it was hard to do things in real time. You had to process stuff, right? You had to process stuff. Oh, my God, I had the same issue. Well, the math teacher's curriculum was too slow for my brain. Yeah, it's pretty neat. Yeah, Cheryl says ARC GIS is pretty neat. I've never used it. I don't think I have anyway. Unless it's a 25-plus-year-old system program. Joe Chichot, do you still follow geophysics? Reading journals, attending... No, no, no, no. Once I got the teaching bug, it's stuck, right? I love geophysics. Don't get me wrong. I love the traveling aspect of it and stuff like this. Yeah, geographic information system, yes, exactly. But it's very complicated. It's very complicated. Yeah, back then we had a GIS department. I was working for a multinational corporation. With geophysics branch, just a handful of us. Less than 12 of us doing geophysics. Less than 10 of us doing geophysics for this multinational corporation. So we fly around all over. I went all over Canada doing geophysics. And they had their GIS department as well, where I overlap with every now and then. All right. John Somerfold, hey, Chichot. Finally caught you live after 10 years. Nice, John. Hey, I know your... What do you call it? John, I know your user face. That big smile you used, the emo... What do you call it? Your thumbnail. I recognize your thumbnail. Awesome. I like that smile, man. Whenever I see that your smile there, you put a smile on my face. Awesome, awesome thumbnail, man. Smiles all around. Smiles all around. Fantastic, fantastic. Huge calculators. When I left the school, yeah. Yeah, computers were basically huge calculators. The king, 11, the king, 11. Hey, man. How are you doing? Doing good, brother. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I hope you're doing well also. Thank you for popping into our live stream. Put tonic plurals on rumble as well. Friends and math, curious on rumble. Gang, let me give you a little count. We got like 14 people on sensor tube. We've got 26 people on Twitch. And we've got eight people on rumble. Now, gang, I'm going to follow the chat, but I want to give you a lowdown. Look, I've been meaning to put modules together for math for a long time. Take a lot of the content that we've created, right? And glue them together with text. Exercises I used to have online, but Google killed some of the stuff they had. So exercises got killed. But basically take the videos I've had online that I've made for the last long time now. Wow, it's so long. It says 2007. So 17 years of math content, right? Hundreds of videos. Take that. Make additional math videos. Take that, cut them up, put them together with text, and create modules. So basic idea is this. Here's our module number one. I'll tell you what it's going to be. Module number one. Have text, have video, have exercises, right? Have text, have video, have exercises, have text, have video, have or set of videos, exercises, exercises, et cetera, right? And depending on the module that we're going to create, whatever we're going to talk about, this is the layout is basically this, but basically merging text, video, and exercises, trying to get people to learn, help people learn a certain module and a module being a certain topic, geared towards teaching something, right? Start at a certain point and go to, at the end, to be able to learn something, okay? So the first module we're going to do, we're going to do this, okay? We're going to do this. We're going to do this. Our first module is how to deal with fractions, right? Dealing with fractions. I'm just going to do short form right now, right? Dealing with fractions. And I'm going to create this. I'll make a flow chart really nice and stuff like this. I just wanted to give you guys a lowdown of what I'm going to be working towards as long as soon as some of the chaos around me subdues a little bit, right? Dealing with fractions is one of the most important things that people need to learn, right? Fractions is one of the first things that takes people out of the game, right? So I thought it was important to deal with the fractions first, because that'll help out a lot of parents that are homeschooling. They catch especially elementary school and early high school, because that aspect of education in County United States has completely, it's been annihilated, right? Ennihilated, right? So when we're going to do this, this is what we're going to start off with. We're going to start off with the real number set. Natural numbers, whole numbers, integers, rational and irrational numbers. One of my first videos I ever put out was this graffiti style, under a bridge in Vancouver, okay? Important video. And we're going to redo that in this format. And when we're doing the module, creating modules, there's going to be text gluing everything together, putting it together, right? And there's going to be little segments, longer videos as well as little segments to make sure the people can't focus for an extended period of time get the little gist of it in little sound bites as well, right? And the most important thing about the real number set is aside from the transition from natural to whole numbers being zero, from whole numbers to integers being negatives, from integers to rational numbers is fractions. Okay? And irrational numbers being really connect up to primes and special numbers such as pi, right? To be able to understand this, and we've talked about this, we've laid this out and whatnot, right? The most important thing you need to get at this at the beginning stages, the first thing you need to understand about mathematics to get into this, is prime numbers. Because prime numbers govern irrational numbers, for the most part, and prime numbers is the building block of the real number set, really, right? So prime numbers are ridiculously important, we'll focus on that as well and we put a lot of videos on that stuff, right? Okay, because this is the building block, building block of real number set. Okay, so we're going to have a flow chart explaining all that stuff. Once we start talking about prime numbers, we're going to lay it all out, right? And by the way, this is the way I teach my students from the beginning when I get them, when I work with them, if they're just starting out the basics, right? And each student is different. Sometimes you need to focus on this, focus on this, focus on this, focus on this. That's why centralized indoctrination is pure garbage, because centralized indoctrination cannot meet the needs of individuals, right? Individuals extremely important, extremely important, right? But once we talk about the real number set, understand what prime numbers are, then you get into the operations, operations of adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing. And all of those are just an extension of addition, right? Subtraction is adding negative numbers, multiplication is adding the same number multiple multiple times. And division is seeing a certain number, how many times a certain number goes into another number, right? The reverse of multiplication, right? What we will be doing is focusing on addition, subtraction, multiplication. I got my little flow chart here. I just generated this yesterday, but I know it from bottom of my heart. I've been doing this for so long, I know this very well, and I fine tune it again based on the student, right? So, oops, multiplication and division. And division is really important because it's related to rational numbers, which is fractions, right? Because rational numbers are just numbers that you can express as fractions of integers, plus or minus whole numbers, I guess, if you want to think about it, right? Now, once we deal with this, we will mention the equal sign, which is really about solving. So there's two types of operations you do in mathematics. One of them is simplifying. The other one is solving. When you're simplifying, you're really dealing with the operations. When you're solving, you need to know how to simplify before you can start solving, right? That's the general flow of how the information is going to be presented, right? And that's the general flow of the way you should start thinking about this stuff, right? Now, Q, which is really the rational numbers, rational numbers, which is really just fractions, which is anything that you can write as a fraction of integers, really means, initially, the first introduction to it, aside from ratios, because we won't get into ratios yet, is fractions is part of a whole, part of a whole, right? Why are fractions important? Because if you don't know how to deal with fractions, fractions, if you don't know how to deal with fractions, then your whole life is going to be whole numbers, right? That means you'll never be able to eat an apple or half an apple. You'll only be able to eat one whole apple because you won't understand what a half means, right? You'll never be able to eat half a watermelon because you won't understand what half a watermelon means. You can only eat whole watermelons, right? I know that sounds ludicrous because it is. If you don't understand fractions, that means you haven't lived. So we, as human beings, have an innate understanding of fractions. We're just adding a syntax to it, right? Being able to quantify fractions in a way in the language of mathematics for us to be able to do higher level mathematics, to take that information, expand on what we mean as part of a whole, right? Once we hit up fractions, again, we're going to be dealing with adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing. Because the initial phase of the operations, adding, subtracting, and multiplying is going to be based on natural numbers, whole numbers, and integers, right? Natural numbers, whole numbers, and integers. Once we hit division, that's when we're going to get into rational numbers, right? And once we get into rational numbers, we start dealing with fractions, then we're going to have to relearn or learn the process of how we add, subtract, multiply, oops, and divide fractions, right? Okay, again, that's the flow of information coming at you, right? And once you understand this, then you can start introducing the equal sign. Let's do it this way. Let's write it out this way. Once we hit this, then we can bring in solving, okay, which is really learning how to deal with the equal sign. So let's just write that up. Learning, learning how to deal the equal sign, which is basically solving for equations, solving for the unknown, right? Solving for the unknown. And all of these in each step along the way, in each step along the way, we're going to have examples, okay? Examples are going to be practice problems, practice questions, and stuff related to math in real life, applied in the real world, applied math in real life, math in real life. And then you have your exercises. And these two are going to be embedded at every step along the way. And the text plus videos is going to be what glues it all together, okay? And this is the way I teach my students. This is really, there's a little minor tangents that we go off depending on the student. I mean, we'll probably encounter those as well, as we're generating this first module. This first module. And what we'll do is we will put out a booklet with the text and titles of videos and exercises and stuff. And the content will be compiled together into a specific, its own section, with the text available online as well, with the videos embedded within the article. It's going to be a lot of work. I still have to figure out what the best way to do this is without being censored, deplatformed, off of, you know, by technocrats. But what I want this stuff, what these modules that we're going to create, especially this first module, incredibly important, because this is going to be laying out the foundation of how we're going to go about things. So we're going to spend a fair bit of time on this fine-tuning things, figuring out what the best ways to present this information is to really have this available in a format where it's going to help educators. And educators could be teacher, could be a mentor, could be parents, especially parents, because homeschooling is kicking up like mad and parents are desperate, as well as students to be able to take this module and either help someone learn it or learn it themselves. Okay, I want this to become a resource where people can go. I want to learn how to deal with fractions. How do I learn how to deal with fractions? And they go here and by the end of it, when they get spat out, right, they come out and go, wow, I know how to deal with fractions. That's my plan. Now, there's a saying that says, if you want to make God, if you believe in such things, if you want to make God laugh, tell him or her your plans. Well, this is my plan. Let's see who's going to laugh. I can guarantee you, we'll have it out. Okay, there's been a lot of people that have been sporting this work on Patreon for a number of years and I promised people that I was going to do this a long time ago. Right, and we get caught up with a lot of things. So, huge, huge respect to all of you who remain on Patreon supporting this work. Huge respect to everyone that's been supporting this work for this long. We're getting into the final stages of it or the beginning stages of it, you know, final stage of one phase and the beginning stages of another phase where we're going to start dealing with the stuff. Okay, producing the stuff. And I'll try my best to stay on top of it, make sure we do it. And my plan is to have, my guess is, this is going to take a year. Okay, by the end of 2024, maybe sooner, hopefully in the summer, we'll have a lot of time. We will have the first, you know, one-on-one version of this out. Okay, and then we can fine-tune it from there. Fun, fun, fun. I can't wait, I can't. I just wanted to give you guys a little down of what's going on in my mind and where I am. Okay, and give huge, huge kudos to the people who've been supporting this work on Patreon. There's been a lot of you guys, some of you guys that have been there for a very long time, very long time. And I will definitely make sure your support is, you're happy with supporting this work, as well as on other platforms getting again. We'll put it all up, we'll put it all up, we'll put it all up, we'll put it all up. And more and more. Okay, and a huge thanks to the mods gang. I'm just going to read the chat a little bit, just because I saw some stuff popping up, but I didn't want to lose my train of thought. Joe, something that has always confused me about freshness. If we can do 10 divided by 2, we can think of it as answering two things. How many times does 2 go into 10? And if we split 10 into two identical pieces, how big is each of the pieces? Yeah, clearly these two things are related. I just can't understand how. It's because you're using English to try to explain, interpret something that is happening in the language of mathematics. So whenever you're trying to interpret from one language to another language, what you'll find is that there are multiple ways to interpret the same thing. So just think of it that way. Think of mathematics as a language, and whenever you're given a word problem, or you're trying to think about it in the terms of English or any other natural language, there are multiple ways you could probably say the same thing. That's what it is. Barf Bag, how are you doing? Just came in, thought you were doing the red yarn conspiracy. And gang, do not forget, do not forget. Thank you, peanut butter pumpkin party. Free Assange, Julian Assange, a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. Something that we desperately need in our societies. Really, desperately, desperately needed in our societies. For more information, see WikiLeaks.org, Defend.WikiLeaks.org, where countless resources are available online. Plutonic Polaris, I tried to run the Bressel mile, but it was 6,700 meters. Oh, not miles. I'm like, what? Here, ever use Ranger Pace beads. Let's check it out. I like mathematics a lot. I want to embrace it, though I am some lazy in doing my effort in productivity. I could take much time into it. Yeah, think of it as a sort of a meditation technique. Really, there is, look gang, I can appreciate how hard math is to learn. I've put in my time. I've put in, I'm not a natural mathematician. And I tell people, I'm not a mathematician. I have students, parents, all your math. I go, I'm not a mathematician. I'm just someone, Joe Blow, an ordinary human being, that realized this is a tool that I need to learn well to be able to live my life properly, to be able to fulfill my dreams. No ifs or buts about it. If you're a carpenter, you have to learn how to use a hammer properly. This is the same thing. If you're a human being, you have to learn how to use mathematics in this world to fulfill your dreams. Because at some point, I don't care what it is that you're doing, you're going to encounter, you're going to reach a level where math is going to enter your life, and you're going to have to deal with it. You're going to have to understand it. Otherwise, you're going to be taken advantage of. Okay, real Xenomorph. I love attending lectures of complex analysis and solving the unsolvable into girls. Yeah, for me, look, there's been times where some of the most amazing, most beautiful times I've ever had in my life is sitting in a library, university library, with two math books in front of me, with, at the time, my CD player, right, or my tape deck. The tape deck, yeah, I was a CD player at that time, right, with classical music, with my headphones listening to classical. I did a lot of math with Bach and Beethoven and Mozart, George the basketball and Mozart, and multiple other Gasperian and who's that Armenian conductor, I forget his name, multiple conductor, like classical music, learning calculus, where I spent like 10 hours at the library, had a table, had little snacks, and your stuff was safe. You study with someone else sometimes and you take breaks and it was just a learning area where everybody was in a full immersed mode of learning something. It was beautiful. It was constructive. It was the opposite of destruction. For me, the opposite of war is not peace, it's education. The opposite of war, because war is the ultimate destroyer, the opposite of war is construction and peace is not construction. Peace is the neutral aspect of things, pre-war and pre-education or whatever you want to think about it, right? For me, the opposite of war is education because education is about building something, it's about construction, it's about knowledge, it's about understanding. War is about not understanding, right? That's why I love what I do, because it's a peaceful life. It's a peaceful process, okay? And mathematics is a beautiful way to do it. Beautiful way to do it. Salbandini, Yochicho and Chas, sorry for the tardiness. Work is a son of a bitch, indeed, indeed. Yochicho and are there times when one interpretation of division doesn't translate to the real worth? For sure, I'm assuming there is. For example, if I have 10 items and I wanted to divide 10 items by two, then I can make two piles with five items in each pile. But then what if I want to divide those 10 items by half? You can. Obviously, the answer is 20. But how does that translate to the real situation? Let's say you had 10 apples and you wanted to feed 20 people, cut your apples in half, and each person gets half an apple. That's how you would apply. You had $10. You want to give money to 20 people, give each person 50 cents, right? You need to move any, like you take your example, like you could use so much. Allerga comes in with a little math. One, two, arsenal. Because each pile would have more items in it than the total amount item. It's not. That's why. Joe, that's why. That's why. This. What you're saying is you're verbalizing why fractions are so important. Because if you don't understand fractions, that means your whole life, you can only deal with whole numbers. You'll never be able to deal with a half a number, okay? You'll never be able to deal with a half a number, right? That's why this. That's why I'm starting with this module first, okay? Putonic Purse is saying, Luis to go to Govian. It's not to govian. It's I haven't listened to him for so long. Or billion certs. Simoyan. Simoyan. I think it's Simoyan. Is it Simoyan? Sir Sabatian, no. Tegran, Akaryan, no. I think it's Simoyan. I think it's Simoyan, the Armenian conductor I'm thinking about. NKP on censor tube. Carpenter needs to learn his fractions as well. Indeed, indeed. One of the biggest complaints I've had, because I've known a number of carpenters in my life, a lot of people do construction, one of the biggest complaints I've had people that take on apprentices is they don't know how to do fractions. They don't know how to use a measuring tape. Do I have my measuring tape here? Where's my measuring tape? They don't know how to use a measuring tape, okay? No, he had 10 apples to begin with, nafayet. So are you streaming on multiple sites at the same time? Yeah, I'm streaming on Rumble, Twitch, and censor tube. NKP on, you know, it's not YouTube anymore, censor tube, because they censor so much. So I'm streaming on three platforms right now. Okay, and I have three different chats going on. And give everybody a lowdown. Give everybody a lowdown. What have we got? We've got seven people watching on Rumble. We've got 37 people on Twitch, and we've got 12 people on censor tube, right? That's what we're doing right now. Parkback Chichou, you need bigger drivers, haha. Indeed, indeed. We'll do this here for now until we do another move or set up a, I have a new setup where I have camera, big screen, where I can see what I'm doing and stuff. But one step at a time, right? One of the things I used to see back in the day when I used to go skiing, right? You would have people come on the ski slopes dressed in the finest gear with the greatest skis you could ever get and they couldn't ski worse shit, right? And you see people with jeans and a sweater with not, the skis would have been probably pretty good. And they're going, and you had some of those friends that did that, taking jumps and doing loop-to-loops and going off like mad, right? Going off like mad. NKP, nice. I've been watching your videos for more than 10 years, awesome. Started with your beard grooming videos, nice. Awesome, awesome. Cheryl, don't worry Chichou, hasn't changed. No, not much, not much. I found my core philosophy early on, dealing with life and I haven't deviated too much from it. Right, I haven't deviated too much from it. A constant of my life, so to speak. Cheers for that, cheers. Cheers, cheers, cheers. Salud, Ken. Oh, my Sokotoa t-shirt is in the drawer. I gotta start wearing it. I gotta start wearing it. I gotta start wearing it. Lord of iron, first time I went snowboarding, my cousin tried to brace himself from falling and broke. It is colorful. Yeah, I've done some people that hurt themselves the first time going out. Putako is adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing fractions, indeed. Indeed, and solving equations with fractions, right? Which is where it leads to, really. Loser forever, significance of prime numbers. If we're taking questions, I understand the definition, but do they have a greater purpose amount? Yeah, for sure. They're the building blocks of the real number set, right? They're the atoms and everything else is the molecules, right? So, these guys, prime numbers, consider these the atoms or the elements of the world, what you use to make everything else, right? So, H2O, H2O is water, right? It's two hydrogens and an oxygen and two hydrogens and H and an H, right? The number 12 is 4 times 3 and 4 is 2 times 2. 2, 2, 3, H, H, O. That's what prime numbers are. They're the elements of mathematics. Loser forever, oh my god. Yeah, it's brilliant, it's brilliant, right? Not though, but you just made that click in a way that has never, never has. Masters in accounting, by the way. You got masters in accounting, nice. I took accounting courses. It wasn't my thing, it wasn't my thing. Yeah, that's what it is. Once I explain this to students, it clicks for them, right? Important, important. And this is one of the things we focus on when we start talking about prime numbers, right? And before we get into operations is prime factorization. Prime factorization, which is this. That's what we do, right? That's what we do, okay? And if you want to be really blown away to a certain degree, when you get into functions, when you get into functions, for example, here's a parabola. This color isn't good, let's see if this one's better. Here's a parabola, right? A parabola is really two lines multiplied together. So you can break this down into one line times another line, right? So linear functions are the building blocks of other types of functions, if you want to think about it, or polynomial functions. But anyway, we'll get into that stuff. I've talked about this stuff in the language of mathematics, the videos I made before, and ASMR math, right? Eagle Eye, first time chat. Interesting way to find numbers with atoms. Yeah, yeah, for sure, for sure. South math, that says math stresses me out. It shouldn't, it helps me meditate. It calms me down, it calms me down. I also got Chichou. We were talking about Chichou's street math streams. Would be fun to see under past Victoria. It would be, it would be. I'll get into it, gang. I'll, 95%, I will start doing street math again, even when I'm hopefully make it out to be, you know, if it takes me until I was 80 years old. If you guys are still around, we'll try to do, hopefully we can do it before then, right? Because I loved it. I loved it. I loved it, right? Lot of iron, just out of curiosity, what kind of math is used in theoretical physics? I think theoretical physics uses theoretical math. They use everything and anything, I think. I didn't get into theoretical physics at all, but it's pretty, and a lot of magic, not magic, but assumptions. A quill on sensor tube. A quill musa, hello, hello. A de king. Do you think numerology is real? It could be as real as you want it to be, not for me. It's interesting, fun. Math can be fun. You could use that for fun. It doesn't really necessarily have any deeper meaning than that. Some people would disagree, but that's the way I see. NKP, stay safe though, stay safe. Joe Chisholm. So if you had 10 items and wanted to divide it by five, then you are saying that you would, you want to split those items into five piles. Yes, right? And how many items in each? Two, right? But if you divided it by a half, you're saying you want to split the items into half a piece. What would that even mean? It means you take. Let's erase this. Here, I'll show you division. Oh wow, this red pen is not coming off too well. Bad red pen. Maybe one way, the best way to learn what how division by half works is the follow. Maybe it's the follow. If you take 10 and divide it by a half, why is my one sideways? If you divide it by a half, whenever you get a fraction on top of a fraction, if you want to think about it, write it sideways. This is 10 divided by a half. That's what this means, symbol here. Let me use blue so it's not as bad to take off. This symbol here is really this guy here. Divide it by half. When you're doing division with fractions, you change it to multiplication and flip the fraction, so times two over one. Well, 10 is just 10 over one. So when you multiply fractions, top, multiply, stop, bottom, bottom, bottom, 10 times two is 20. One times one is one, but 20 divided by one is 20. So you get 20 pieces out of it. You get 20 half pieces out of it. Now if you want to think about it, here's 10 apples. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, nine, 10. Well, we're going to divide each 10 by half. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20. Oops, 20. They have 20 half pieces. There isn't any deeper meaning than that. There isn't. It's just that. Don't try to take any deeper meaning in certain mathematical operations. It's just a technique. It's just a technique. Apples, I got 20 pieces and then went to 40. And then went to 40. Yeah, if you divide it by half again. Yeah. Which really means dividing by a quarter, the original by a quarter. Cheryl, I'll flip up and push you in a chair if needed. I'll fly up and push you in a chair if needed. Oh heavens. That would be hysterical. What happened here? I have no idea. And dividing by half means you're multiplying by two. Indeed. Multiplying by two over one. Yeah. First time. Could you do go through binomial expansion? Yeah, I could. What is number one or one unit for you? It's one unit and the unit matters. For example, before we do binomial, I got a marble binomial expansion. So for example, you could have a unit that's one bunch of apples. Do you even say bunch for apples? I don't know. Do you or a bunch of bananas? Right? The unit is bunch. Bunch of apples. But a bunch of something could have multiple pieces. So a bunch you could define as eight apples. Right? I don't know if that's an official term for it or not. It's like saying one dozen eggs. Eggs. So dozen means 12. So one dozen egg means there are 12 eggs. Right? So an egg is a unit. A dozen eggs is the unit now. Right? So it really depends on your unit. That's what math, learning math is really about learning the syntax of the language of math, the rules of the language of math. Applying math in the real world requires units. You need to have units. Right? Put your mind in again. Sorry. Cheryl, Chico, flying up. If it takes you until you're 80 to get back to street math. Ah, I know, I know. Hopefully we can do it before then. Let's say we do it before I'm 60. I'm talking like yes. It's the differentiation into numbers and denominators. Bushel of apples. Bushel of apples. Is that what we say? Bushel of apples. Bunch. Bushel. Bushel of apples. Right? Bushel of apples. I need to learn my language of English better. We go through logarithms. Logarithms. Oh man, how are we doing for time? Logs is... Okay, you know what I'm going to do here? Watch this. I'm going to give you... For logs, I put out a video, some videos on logs that are really good. Really good. Because I would require more time than this to go over to give you the log info. Think of logs as the inverse of exponentials. Logs. Logs. Okay, let me find log. Introduction to logs. Visualizing the exponentials. Let me find... Oh, I got 21 logs here. Radicals, exponentials, logs. Okay, hold on. Here's the video. It's a half an hour video. ASMR math video on logs. Hold on. Let me do this. Here's this. Here's my ASMR math page. There's a lot of examples where we did logs here. I didn't do any logs in math in real life. Watch that initial... Tough. Watch that initial video that I linked up, the log one. That would be what I would need to do right now to give you an intro on logs. But towards the end of the stream, and that video will cover you. That video will cover you. And then if you need additional, go to the second link and do a search for logs and find all the videos where I did logs. And that'll set you, right? That'll get you straight. Okay, and if you have any questions, come to our Gilded Server and post any comments there. And we'll do our best to accommodate. Okay, we'll do our best to accommodate. Oops. Push off. No, log is not the opposite of square root. Log is the inverse. Oh man, this blue is brutal too. Log is the inverse. I need to watch this whiteboard now. Look at this. Okay. Log is the inverse. So here's an exponential. Oh, sorry. What did you say? Log is the opposite, not square root. Square root is the inverse of quadratics, right? So this is an exponential. Let's say y is equal to 2 to the power of x. Logs is this. This would be y is equal to log base 2 of x. Okay. And it's a flip about the line y is equal to x. Okay. This is the line y is equal to x. Mirror. Okay. So if this is y is equal to x squared, then this, when you take the inverse, y is equal to x of this, you get this. y is equal to square root of x. Okay. And that's a function. And then over here is the relation. It's really just flip of dot. Okay. It's really just flip of dot. MTL. How are we doing? But Chico, have you ever touched on Quebec's language laws in any of your discussion videos? We might have mentioned them. Not really though. Not really. No, because I've changed them recently again. One thing they did, they did the university one where they said the university education has to be mainly in French or something like that. And they're seeing a huge for foreign students coming outside the province. So they're seeing a major drop in university attendants, attendees, right? Which I'm not sure what the effect is that going to be. It's going to open up more spaces for Cobacquas to be able to do university. Supposedly they've taken a huge hit in terms of finances to universities, but universities are too expensive anyway to begin with. So they've increased the charges for foreign students, non-Cobacque speaking students, and then they decreased it again a little bit, but they said certain amount of your courses have to be in French or whatnot. Poul-Tarque-Portes, if you divide by a fraction, you go into the different direction as when dividing by a whole number. Like if you add a positive number and in the other direction adding a negative number. Okay, thank you very much. My pleasure. I can't know. Did you go, did you go and set theory and and Mathmatic Foundation? I did set theory at university. I didn't, I don't know it well. It's not at all really right now. Especially it's foundational problems, incompleteness on this, this debaul, undecidable and inconsistency. Again, I did it in university, but I didn't, I don't remember any of it. Aside from the core foundation of it, what it implies, right? Mafia, can I ask a general question? For what is Fermat's last theorem, that famous, it was the last proof I saw. It was a hard proof and it did some stuff. I can't remember, but they did find it. They did find the proof. First time chat, what would be a good example of an application of logs? Richter scale, logarithmic scale, base 10, or to the power of 10? Right? pH, what else? Seismic pH, there's another one that is used a lot, that's logarithmic, right? So on that level, whatever you can apply exponential to, logarithmic can apply, just the mirror of it, right? So where does this apply? Like exponential growth of bacteria, right? Exponential growth of bacteria is like this. Well, in mathematics, mathematicians ask questions. They say, okay, if this is y is equal to 2 to the power of x, right? Then what happens if we switch the x and the y around? If we say x is equal to 2 to the power of y, what happens? Well, this happens, right? Well, how do you write that as a function? Well, you come up with terminology and say, oh, you know what? We're going to just drop this, and this drops, and this goes to the base of log, and I can get that, and that represents that function, right? So anything that you can apply exponential to, you can apply as to logs, right? Just in the reverse. Fair enough, fair enough, very fair, right? Put on a plus. I once tried to build a house with logs. I have a math problem. I came across while I was doing some programming. If we have time, it depends on the math problem. Or else, would a recessive gene be another example? Not a perfect example, but still, I don't know what's involved with the recessive gene. I don't know my biology, but I'm pretty sure there are applications of logs and biology. There is in chemistry. I know for sure there is in economics, finance. There is in physics and whatnot. Joe, what's the question that you came across regarding programming? I'm not sure we have time. I'm pretty burnt out right now, and we're at the end of the stream. While I do my outro again, let's do an outro. Let's see if Joe comes in. Well, with a dominant gene, you'd expect with each generation, the gene would become more common in the population. Oh, okay. There would have to be a factor on the gene. I don't know my biology. I'm just doing a flyby. I'm assuming whatever gene it is, gene A, B, C, D, each one of these or whatever trade it is, has a certain R factor, if you want to think about it in terms of viruses spreading. It has a certain factor that says if this is present, 90% of the time is dominant. If this is present, 20% of the time is dominant and so on. So there's got to be some kind of factor in there for sure. But with recessive, it would become less and less with each generation. Yeah. So it would be the same. Anything like this, you can apply like this. It's the same discussion really. It's the same discussion. So I would assume it would be the same. Gang, gang, let's do our outro. Thank you very much for being here. If you want to know what this work is about, we're on Patreon, subscribe, star, sub-stack. You're definitely welcome to follow us there for those of you that are supporting this work on those platforms and more. SensorTube, Twitch, Rumble, Odyssey, BitShoot, wherever it might be on Gilded, on SoundCloud, Twitter, Mines, VK, Gap, Getter, sub-stack notes and true social now and anywhere else, PayPal, cryptos, whatnot. Gang, thank you very much for the support. It is in large part because of your support that we're able to do this, really. It's motivation for me. It really is. It really is. So I appreciate you. So look to the mods, gang. So look to the mods. Thank you for being here and putting your time in. That's a lot of time. That's a lot of time. I appreciate it. Be nice. Thank you indeed. I had this problem for blue eyes and you cannot prove the child is not made from the parent. Really? Interesting. Interesting. Razor, I like it here. The aesthetics is fantastic. Thanks. Dancing visual back to work for me to use my saluticcio salut dancing visual salut. Cheryl says my pleasure. Lots of love, Cheryl. Lots of love, Allerga. Lots of love, Plutonic Plores. Lots of love, everyone. Very nice string, very nice. Padre, padre, padre. Awesome, awesome. Joe, if that's the end, then I'll leave it until next time. Okay, Joe, we do it next time. And gang, do not forget, do not forget as our final outro message. Frisage, frisage, frisage. Julian Sange, publishing journalist that has been crucified for trying to be transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. Something that we desperately, desperately need in our societies. For more information, see wikilees.org, defend.wikilees.org, or countless resources available on free speech platforms.