Lateral with Tom Scott - 81: Women in red
Episode Date: April 26, 2024Simon Clark, Alec Steele and Rowan Ellis face questions about creative calibration, Canadian cities and crafty cataloguing. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonderful ...answers, hosted by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://lateralcast.com. HOST: Tom Scott. QUESTION PRODUCER: David Bodycombe. RECORDED AT: The Podcast Studios, Dublin. EDITED BY: Julie Hassett. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: David Lyford-Tilley, Geraint Gough, Shiro, David Teresi. FORMAT: Pad 26 Limited/Labyrinth Games Ltd. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: David Bodycombe and Tom Scott. © Pad 26 Limited (https://www.pad26.com) / Labyrinth Games Ltd. 2024. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What creative people work with both feet and meters?
The answer to that at the end of the show.
My name's Tom Scott, and this is Lateral.
If you're looking for a podcast that's as witty as it is informative, you've come to
the right place.
If you're looking for the washroom, it's down the corridor, third on the left.
Hoping to show a clean pair of hands today, we have two new players and one returning
one and we're going to start with a new player.
Joining us for the first time, I don't know how to describe you other than the internet's
favourite blacksmith, Alex Steele.
Hello.
That works fine for me.
I'll take that.
And what I love is there is a little bit of authentic shop echo on your microphone here.
You are in your workshop having just made stuff, presumably?
Yes, I'm in the middle of making a steam power hammer.
A miniature version of that thing.
That's quite fun.
I'm in the middle of doing that as we speak.
It's over there.
A power hammer is one of those things that is just a giant, whacking press that repeatedly
hits something over and over, right?
Yes, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Except I'm making ones about eight inches tall.
Okay.
Are you going to use the tiny power hammer to make a tinier power hammer, and then on
and on and on?
That would be quite fantastic.
I wonder how small I could go.
I definitely want to try and heat up a little bit of wire and forge maybe a little, forge
something underneath it.
That has to happen.
Well, very best of luck on the show today.
Also joining us for the first time, climate scientist.
I don't know what to introduce you as these days because partly you are talking on the
internet about climate and then I also saw you hosting Yogscast's Jingle Jam...
Who wants to be a millionaire.
Who wants to be a millionaire.
Who wants to be a millionaire parody about Jaffa Cakes.
There's just a lot going on with you, Simon.
How are you doing?
Oh, I'm alright.
There is a lot going on and I feel every single one of those things right now.
For context listeners, I became a dad not that long ago.
I am running on very little sleep so if I lose today that is exactly why I'm leaning
on that crush.
There is no winner or loser in this show.
There are no points other than bragging rights and your own self-worth.
So given you have plenty of other things to judge that by, Simon, I think you'll be okay.
Our third guest, returning to the show for quite a few episodes now, I think.
Rowan Ellis from the Queer Movie Podcast and her own YouTube channel.
Welcome back, how are you doing?
Thanks, doing great.
Very excited to have an impaired, you know, tired dad on-site so that there's like a little
bit of a chance that I might seem vaguely smart in front of people who seem to be very
qualified in their fields of expertise on
this podcast.
Welcome to the self-deprecation special.
Everyone is getting their excuses in early.
Well, good luck to you all.
This is the 87th show we've recorded.
87 is an unlucky number in Australia because it's 13 away from 100.
But nothing will go wrong today.
Nothing.
And with that sword of Damocles hanging over our heads, let's tiptoe nervously into question away from 100, but nothing will go wrong today. Nothing.
And with that sword of Damocles hanging over our heads,
let's tiptoe nervously into question one.
In its early days, why did Amazon's computer systems
repeatedly order nine copies of a book about lichens?
I'll say that again.
In its early days, why did Amazon's computer systems
repeatedly order nine copies of a book about lichens.
How are we spelling lichens? Which kind of lichen?
I didn't know there was more than one kind of lichen.
There's wolf kind of lichen.
There's the wolf and there's the plant.
What's the wolf?
Assuming that that's how they're both pronounced.
Lichen's like another word for werewolf.
Like lycanthropic.
I have never heard of that, but several people here have much better literary fiction knowledge
than I have.
I'd say it's more fan fiction knowledge actually, to be completely honest.
Listen Simon, you don't need to call us out on the live on the podcast right now.
Okay, so it could be the lichen thing or it could be the nine thing, he says, desperately
trying to pull the car back on the road.
Is lichen the plant, like the moss-type plant?
Yes, it is. You have the correct kind of lichen for this question, Alec.
Okay, good.
I wouldn't normally clarify that so early on, but I feel like I want to steer this test
away from the werewolf.
Away from the werewolf.
I guess it's why, so is it something to do with like, in general, like ordering something
might be to do with testing, like making sure that something's working properly, kind of
like a little tester order.
So I guess the question is, yeah, exactly what you said, Simon, is the like an important,
it's the nine copies important or are both of those together?
What matters?
And also, I mean, this is early Amazon, right?
So it's not going to be something
like machine learning that's being trained on a data set and is overreaching
based on something. There's got to be a human input here, I'm guessing. Unless
is the book of a particular physical dimension that was useful to Amazon in
the early days? Like, were they using the book to hold doors open in their office
or something like that?
The same exact dimension as a certain bit of hard drive.
Or as packing.
What if they packed packages with the book because it was the right size?
Does the word Moss have anything to do with computers or data storage?
Moss, M-O-S-S.
Does that mean something where like, like, Moss. All about moss.
And the computer goes, where? We need more of these moss things.
I can think of BIOS,
and I can think of OSS for open source software.
I don't think moss.
I mean, it inevitably will be some computer algorithm,
because you take, like, any four letters,
they'll work out to something.
But in this case, that's not the connection.
Maybe someone who worked at the company wrote this book and was like, I want to try and
make sure that my book is still in stock, like it's in demand, that people know about
it, I'm going to push it up to the bestseller list.
People have been manipulating the bestseller list from the very beginning.
From the very start.
That isn't the reason behind it, Rowan, but you are getting closer there with thinking
about stock.
I seem to remember you have a bit of a background with publishing here.
Yeah.
Yes.
That's the end of that thought.
Technically, yes, I do.
Does that, does that give me any ideas?
No, it has not.
What if they constantly sold nine copies of it?
If they were always being bought out by nine
copies, they would immediately restock. So would there be a reason that any, an institution
might buy nine copies of a book about moss?
Did it say in the question how often the, it was being restocked or being, those nine
copies were being restocked or bought?
The question says that the computer systems were repeatedly ordering nine copies.
I think the nine thing has got to be important. The fact that it's one over a power of eight
tells me that that's... it's a Mersenne prime.
Oh! I love that you went with the full maths thing there. But it's not important that it's
one more than a power of two. It is important that it's one less than ten.
Okay. So computer systems care about powers of two. The fact that it's less than 10 means that it's got to be a human thing, right?
Yes.
Was it to level out a stack of books or something?
Not quite.
Or what can fit on a shelf?
The books are being ordered.
But that's all the question's saying.
They're not being necessarily delivered.
And this is the early days of Amazon.
They're not really selling much at all at the moment.
Ooh, I could just, it's like, I just know that it's going to be so,
like, Tom's going to tell us and we're going to be like,
of course that's what it was.
It's tricky because there's so many elements of this question
that could be important.
Could be something to do with testing delivery times to see how long their orders are taking
to ship because, oh, we now have this kind of slightly, we've got this relatively, no,
but it's not being delivered. So it's not about how long it takes to get there because
it's not being delivered.
Wait, so what if somebody was to order one object on Amazon, and then the computer would
add on nine other items to make it up to ten items.
For some reason, there was a problem with powers of ten and the number of items being ordered.
Ooh. Apart from the last bit, you're right. Someone's ordering one thing on Amazon,
the computer system is adding nine copies of a book about lichen, and then passing that order on.
Why is it doing that?
Does the one thing that they order happen to also be a book about lichen?
No, it could have been a book about anything.
Was it the first book in their system?
It's a workaround.
Amazon can't afford warehouses at this point.
Amazon hasn't really got anything.
They're basically just taking orders from the public and sending them on to publishers.
Is it that publishers will only ship a certain amount of books out?
Like a palette has a certain amount in.
And so it's like we go through...
Interesting, because I know that the way that books ordering works in publishing and traditional
publishing is that a bookshop will order a certain amount and they can also return the
books that they haven't sold in a lot of cases.
But the idea is that they kind of predict how many it will sell, they'll send it over,
but it's unusual for them to send like one copy of a book.
Yes.
That's it.
The big book companies would not fulfil an order for one book, because that's a retail
customer.
So Amazon added nine copies of a book they knew would be out of print and unavailable
to the order.
Oh! Brilliant.
Fezos, you son of a bitch!
That's so sneaky.
So the response was, oh, yes, here's the book you order, we couldn't fulfil the other nine,
sorry, but you still get it at the wholesale price, not the retail price.
Gosh, I really hope the guy that wrote that book was not alive at that point,
to just have his heart crushed when he realised,
oh no, it isn't that people really are so keen about my book about Leichen.
This is just to get around minimum order quantities.
Huh.
Each of our guests has brought a question along with them.
I don't know the questions, I definitely don't know the answers.
We'll start today with Alec, whenever you're ready.
Alright, this question has been sent in by Shiro.
The Jacksonville Jaguars NFL team spent $120 million on their new practice facility.
Their locker rooms included innovative sensors that control traffic signal style
lights. What did the sensors detect? I'll read it again. The Jacksonville Jaguars NFL
team spent $120 million on their new practice facility. Their locker rooms included innovative
sensors that control traffic signal style lights. What did the sensors detect?
The only thing I know about the Jacksonville Jaguars is that they're a punchline for not being a good NFL team.
I saw them live once.
I saw them at Wembley and it was them versus the Niners and they scored a touchdown and they were so surprised that they had scored a touchdown that they had people run onto the pitch spelling Jaguars,
but they came out in the wrong order.
So it said Jaguars as they ran across Wembley Stadium.
Oh, we've got an NFL question for an all British panel as well.
And we're all pronouncing it Jaguar instead of Jaguar.
And it's going to annoy so many NFL fans.
Do the traffic lights respond to how smelly their socks were?
I think I'm allowed to say no.
We'll talk about this for a while.
If we spot something that is no, but we'll just run through some things that NFL teams might...
I imagine they change their socks every single game anyway.
That feels...
But people have lucky socks, right?
People might not want to change their socks.
But maybe they should if the team is that unlucky.
I just feel if you have like a $120 million practice facility, you don't need to worry
about the additional cost for a pair of socks.
You can probably have all the lucky socks you want in the world.
Yeah.
So if it's a traffic light system, I'm assuming the element of the traffic light system is like stop, go, pause.
That sort of, we're looking for something that people might want to be waiting for in
order for them to be allowed to do something or they have to stop doing something.
Or it could be one of those parking systems they have in fancy car parks now where you
can look up and see green lights wherever there's a parking space.
Maybe there's a shower is available or a locker is available, but it's
the Jaguars. They're not going to...
Rowan is getting closer with that. There is some information that is useful based on the
traffic lights.
Okay, so you're in a changing room. What do you need to know? You can change your clothes, you can take a shower, there could be capacity for a room. It's also American football, so I don't know,
could be injury related.
I like that's what we go to for American football. It's clothing and injuries.
Genuinely, the amount of head injuries in American football, it could have been just
a test there. Are they colourblind? Do they looking up? Do they understand the
lights? If not, get them to that doctor real quick. I feel like I can't really it's a bit
cheating asking you. So I'll do that thing where I just say it questioningly to the crowd.
Is it something that is you it's in the locker room, but is it something that will be used during like actual games?
Or is it something that's used during like practices or while people are changing after
a game is finished?
I don't know if there would be a difference or like different things happening in the
locker room.
Because obviously they can come back in half time, I think that's a football term, sports.
Or it could be like after it's done.
It could be a warning for anyone else who's in there that, you know, 40 extremely bulky
football players are about to all rush back in. Maybe you don't want to be standing next
to this door right now.
It's not that Tom, but it could be used at any point the player might choose to use it,
probably not during the game, but, you know,
whenever they are going to the locker room.
I can't tell if this is stupid or not. Is it to do with toilets?
It is.
See, I love it when someone starts with, is it some, this is stupid, but is it? Yes, yes,
it is. That's how the show works.
Is it to do with how recently a cubicle has been occupied?
It is not.
Oh.
That would be hilarious.
That would be useful.
Temperature of the toilet seat?
Unfortunately not.
Damn it! I would love that as well.
Okay. What's the pressure on the bidet? Is it dangerous yet?
Level of toilet roll.
Yellow for danger. There's not much left.
With these questions, it's always, there's a bunch of info and it's just a question of
what is relevant particularly. So it's like for us, it's about figuring out, is this a
thing that's specific to like football players, to the Jacksonville Jaguars, to, or is it
like this could be a system that you could use in any toilet in the world? Oh, Simon's had a realization.
Jacksonville Jaguars are in Florida.
Is it to do with alligators being toilet?
Is it like one alligator yellow light in the toilet?
Because that's a normal amount of alligator.
We can deal with one alligator, this is Florida.
If you're a football player, if you're a tight end or something, I'm like, yeah, that's fine.
I really need to go.
Why do you put traffic lights, I assume, on the toilet cubicles, like on the doors,
to whether it's occupied or...?
It's not in the cubicle, in fact.
Outside? On each one?
Also not on a toilet.
A few minutes ago, Rowan talked about whether the traffic lights might give the players
information about whether they should go see a doctor.
Well, if the traffic light went red, you should go see a doctor.
So is it testing for something in urine?
Yes it is.
Oh, is it like a drugs test thing?
Or just like a health check or something like that?
It's just... are these on something like that. It's just...
Are these on the urinals?
It's just testing whether you have...
Dehydration, maybe?
That's it.
Oh my god!
So the sensors were installed in the bathroom urinal?
Urinals?
Urinal?
I'm stuck between America and England. Same here. Same here.
And they would analyze the urine to see if the players were hydrated and they're all good.
Good, you're green. Green light.
If you're maybe a little bit dehydrated, you should take on some fluids. Yellow light.
And if you get the red light, it's time to go see a doctor and maybe get some fluids put in you because you
are severely dehydrated.
I feel like there's a better colour chart you can use for that.
Yellow is a confusing colour to choose for your dehydration chart.
If anything it's perfect. I'm more concerned about green and red.
The sensors were installed in the bathroom urinals, and they would analyze the urine and
detect how hydrated the players were, and give them that information in green for good,
all the way to red for severely dehydrated and bad.
Our next question has been sent in by David Teresey.
Thank you, David.
Residents of the small Canadian town of Orono petitioned for a famous landmark to be relocated there.
Made for the Pan Am Games in 2015,
the landmark could have attracted visitors to the town
after dismantling part of it.
How?
I'll say that again.
Residents of the small Canadian town of Orono
petitioned for a famous landmark to be relocated there.
Made for the Pan Am Games in 2015,
the landmark could have attracted
visitors to the town after dismantling part of it. How?
I don't know if I'm allowed to ask this, Tom, but I just wanted the clarification on
it being dismantled. I'm assuming we're talking about the monument and not the small town.
Yes, part of the famous landmark would have to be dismantled.
Yeah.
Okay, the 2015 Pan Am Games. I've never heard of that before.
Pan Am is an airline.
Oh, this is just short for Pan American.
So North and South America.
Oh, right, okay.
Which is also what Pan Am was short for.
Just Pan American.
Yeah, they're still in business?
I actually don't know.
Absolutely not.
I haven't flown in a while.
They were the ones who famously sold tickets to the moon, just like a holding amount that
you could pay for being on the waiting list for when they inevitably had lunar flights
available in the future.
Well, weren't they in 2001?
Yeah, that is part of the reason, yes.
Yes.
Would they have to remove a part of this important structure that perhaps was not Canadian enough for them. And they wanted
to make it only a Canadian landmark by removing the American part of the landmark.
This was definitely a Canadian landmark.
It was already. You didn't have to modify anything to make it a Canadian landmark.
Not at all.
Now I'm like, do I know any Canadian landmarks?
Also the fact that just because a small town is petitioned for something, it doesn't mean
that this has to be a realistic thing for the small town to be able to actually get.
Small towns can petition for all kinds of weird stuff.
So it's not even like, what is doable?
I'm like, they could ask for the Eiffel Tower if they wanted to. They can petition for all kinds of weird stuff. So it's not even like, what is, what is doable?
I'm like, they can ask for the Eiffel Tower if they wanted to. They can petition for it.
Doesn't mean they're going to get it.
Orinno. The fact that they're called Orinno has got to be important though, right? I feel
like the name has got to be like, if you took letters off a massive sign, would it spell
Orinno?
Was it a big rhinoceros?
Oh, Rhino!
Or a big rhinoceros? Mmm. Oh, rhino!
Or a big Oreo.
I'm like, have I got a pen?
Can I figure it out?
Honestly, I think you could.
However, I realise now I've said that, that all three of you are scrambling for pens and
paper and that doesn't really work for an audio show.
I have it in low-
Hang on, wait, so if it's O, if it's how it sounds like it's O-R-O-N-O, is that right?
Or different spelling?
That is right.
Okay.
Nuru. What else can you spell with that?
I'm trying to think of same famous signs. Hollywood sign doesn't work. The like welcome
to kind of signs.
It's Canadian.
Okay, ice hockey, maple syrup, maple syrup, Oreo's Canadian?
Toronto?
Rowan, you've got it.
Oh!
There was a giant, Instagrammable sign just saying the word Toronto set up in Toronto.
And it's for the 2015 Games.
If you've ever been to the centre of Toronto and done the
tourist trail, it's a massive, massive sign.
It's several metres high each letter.
And they decided that they were going to keep that sign, they were going to make a permanent
version of it to be there.
So RNO were like, can we have the old one, please?
We don't need the T's, but can we have the old one?
Oh, brilliant.
I love that.
Did they get it? Do we know if they got it? I hope they got it.
They did not get it.
Aww.
Aww.
Boo!
Justice for Orono.
The Isle of Man TT could have had the leftover letters.
Rowan, over to you for the next question.
Founded in 2015, what is the aim of a group of volunteers called The Women in Red?
Nice snappy one.
Founded in 2015, what is the aim of a group of volunteers called The Women in Red?
Is anyone else immediately going to Christenburg?
That's the ladies in red.
I know, but I know it is, but I can't get that out of my head.
And this is being asked to three men.
Here we go.
Is it a Handmaid's Tale reference?
Oh, is there any other literary stuff there that we could go with?
It's either that or a Taylor Swift reference.
Is it literary, Rowan?
No.
What happened in 2015 apart from the Pan Am Games?
Very important year.
Yeah.
If you had to describe this as an upbeat thing or a we need to make this group of volunteers
because they're a problems type of thing, how would you describe it?
Like a woo, This is really fun.
Or like a, ah, we've got problems to solve.
Ah, Alec, you'll understand when you know what it is,
but that is a really interesting and tricky thing to answer.
In that they are solving a problem, but there is like,
there is also a sense of excitement and joy around what they're doing,
when they're doing it.
Is it Christenburg?
I'm just gonna double check this, because we never actually got a resolution to whether the problem was Christenburg.
No. But this 2015 thing is interesting. So the 2015 in particular isn't important,
but it is maybe interesting to note that this role, like this volunteer system,
would not have been even possible before 2001.
Wikipedia was founded in 2001?
Oh.
Oh, that from the Wikicast person.
Oh my, no, that's the solution.
That's it.
It's...
Oh.
They're fixing red links on Wikipedia.
They are, specifically, because Wikipedia articles about women were much more likely to have a red link
saying that the article wasn't created yet, so they're fixing them.
Tom, you are exactly correct.
Together with Simon's knowledge of the founding of Wikipedia,
yeah, no, that is exactly what it is.
How was that your first fact for 2001?
I host the Wikicast, a podcast about random Wikipedia articles.
And it was bang on.
It was bang on.
Wow.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah, no, you're exactly right.
This is essentially a group who provide missing biographies of women on Wikipedia, which is
why Alec, you're like, is it bad?
Is it good?
I'm like, well, technically it's not a good thing, but it is like an exciting, fun thing
they do when they volunteer in a way.
So it was a tricky one to answer. So yeah, it's essentially the Women in Red are a collection of Wikipedia contributors
who have this aim where they work together to improve the coverage of women on the site,
specifically aiming to turn so-called red links, signifying that there's like missing
articles or there's not enough information into blue ones, which have a bunch of information
populating it, hence the name. And interestingly,
in a typical year, they add between 20 and 30 thousand new biographies of women to the site,
around 70 a day. So very prolific.
Next one's from me folks, good luck. Using a Sharpie, Penny hurriedly writes the number 7,692 on a piece of plastic, and never refers to that
number ever again.
Why?
I'll say that again.
Using a Sharpie, Penny hurriedly writes the number 7,692 on a piece of plastic, and never
refers to that number ever again.
Why?
If she's anything like me, she's just got a new credit card, she's written down the
pin so she doesn't forget it, and then never uses the card.
Don't do that, folks.
There's terrible security.
Don't write down your PIN number.
You know, Simon, how you keep kind of blundering very quickly towards the end of the questions
in this episode?
No!
That was joking, Tom!
You have identified some of the elements of this.
Not all of it. I'm not going to give it to you. Oh, okay, thank God. But of the elements of this. Not all of it.
I'm not going to give it to you.
Oh, okay, thank God.
But you're right, that's a piece of plastic.
Oh, I was going in a totally different direction, so thank you, Simon, for course correcting
before we'd even gone off course.
I mean, we've got some time, Rowan.
What was that direction going to be?
So 7,692 is feels very like 9 and 6 and 7 and 2 can kind of be like reflected and change and
like look like each other. And I was wondering if the plastic was like transparent in some
way, like if it was that kind of thing that there was something going on with that. But
it turns out it's not. So scratch that off the list.
Yeah, the first hint I have on my sheet of paper here is there's nothing specific about
7,692. In fact, I even specifically said it as 7,692, just because it might take a little
bit longer to get to pin number of that. Like, well done, Simon.
I think, did every single one of us get a piece of paper and write down that number
and then look at it, by the way? Because Because that's yeah, that's what I do. Did you mention earlier that the piece of plastic was a debit or credit
card? Yes. And that was the part of Simon's guess that was correct there. Was she writing the amount
of money that was in her account on that debit card? Simon's closer, much closer. Is this quite
a, is this not a good reason for her to be doing this? Because there's
like a really, I feel like if someone's like demanding your bank card and telling you to
like write the pin number down and then she like never sees it again because she's like
had to like give it to someone who's trying to rob her.
She wrote her pin backwards on her debit card and gave it to the person that was robbing
her because writing the pin backwards would get the card lost inside the machine.
I think if you write a pin backwards, you'd get your account flagged as somebody's trying
to steal your stuff.
I think the backwards pin thing is an urban myth, sadly.
Ah, great.
I was going to say, if your pin's a palindrome, you're just screwed.
But you're along the right lines there.
It's not hurriedly written because she's being mugged, but you're definitely along the right
lines.
Is she giving it to someone else, though?
You said she didn't ever use the number.
She never referred to that number again.
But we know that it's not the pin to that card that was written on there.
It is not the pin.
Like, do we know if it's her card?
Is she doing it for someone else? It is her card. It's her card, it's not the pin. Like, do we know if it's her card? Is she doing it for someone else?
Oh, it is her card. It's her card, it's not her pin.
Penny is trying to commit fraud, looked at somebody else entering their pin,
and wrote it on her card.
And then stole that person's card.
And has 20 minutes to go on a spending spree.
It's a MrBeast video.
Put your last two guesses together, Alec, and you've basically got it.
This is about crime, this is about safety and security, you've basically got it.
Is Penny the criminal?
Is Penny... have we established that Penny's the criminal?
Penny is defending against criminals here.
This is a debit card that she is going to just leave in a wallet somewhere.
Somebody is going to go and put this into an ATM machine, type in those numbers, and
they will now have a CCTV recording of somebody that just stole this wallet.
And so it's a means of finding out, finding the thief in some way, shape or form.
Nearly.
You said, Alec, that she's written down deliberately the wrong pin.
Why would you do that?
Why would you put the wrong pin on your own card?
So that if somebody takes it, it gets the card locked because they enter the pin in,
and it's wrong, and so she then finds out, oh, at this period in time, my card got locked,
therefore, my card's been taken.
Honestly, it's not even that complex. It is to fool thieves. It is so that if the card
gets taken, oh, they've been stupid, they'll put the PIN number on it. So why might you
write that down hurriedly? You're not under any pressure here. Why are you scrolling this
on the back of the card?
I guess so it makes it seem like it's not been necessarily like orchestrated or
planned like, oh yeah, this is just a thing that I've put down so that people
think that it's like just a casual thing I've done rather than like a plan to
trap you in the moment.
Or actually also, wait, hang on.
Is it so that it's not necessarily entirely clear what the numbers are, so that people
type in it a few times to try and get it so that it will lock you out, because you'll
go through all the tries?
Yep, it takes three attempts, usually, to get a card locked in a machine.
So if you have a scrolled number that, oh, maybe that's a one, maybe that's a seven,
maybe that's a nine, maybe that's a zero, then if someone takes the card, they will use the wrong
pin number multiple times, and it will get sucked into the machine, never to be seen again.
What a phenomenal idea! That's brilliant!
Simon, over to you for the next question.
So this question has been sent in by Geraint Goff.
Simon, over to you for the next question. So this question has been sent in by Geraint Goff.
In 2016, the computer system at East Lake County Library, Florida, had 2,361 books on
loan to Chuck Finley.
Rather than putting a burden on municipal resources, this ought to have saved money
for the county.
How? In 2016, the computer system at East Lake County Library,
Florida, had 2,361 books on loan to Chuck Finley. Rather than putting a burden on municipal
resources, this ought to have saved money for the county. How?
We all wrote down 2361 and were like, it's his pin number. It's clearly his pin number.
That's the pin number.
So I know with libraries, it's one of those things where I think a lot of people think,
I don't know, it's just a library, they just get money.
But the amount of books that are loaned out and like the circulation of the books actually does
make a difference to a lot of libraries, like the amount of budget that they get allocated. So I don't, but then that wouldn't necessarily
be about saving money. It would have been about like getting more income from a county
by being like, yeah, we've got like two thousands of books are on loan, like, but that's not
saving money necessarily.
If you've lost books, and you admit that you've lost them, you would presumably need to purchase
them again.
However, if you pretend that the books are just simply on loan, you don't need to purchase
them again.
And so Chuck Finley is their pretend book lover who stops people finding out that their
books have in fact been lost.
Just racking up enormous amounts of fines that at some point, at some point the entire
Ponzi scheme will come collapsing down and the library will be in trouble.
In my head, I was thinking phone books.
And that's because I remember the library, when I was a kid, had a copy of every single
phone book in the country.
Which again, dates me and you know how old I am, like the fact that phone books were a thing then.
But every town in its central library would have a copy of every phone book, because someone
needed to look up information sometimes.
I'm wondering if this library had decided to get rid of all their phone books to save
money on storage or something like that, and Chuck Finley, phone enthusiast, decided to take them off their hands.
Chuck Finley is the name of a retired basketball player. They're a real person.
And was this an alias, or it was in fact Chuck Finley that had these books?
The books never left the library.
Oh, well there goes my idea of Chuck Finley being the famous person who tears phone books
in half, Never mind. Yeah, I kind of liked your idea, Tom, of the saving space, like storage, not having to
pay for storage stuff. But if they had never left the library, then that doesn't really
save on storage fees or anything like that.
You are on the right lines that this is an efficiency related issue.
I wonder, okay, so even though it is a real, Chuck Finley is a real person, but I think
that Alec, your whole question about like whether it's an alias, whether it's like a
code in the way that you have like inspector sans and stuff where it's like a, technically
a person, but it's used as a code for something, it's kind of interesting. Because I'm assuming
it isn't just that this Florida random public library was the right area for, but maybe it was, maybe Chuck just
was like, yeah, sure, use my account for your nefarious money saving schemes library. I'll
do that for you.
Okay. I'll give you a hint on that one. Chuck didn't create this account. Two librarians
created this account called Chuck Finley named after the retired basketball player, but he
had nothing
to do with it.
Oh, okay. So why... they're being used to prop up basketball hoops somewhere else in
the building. Like, they couldn't afford to actually, like, mount them to the walls, they
just kind of piled up a load of books. Which in my head are still phone books. I don't
know why I'm obsessed with this.
They'd be very tall hoops if it's a thousand one hundred and fifty phone books outside
of the court.
Yeah. Yeah.
They were not phone books, I'll tell you that.
They weren't, they were similar to phone books in one regard, which if I told you would give
the game away.
Bibles.
Encyclopedias.
No, it's not to do with their size.
The librarians were trying to prevent the loss of these books.
Why might a book be lost?
So another thing that I know about libraries in terms of their stock is that in order for
books to stay in the library, they have to be loaned out in some way.
That's the whole thing of like, if you have a book that hasn't been loaned in a while,
that they will essentially dump it or recycle it or just throw it away. So I don't know if by saving the books,
are they books that like out of print or some other reason why you would want to keep them
around, but they haven't technically been loaned out. So it's like, okay, we're going to say they're
loaned out by this like fictional account so that we can keep them in circulation.
Will Barron You are almost precisely correct. So if a book isn't borrowed for a certain amount of
time, what happens to it?
It gets sold, usually. The library will put it up as a cheap book sale outside, and if
no one takes it, it'll go into recycling.
Right. So you lose money on the book. But then what happens if someone wants to loan
that book in the future?
Do you have to buy it again?
Exactly.
So it's like a cheat around to be like, if we keep these in storage, we don't technically if someone wants to loan that book in the future. Do you have to buy it again? Exactly.
So it's like a cheat around to be like, if we keep these in storage,
we don't technically have to destroy them, which means if they want it again,
we don't have to buy it again.
Exactly correct.
So basically, if a book wasn't loaned for a certain period of time,
they would have to sell the book and then buy it again when it became popular again
at a higher price.
So the librarians created this account called Chuck Finley to borrow 2361 books
over the course of nine months.
So they didn't have to repurchase the DaVinci code or whatever it would be when
suddenly everybody wants to read it again.
The problem with that was state funding was linked to the number of book loans
taken out.
So by adding 2361 book loans, they had a 4% boost in their funding, which had nothing
to do with actual demand, and so the librarians were suspended.
This is what you get for trying to save the books.
I think there's good intentions going on here.
The last question then.
At the top of the show, I asked one that was sent in by David Lyford-Tilley.
Thank you, David.
What creative people work with both feet and meters?
Anyone want to take a shot at that before I give the audience the answer?
Am I able to say myself?
I've been using both feet and meters this very day.
Oh, do you have to work in both systems for, uh...
On the current project, I am working on a project that is in Imperial, with tools that
are metric.
Oh, I'm so sorry to hear that.
I have typed 25.4 into a calculator at least 300 times this week.
Okay.
There was a Mars mission that did this.
Is it to do with that?
It's not in this case. This is more a play on words.
And I accept that there are valid alternate answers in specific things here.
I was going to say, I don't think it's in reference to length.
I'm assuming it's to do with either feet, the physical body part, or meter as in the music term.
So I don't know whether it would be something to do with
combining those elements or a different version of it. I don't know, with a feet with an
E-A? I don't know if there's any other versions of those words, you guys, that you know of that
might pair together well. Bards and D&D. You can take feets and presumably sing in meter.
You know what, Simon? I'll take that. It's poets.
Rhyme and meter and the feet of a poem, yeah.
Yep. So, meters are the basic rhythmic structures of a poem, something like iambic pentameter.
Feet are the patterns of stress in words, and they are the basic units of meters. So,
yes, I will also accept Alex Steele as an answer, but in this case we were looking
for poets. Thank you very much to all our players. Let's find out where can people find
you, what are you up to, what's going on in your lives. We will start with our new players.
Simon?
Yeah, you can find me on YouTube, Simon Clark. I host a podcast called The Wikicast that
you've heard about, and also a podcast called How to Make a Science Video and gosh, I'm in lots of different places.
You can find me in bookstores with my book firmament.
Alec.
You can find me on YouTube making things with both feet and meters with my name and I make
things.
And Rowan.
Yeah, you can find me on YouTube Rowanan Ellis, and on the podcast, Queer Movie Podcast, which
does exactly what it says on the tin, and also in bookstores with my book for queer
teen girls here in queer.
I need to write a book, don't I? I'm getting left behind.
No, it's a trap, Tom.
Thank you very much to all of you. If you want to know more about this show, you can
do that at lateralcast.com. We can also send in your own ideas for questions.
We are at Lateralcast basically everywhere, and there are video highlights several times a week at youtube.com slash Lateralcast.
Thank you very much to Rowan Ellis.
Thank you for having me.
Simon Clarke.
Thanks for having me.
And Alex Steele.
Thank you for having me.
I've been Tom Scott, and that's been Lateral.