Really glad to see that The Organisation of Really Contrived Acronyms (ORCA) has been reactivated. Thought that a few people in here might like to contribute. Bioinformatic tools seem to be particularly guilty of this, I've been guilty of a few myself.
So what are some of biostars' readers favourites.
Is Biostar itself an acronym? :-)
Much like the ensEMBL/Ensembl thing, this is actually the first time that I have realised that it is "Biostar" and not "BioStars". (I thought it was "BIOinformatics STARS" - for aren't we all? :op )
indeed, there is an inconsistency there - the original name was Biostar but when it came to domain names only biostars.org was available. All things considered Biostars would probably be more appropriate of a name - we're just waiting for a cease-and-desist order from the motherboard maker as motivation to change the name
but it's still www.biostars.com .....
Isn't the American Association Against Acronym Abuse (AAAAA) taking care of this?
How about: "biology inspired objectives imparting frequently obtuse random mathematical algorithms that irritate computer scientists"
"...INstigating frequently obtuse..." ? (Or where you going for ImpartiNg, which is cheating! :op)
I was cheating but I do prefer INstigating :->
Linking to a related post CRAC: funny and/or weird names for bioinformatics tools
Worse as it confuses the name CRAC, which it is also the name for a DNA-RNA hybrid technique
Given the contrived nature of some acronyms, and the pedant nature of ORCA, perhaps it should be re-branded as the Organisation of Really Contrived Abbreviations (ORCA).
I don't follow. ORCA is not particularly pedantic and, even if it were, "Acronym" seems wholly appropriate given its definition. If it were pendantic in nature, the big thing to change would be "Organisation"...
Now I get to put my pedant hat on :-)
Acronym refers to the use of initial letters (commonly on the first, but sometime more) of the words in the phrase being abbreviated. In many of the more fun examples of abbreviations that appear to be acronyms, a mixture of letters appearing in the phrase is used, not just those from the start of the words. A common example would be XML (eXtendable Mark-up Language), which would not count as a acronym due to the use of 'X' instead of 'E'.
OK. But what has this do to with ORCA? (XML is not in ORCA) Is it the "of" that is the issue? Or are you suggesting that it should become "Abbrevations" to let things like XML into the fold?
well it ought to be Abbreviation rather then Acronym - otherwise it would fall under the Department of the Redundancy Reduction Department.
Hmmm. If I wasn't too lazy to change the logo then I would probably change it. As it is, ORCA is not pedantic and will accept Abbreviations if they are sufficiently worthy/contrived!