h a l f b a k e r yThe word "How?" springs to mind at this point.
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This is an idea for a website, which prompts users to enter the postcode or zip code for their current home. They then enter their previous addresses in a similar manner. (If you can't remember the exact address for one or more of your previous addresses, the town, state and country will do.)
You
then select 'objective mode' or 'subjective mode'. If you select 'objective mode', you are prompted to enter the length of time you lived at each address. In subjective mode, you enter the emotional importance of that place to you (you can type in any number you want, positive or negative). Subjective mode can also be used for other purposes: for example, you could rate the locations by how much your ferret-legging skills improved while living there.
The website then finds latitude and longitude for all the locations you entered. It converts these into Cartesian coordinates (or maybe it can do it more directly with polar coordinates, radians and the like). It assumes there is a point mass at that location of mass X (X being the score you assigned to that place). It's then a simple matter to calculate the centre of gravity of these points.
This centre of gravity will often be somewhere within the earth. The website extends a radius from the centre of the earth through the centre of gravity to the surface. The surface location is converted back into latitude and longitude, and this is your centre of geogravity.
The website then gives you those coordinates, and tells you that your centre of geogravity is 221b Baker Street, London, or somewhere in a field in Hampshire, or wherever.
What you do with your centre of geogravity is up to you. Possibilities include:
- Pay a spiritual homage to your centre of geogravity, with which you now feel a deep connection
- Find out your and your partner's centres of geogravity to discover your combined centre of geogravity and ponder its implications for your relationship
- Find what your centres of geogravity would have been at different times of your life, draw lines on a map to show how your centre of geogravity has moved around over the years, and then go for a walk along the route your centre of geogravity has traced out
- Do various Google-Earthy things with your newfound knowledge
- Move to a different country in an attempt to shift your objective centre of geogravity away from Milton Keynes.
Milton Keynes in popular culture
http://en.wikipedia..._in_popular_culture For Americans and other aliens [imaginality, Nov 17 2006]
[link]
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That bun was mine, now yours. |
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My geocenter has long been somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. |
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I can't remember my weight when I was 5. |
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Hm, my center is quite shallow. Not sure what this means. Oh, I just had a terrible thought. - When you are buried your center follows you to the surface (well, -6'), so statistically it can be shown that the closer your center is to the surface, the less time you have to live. That's it, I'm moving to Afghanistan! |
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So it's the point on a great circle between your two original places which is proportionally as far from one to the other as the two numbers that you entered? |
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If you enter just two places, yes, that's exactly it. If you've entered more than two locations, you'd have to iterate that process, giving the newly created point each time the weight of the points that have 'gone into it', and pairing it with another point, until all points have been added. |
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After further consideration, the 'great circle' approach doesn't work for certain cases. If I live for 14 years in a particular location, and 15 years in its antipode, on the other side of the world, my COG will be very deep within the Earth, but its surface location (the place on the surface closest to it) will be the second location, not halfway between the two. |
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I used to live at this intersection + |
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