CEMETECH
Leading The Way To The Future
Login [Register]
Username:
Password:
Autologin:

Don't have an account? Register now to chat, post, use our tools, and much more.
Latest Headlines
Online Users
There are 92 users online: 1 member, 66 guests and 25 bots.
Members: critor.
Bots: Spinn3r (2), Magpie Crawler (3), Googlebot (20).
RSS & Social Media
SAX
You must log in to view the SAX chat widget
    » Goto page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6  Next
» View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
KermMartian


Site Admin


Joined: 14 Mar 2005
Posts: 55741
Location: Earth, Sol, Milky Way

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:18:45 pm    Post subject:

I'm loving the Kerm pose in that chart, which, good sir, is truly epic. Looking at that chart, it doesn't actually seem that we average above-average, which I find very surprising. Selection bias in my brain?
_________________


Back to top
Tari


Systems Integrator


Joined: 03 Jul 2006
Posts: 2107
Location: Always-winter, Michigan

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:21:00 pm    Post subject:

Added TheStorm. You people all make me feel short.
Averagers unite?
_________________


Ask questions the smart way · タリ
Back to top
technomonkey76


Advanced Member


Joined: 09 Dec 2009
Posts: 291
Location: Inside your computer

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:22:02 pm    Post subject:

Can you add me too? I'm 5', 11.875".
_________________



Back to top
KermMartian


Site Admin


Joined: 14 Mar 2005
Posts: 55741
Location: Earth, Sol, Milky Way

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:24:09 pm    Post subject:

Technomonkey, that's extremely precise. Very Happy
_________________


Back to top
merthsoft


File Archiver


Joined: 09 May 2010
Posts: 2735

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:25:55 pm    Post subject:

The Tari wrote:
Added TheStorm. You people all make me feel short.
Averagers unite?
I'll unite with the other people who are average. You can go chill with benryves in the "just barely below average" group Wink

KermMartian wrote:
Technomonkey, that's extremely precise. Very Happy
I imagine that's because it's just almost 6', which seems to be some sort of ideal, to be at or over 6 feet. Personally, I'd rather not stand above everyone in a crowd Wink
_________________
Shaun
Back to top
Tari


Systems Integrator


Joined: 03 Jul 2006
Posts: 2107
Location: Always-winter, Michigan

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:30:08 pm    Post subject:

Latest revision, reposted so it's on this page too.

Added Technomonkey.

[Last updated 20.2.2011, 17:19 UTC-0500]
_________________


Ask questions the smart way · タリ


Last edited by Tari on 20 Feb 2011 05:16:39 pm; edited 1 time in total
Back to top
Qwerty.55


Expert


Joined: 08 Dec 2010
Posts: 613

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:35:57 pm    Post subject:

About 6'5" for me too.
_________________
∂²Ψ -(2m(V(x)-E)Ψ
----- = -------------
∂x² ℏ²Ψ
Back to top
tifreak8x


Guru


Joined: 16 Mar 2005
Posts: 9060
Location: Sol System

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:36:43 pm    Post subject:

I'm 5'11" I think. I haven't checked in a very long time.
_________________
Projects: AOD Series: 70% | FFME: 80% | Pokemon: 18% | RPGSK: 60% | Star Trek: 70% | Star Trek 83+: 40% | TI-City: 5%

Look here for Assembly Resources.
Back to top
Weregoose


Cemetech Expert


Joined: 23 Oct 2009
Posts: 463

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 03:43:04 pm    Post subject:

5½ ft ≈ 167.64 cm
_________________
Common Errors in English · How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
Back to top
KermMartian


Site Admin


Joined: 14 Mar 2005
Posts: 55741
Location: Earth, Sol, Milky Way

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 04:00:42 pm    Post subject:

Qwerty.55, high five for the 6'5" people! \o/ Tari, I'm curious what software you're using to generate that chart.
_________________


Back to top
souvik1997


Guru-in-Training


Joined: 19 Apr 2010
Posts: 2870

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 04:22:44 pm    Post subject:

0x5 @nikky's height. Laughing
_________________
CALCnet Tournament-38%


deviantArt
Back to top
qazz42


Vampire Killer


Joined: 07 Apr 2010
Posts: 4177

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 04:51:22 pm    Post subject:

AHAHA nikky is going to be mad is he sees that Razz
_________________


Back to top
Tari


Systems Integrator


Joined: 03 Jul 2006
Posts: 2107
Location: Always-winter, Michigan

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 04:52:37 pm    Post subject:

KermMartian wrote:
Qwerty.55, high five for the 6'5" people! \o/ Tari, I'm curious what software you're using to generate that chart.
Put together by hand in Inkscape with some freely-licensed silhouette paths. Smile

Adding Weregoose, tifreak, and Qwerty.55 now, so I'll update the image shortly.
_________________


Ask questions the smart way · タリ
Back to top
MufinMcFlufin


Advanced Member


Joined: 29 Aug 2009
Posts: 252
Location: C:\Users\Admin\Desktop

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 04:53:54 pm    Post subject:

I'm about 6'1" -ish.

Haven't had it checked in about a year or two, but I'm pretty much done growing, so I think that's pretty accurate.

Also Kerm, were you taking account age? I think I'd be surprised itf everyone here was done growing (referring to some of our younger users), so you may have to take that into account.
_________________

MufinMcFlufin's quote of the week:
"Diapers and Politicians should both be changed often for the same reason."
-Anonymous
Back to top
Tari


Systems Integrator


Joined: 03 Jul 2006
Posts: 2107
Location: Always-winter, Michigan

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 05:25:00 pm    Post subject:

Also just added Mufin, post has been updated.

MufinMcFlufin wrote:
Also Kerm, were you taking account age? I think I'd be surprised itf everyone here was done growing (referring to some of our younger users), so you may have to take that into account.
Quite true. Most of those who are below average seem to be those whom I take to be younger/still growing. The exceptions I know of seem to be myself, Weregoose, and benryves.

Overall, however, you'll probably find that the younger generations (such as everyone here) are taller than the older members of the population. If you were to generate a histogram comparing age (say, in one-year buckets) to height, I suspect it would show a significant right skew (a negative correlation of age to height).

There are a variety of possibilities for the cause of such a phenomenon (in addition to straight compression of a person over time), but one that I find particularly plausible is the improvement of nutrition in recent decades, so the youngest generations are able to grow larger than their predecessors.
_________________


Ask questions the smart way · タリ
Back to top
KermMartian


Site Admin


Joined: 14 Mar 2005
Posts: 55741
Location: Earth, Sol, Milky Way

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 05:28:20 pm    Post subject:

Hmm, and I wonder if our ages could indeed explain our perceived above-average average height, since we're all younger than the average age, I think.
_________________


Back to top
MufinMcFlufin


Advanced Member


Joined: 29 Aug 2009
Posts: 252
Location: C:\Users\Admin\Desktop

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 05:31:50 pm    Post subject:

I was beginning to think that may as well also explain the "over average intelligence" part as well. No offense to some of our older members, but each generation will be progressively more intelligent than it's predecessor. Perhaps this could explain your theory, Kerm?

P.S. Thanks for adding me in so quickly, Tari.
_________________

MufinMcFlufin's quote of the week:
"Diapers and Politicians should both be changed often for the same reason."
-Anonymous
Back to top
KermMartian


Site Admin


Joined: 14 Mar 2005
Posts: 55741
Location: Earth, Sol, Milky Way

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 05:34:27 pm    Post subject:

MufinMcFlufin, possibly. I have an alternate explanation, though. I believe that those who have a genetic predisposition towards intelligence may be the product of above-average-intelligence parents, who have the means for both good nourishment for the child and good education, which could then support both superior physical development and mental development; the height and intelligence factors could thus both be a result of a third commonality.
_________________


Back to top
Tari


Systems Integrator


Joined: 03 Jul 2006
Posts: 2107
Location: Always-winter, Michigan

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 05:52:29 pm    Post subject:

I feel like much of the feeling of superior intelligence that us younger people feel is probably not actually true.

The general feeling of children and young (hence inexperienced) members of society that they have everything figured out (call it a sophomoric feeling or perhaps unconsious incompetence) is pretty well-known and recognized, and that likely plays some part in this feeling.

However, I also think the feeling comes from a difference in how today's young people approach problems. We're very used to quickly absorbing information and putting it to use through some means- such an approach to problem-solving would be very difficult to execute as little as 15 years ago, as common web access allows us to get nearly any information with a few keystrokes.
As a result, today's young generations have a different set of expertise than the older ones- specifically, I feel that we have learned how to learn, rather than just learning a variety of things in a rather specific field.

Some anecdotal evidence: I did some work on embedded systems for an internship last summer, working mostly with other middle-aged engineers. I hadn't ever worked with the exact toolset which was in use there, but I quickly picked it up by spending a day or two with the documentation and studying the results of some tinkering. The result of that was I had the software for a project finished in only several days, which was much faster than anyone else seemed to expect I would have it completed. To me, however, this seemed par for the course.

Basically, I think the increased intelligence of today's young people is an illusion. It's just the case that we have become very good at being consciously incompetent (rather than unconsciously incompetent) at many things by assuming greater depths to problems than may seem immediately obvious. When we know what we don't know, it's then easy to find a solution to whatever problem currently presents itself.

Some of that is probably just the tendency of our types (the programmer type) to present all of the above properties, but I think much of it is also the recent availability of information.
_________________


Ask questions the smart way · タリ
Back to top
shmibs


Advanced Member


Joined: 25 Nov 2009
Posts: 230

Posted: 20 Feb 2011 09:28:29 pm    Post subject:

i think that the adaptability applies mostly to denizens of the wob. the influx of information has had much the opposite effect on some people. take, for example, the widespread epidemic of "Attention Deficit Disorder."

also, i take cemetech's ability to turn a "just for fun" thread into a debate of sorts as evidence enough for a correlation between active membership and intelligence.

Kerm: what exactly is the relation between health and height? food intake?

lastly, i love that i am a bald, pink man, but why is my name always misspelt? XD
_________________

ohithur
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Register to Join the Conversation
Have your own thoughts to add to this or any other topic? Want to ask a question, offer a suggestion, share your own programs and projects, upload a file to the file archives, get help with calculator and computer programming, or simply chat with like-minded coders and tech and calculator enthusiasts via the site-wide AJAX SAX widget? Registration for a free Cemetech account only takes a minute.

» Go to Registration page
    » Goto page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6  Next
» View previous topic :: View next topic  
Page 3 of 6 » All times are GMT - 5 Hours

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum

© Copyright 2000-2013 Cemetech & Kerm Martian :: Page Execution Time: 0.038104 seconds.