BILL: You call that a rabbit hole?! A while back I spent 3 hours reading questions and answers on quora ranging from is Michelle Obama actually a man? to Is Donald Trump the Anti-Christ? (The answer to both is no.) THATS a rabbithole. Listening to Tom L is not.
NICK: SO... what is and isn't a rabbit hole? Also, is it rabbithole or rabbit hole?
BILL: Spellcheck is happy with rabbithole, hence so am I. As to your question, we need a function \(f\) and a threshold \(T\) such that
if you spend \(x\) minutes on A, and
you get y enjoyment out of it, where \(0\le y\le 10\), and
\(f(x,y)\ge T\)
then A is a rabbithole.
(Note- I was kidding. There can't possibly be a function f that works.)
ONE DAY LATER
NICK: I asked Gemini what \(f\) and \(T\) are and it told me:
\(f(x,y) = \frac{x}{y+1} \) and
\(T=20\).
It also gave me some examples:
1) The Tom L. Example: 40 mins, 8/10 enjoyment. Score 4.44. NOT a Rabbit Hole!
2) Doomscrolling: 90 mins, 1/10 enjoyment. Score 45. Rabbit Hole!
3) Binge-Watching Mediocre TV: 3 hours (180 mins), 4/10 enjoyment. Score = 36. Rabbit Hole!
4) Incredible Documentary: 3 hours (180 mins), 9/10 enjoyment. 18. Worthwhile but its close.
Gemini also output a heatmap, see here.
BILL: Uh- I was only kidding.
NICK: Well, the jokes on you.
I don't think this definition captures the essence. I think rabbit hole requires more than just time vs. enjoyment.
ReplyDeleteMerriam-Webster says, "a complexly bizarre or difficult state or situation conceived of as a hole into which one falls or descends; especially: one in which the pursuit of something (such as an answer or solution) leads to other questions, problems, or pursuits".
That seems correct to me.
I didn't know it before, but the etymology is from Alice!
The dictionaries spell it "rabbit hole", which is how I would spell it.
I have heard the phrase ``I fell down a rabbit hole' to mean exactly what I described- spending to much time on the web- often going from link to link and getting far away from your original interest- e.g., you look up general relativity and end up reading the Wikipedia entry on HOT TUB TIME MACHINE.
ReplyDeleteWords and phrases change their meaning, or have two common uses, over time. EITHER NOT that many people use it as I describe and you are correct, OR the meaning I have is spreading and at some point the dictionaries will change.
Henceforth I will use `Rabbit hole' not `Rabbithole'
The "getting far away" part isn't in f. So, I think I agree with your definition, but not with Gemini.
Delete