originally posted by Steven Spielmann:
I love this wine. And the 2007. Love love love. I think I'm cracking my last 2002 tomorrow. Love that too.
People who hate wines with any sweetness can get converted by this stuff. I've seen it.
Drink more Vouvray.
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Lazy Friday TN: 2006 Pinon Vouvray Cuvee TraditionMy first tasting note on Wine Disorder and the second Vouvray I ever had:
Smells good. Lots of YUM! on the palate [Score: 1.9213 out of Log2(4)]
originally posted by SFJoe:
Quite lovely 2008 tasted this week as well. Special, actually.
originally posted by VLM:
I've really never understood the reason people use log base 2.
originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by Steven Spielmann:
I love this wine. And the 2007. Love love love. I think I'm cracking my last 2002 tomorrow. Love that too.
People who hate wines with any sweetness can get converted by this stuff. I've seen it.
Drink more Vouvray.
so how was the '02? I was debating opening one.
originally posted by Yule Kim:
I really hope the 2008s end up in DC. I only got one bottle of the 2007, and only the 2006s are left at the store. I need to reload on more Vouvray soon.
Any other Vouvray producers good besides Pinon, Huet, and Foreau? Is Chidaine '04s and '06s worth getting (Montlouis or Vouvray bottlings)?
originally posted by Steve Guattery:
originally posted by Yule Kim:
I really hope the 2008s end up in DC. I only got one bottle of the 2007, and only the 2006s are left at the store. I need to reload on more Vouvray soon.
Any other Vouvray producers good besides Pinon, Huet, and Foreau? Is Chidaine '04s and '06s worth getting (Montlouis or Vouvray bottlings)?
Have you tried the Pinon 2007 yet? As we've discussed here before, the 2006 and 2007 are very different: the 2006 is plumper, the 2007 leaner and racier. I'm looking forward to trying the 2008.
I've generally liked Chidaine, but since you asked about 2004 and 2006, the bottle of the 2006 Montlouis Clos de Breuil had just a little too much residual sugar relative to the acidity. I've got a second that I put away to see if the first was a fluke, or if it improves.
originally posted by Steve Guattery:
originally posted by VLM:
I've really never understood the reason people use log base 2.
Those of us who spend a fair part of every day working in base 2 have a pretty good idea why...
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Steve Guattery:
originally posted by VLM:
I've really never understood the reason people use log base 2.
Those of us who spend a fair part of every day working in base 2 have a pretty good idea why...
So why? The answer I got was strange to me. I only ever log shit for distributional reasons.
originally posted by Steve Guattery:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Steve Guattery:
originally posted by VLM:
I've really never understood the reason people use log base 2.
Those of us who spend a fair part of every day working in base 2 have a pretty good idea why...
So why? The answer I got was strange to me. I only ever log shit for distributional reasons.
I mainly use it in the analysis of algorithms. For example, in my algorithms course this term I taught my students how to solve recurrence relations describing divide-and-conquer recursive algorithms. The depth of the recursion is typically logarithmic in the size of the input, and it's most often a log to the base 2 (denoted as lg). That often shows up in the solution to the recurrence. Because logs to any two specified bases differ only by a constant factor, once things are folded into big-O notation its convenient to express all logs in terms of log base 2.
For a number n, lg n also tells you how many bits are needed to represent that number in binary. As a result it's useful in a wide range of problems, e.g. everything from design of a memory hierarchy to figuring out the running time of certain numerical algorithms in arbitrary precision.
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Lazy Friday TN: 2006 Pinon Vouvray Cuvee TraditionMy first tasting note on Wine Disorder and the second Vouvray I ever had:
Smells good. Lots of YUM! on the palate [Score: 1.9213 out of Log2(4)]
I've really never understood the reason people use log base 2.