Pentagonal prism |
The stupidity of the plurals notwithstanding (eHow never changed their titles), this is pure junk. It's junk mainly because Judge disposes of a fairly complex question in less than 150 words. What do we mean? We mean that Mike doesn't bother to define his terms in the process: oh, sure, he gives us the basic formula (volume is the product of height and the area of the base). This is what Judge tells you to do:
Well, we can't argue with that: as far as we can tell from our research (including Michael's single reference), this is correct. But there are some problems: for one, did you notice that Michael defines "s" as the "length of any one side of the pentagon"? This means that his solution is only good for regular pentagons, but we'll let that slide. It's his use of the unfamiliar word "apothem" that caught our eye: WTF is an apothem? And how can you call this "instruction" if you don't define unfamiliar terms like this?
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Not only did Judge not define the word, he didn't even link to a site that defines it,. We can, though: the apothem is the radius of the inscribed circle of a regular polygon. Had Michael bothered to say this, we might not have nominated him for the Dumbass of the Day award -- but he didn't; so we did. |
¹ The original has been deleted by Leaf Group, but can still be accessed using the Wayback machine at archive.org. Its URL was ehow.com/how_8148201_calculate-volumes-pentagonal-prisms.html
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