Boring Peoples - Page 7

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IdeaQueen thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#61

Originally posted by: MNMS

Someone start Discussing HP now.... I, Tanaz and Mythili will hear forever 😳

Boring people...hmm.. Some one discussing the Historical Achievements of Alexander in front of a Party-Animal-type of person.. Im sure he will either fall asleep! But same discussion between 2 anthropologists will turn it into an "Exchange of Intellectual Ideas" conversation...

Formal people... If you meet someone in first meeting and do not find him interesting because they are formal, It is somewhat a leap of judgement towards others... Let the association begin and then decide whether you like that "Formal Person" or not... simply relying on First impression doesn't suit... at least me! 😊

I think you should be dropped in HogwardsπŸ˜† becoz  u worked like elf for DC!!!

Posted: 17 years ago
#62

Originally posted by: Believe

Here i feel most(not all) of them are soo serious...A friendly atmosphere is good for a debate.....Am not a serious guy if i tell anyting wrong,no intension to hurt anyone πŸ˜ƒ soo feel free
just chillout...

Believe, Even after going through all these pages do you still think the sameπŸ˜ƒ?

Not all intelligent and beautiful girls are boring. What say QT & Myth?πŸ˜‰. This thread also taught me Eskimo's troubles at expressing their love. Thanks to Jatayu and QTπŸ˜†

-Believe- thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#63

Originally posted by: Maya_M

Believe, Even after going through all these pages do you still think the sameπŸ˜ƒ?

Not all intelligent and beautiful girls are boring. What say QT & Myth?πŸ˜‰. This thread also taught me Eskimo's troubles at expressing their love. Thanks to Jatayu and QTπŸ˜†

Maya_M-ji...i say not all.....😊

-Believe- thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#64

Originally posted by: mermaid_QT

hehe tanaz, do global mods get a warning too?
the rest of us know where this thread is headed. u may not join us in the long journey unless the answer is affirmative to my question.

BTW, although I mentioned eskimos, in one post, in other posts, I have maintained a talk about FRIENDSHIP and BOREDOM 😳. Coming back to which,

BELIEVE, I read what you typed about this friend of yours.
1) I know very many formal people who also enjoy life when they are not working.
2) some people are shy and that can be misconstured as being boring.

3) There are ways entertain oneself in the company of bores.

I still wonder how he came up with the number 95%.

^OMG u still in wonder land...but fact is fact.........πŸ˜‰ 

I like the people who enjoy the small small things in life.....😊

sowmyaa thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#65
Veenu welcome back to Debate Mansion !!! 😊
-Believe- thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#66

Originally posted by: sowmyaa

Veenu welcome back to Debate Mansion !!! 😊

Thank you sowmyaa-ji.....😊

mermaid_QT thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#67
Hello Tanaz,
I do hope and sort of know that you know I was joking about warning. You are great, but I am feeling a bit awful even if ur warning is joke hopefully?
😳

I waited for this thread to sort of die down, so that I can write my post here again. I have nothing more to say about boredom anymore.
mermaid_QT thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#68
no no maya! i'll do anything to get u unbored..

read this news-

Device warns you if you're boring or irritating

A DEVICE that can pick up on people's emotions is being developed to help people with autism relate to those around them. It will alert its autistic user if the person they are talking to starts showing signs of getting bored or annoyed.

One of the problems facing people with autism is an inability to pick up on social cues. Failure to notice that they are boring or confusing their listeners can be particularly damaging, says Rana El Kaliouby of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "It's sad because people then avoid having conversations with them."

The "emotional social intelligence prosthetic" device, which El Kaliouby is constructing along with MIT colleagues Rosalind Picard and Alea Teeters, consists of a camera small enough to be pinned to the side of a pair of glasses, connected to a hand-held computer running image recognition software plus software that can read the emotions these images show. If the wearer seems to be failing to engage his or her listener, the software makes the hand-held computer vibrate.

In 2004 El Kaliouby demonstrated that her software, developed with Peter Robinson at the University of Cambridge, could detect whether someone is agreeing, disagreeing, concentrating, thinking, unsure or interested, just from a few seconds of video footage. Previous computer programs have only detected the six more basic emotional states of happiness, sadness, anger, fear, surprise and disgust. El Kaliouby's complex states are more useful because they come up more frequently in conversation, but are also harder to detect, because they are conveyed in a sequence of movements rather than a single expression.

Her program is based on a machine-learning algorithm that she trained by showing it more than 100 8-second video clips of actors expressing particular emotions. The software picks out movements of the eyebrows, lips and nose, and tracks head movements such as tilting, nodding and shaking, which it then associates with the emotion the actor was showing. When presented with fresh video clips, the software gets people's emotions right 90 per cent of the time when the clips are of actors, and 64 per cent of the time on footage of ordinary people.

El Kaliouby is now training the software on excerpts from movies and footage captured by webcams. This week she plans to gather the first on-the-move training footage by equipping a group of volunteers, some of whom are autistic, with wearable cameras.

Getting the software to work is only the first step, Picard warns. In its existing form it makes heavy demands on computing power, so it may need to be pared down to work on a standard hand-held computer. Other challenges include finding a high-resolution digital camera that can be worn comfortably, and training people with autism to look at the faces of those they are conversing with so that the camera picks up their expressions.

The team will present the device next week at the Body Sensor Network conference at MIT. People with autism are not the only ones who stand to benefit. Timothy Bickmore of Northeastern University in Boston, who studies ways in which computers can be made to engage with people's emotions, says the device would be a great teaching aid. "I would love it if you could have a computer looking at each student in the room to tell me when 20 per cent of them were bored or confused."


From issue 2545 of New Scientist magazine, 29 March 2006, page 30
    * 29 March 2006
    * NewScientist.com news service
    * Celeste Biever 
Edited by mermaid_QT - 17 years ago
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Posted: 17 years ago
#69

Originally posted by: mermaid_QT

Hello Tanaz, I do hope and sort of know that you know I was joking about warning. You are great, but I am feeling a bit awful even if ur warning is joke hopefully? 😳 

Hope she's not upset because I mentioned this in jest and likened her to asrani in sholay?

My best apologies if she is ....

.T you are free to prescribe me with a griveious and near fatal cautionary note for having trifled with you. That should go along way to ensure that I never ever mention such things in jest. However, there is no guarantee that it will.

Majority thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#70

Originally posted by: mermaid_QT

I have nothing more to say about boredom anymore.


Me neither