Talk:Scutoid
Mathematics Start‑class Low‑priority | ||||||||||
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factually wrong citation
Laura Taalman: "This means that Scutoids are not polyhedra, because not all of their faces are planar."
While she seems to have said so, it contradicts the facts (otherwise correct in the article): the are not _necessarily_ planar, therefore not _necessarily_ polyhedra. Also the source is wrong, it should be https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3024272 not a tweet referring to it. How is the description of a related product a quotable source anyway? --Motherofinvention (talk) 11:30, 21 August 2018 (UTC)
Invented on Wikipedia
Okay, this is confusing. The paper announcing was first published on July 28, but the first image we used was created on July 24 by a user named Scutoid: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Prism,_frusta,_prismatoid_and_scutoid.jpg - is this the author? This is blowing my mind. Miserlou (talk) 20:26, 30 July 2018 (UTC)
Name origin
According to Clara Grima-página a mathmatician involved in the project the name originated from the project leaders name Escudero. Translated to latis the name means "escudo". As a joke they called the shape "escu-toids". Later this got shortened to "scutoids". Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_NZ1ql8B8Y&t=791
- No. Escudero is the guy who holds the shield for a knight (a squire?); it’s one of those surnames derived from a profession. It comes from Latin scūtārius (scutum+arius). I’ll add to the article a link to https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/escudero Tuvalkin (talk) 09:53, 7 August 2018 (UTC)
LM Escudero @lmescu (twitter)
So proud that scutoids reached the "meme" level!!! (10:45 PM - 27 Jul 2018)