Another folding video
Tim
Southwest PA Icrontian
I was looking around an AMD motherboard website (amdmb.com), and came across another video made for their folding section. Here's a link to it.
http://www.hel-razor.com/FoldingForOurFuture.html
http://www.hel-razor.com/FoldingForOurFuture.html
0
Comments
1) the Typewriter effect they have on the text gets very annoying to me
2) at the ending credits, its inapropriate to put the actual medical condition the patients have/had. I think it should just scroll the names only.
Great though
Not to be nitpicky, but an English Professor can't help it sometimes...
'Affecting' would refer to some type of pretend state, while 'effecting' refers to something that is being acted upon by an outside force. (which is the meaning they wanted in the video).
Example:
I was affecting a nice British accent, but my tomfoolery was effecting the atmosphere.
Dictionary.com's 1st definition for "affecting":
To have an influence on or effect a change in: Inflation affects the buying power of the dollar.
Dictionary.com is terrible, BTW. The only real resource for the American English Lexicon is Merriam-Webster. They are recognised by Linguists as the athority on American English, the same way The Oxford is recognised for British English. I don't know where Didctionary.com gets their definitions, but this isn't the first time they've been wrong. If you've got a bookmark for it, you would do well to change that bookmark to point to M-W.com instead.
We may be wrong about the usage of the word, but I think saying Dictionary.com is wrong is a bit much...
Let's nit pick pronunciation - things like calling forte forTAY instead of fort. I prefer the Webster New Collegiate Dictionary and I still treat the one I bought for radio school like a bible. Jack
Effect = consequence Affect = influence
Put another way:
The mystery is affecting the world. Our work in folding has effect on the world by solving the mystery.
Affect is an influence.
By affecting a British accent, I effected a ruse.
might want to pick a new profession, because Merriam-Webster says otherwise.
taken directly from http://www.webster.com/dictionary/affect the official website of M-W
An irony that it uses the word 'effect' within the description of the word 'affect'
Either you believe me or you don't. I'm not going to waste any more time on this discussion.
Perhaps CBDroege was affected by my effective argument?
I do believe that this effective argument may effectively affect his career!
I'm sorry, CB, but even a mighty English Professor can be wrong. Shocking, yes, but true all the same. Besides, I used to have arguments with you for years in which you stated that something that the dictionary says is wrong is actually right if it falls into common usage. While I disagreed then (and still do disagree now), I do want to point out that you're effectively arguing against yourself now by stating the opposite. I do, however, believe that Camman is correct in his interpretation of Merriam-Webster's definition, so I don't think the dictionary is wrong.
Yes, we like them very much, but we have stopped wearing them for two reasons: First, the dress code for college instructors has changed at all but the most illustrious of schools; it is no longer required that we wear suit jackets in the classroom (although we still need them for special events). Second, it is difficult enough for us to get students to take us seriously.