As a Hokie, it drives me crazy that journalists (and ESPN) continue to use the non-name “VA Tech”. It’s VT, Virginia Tech, or the full name, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University. https://brand.vt.edu/licensing/university-trademarks.html#tr...
eitally|8 months ago
As a Wahoo, I don't have the "VA Tech" issue, but I assume journos write it that way because their style guides tell them abbreviating states is acceptable, and they don't care that they're doing it to a trademark that doesn't support abbreviation.
MengerSponge|8 months ago
"Cal Poly" is shorthand for the SLO campus. It's the original, and the most established one. https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/team/_/id/13/ca...
Cal Poly Humboldt was only renamed three years ago. It's going to take a few generations to get the same cache as SLO.
Funny thing: I met a German physician who works in California now. His degree is from Humboldt University, an old and incredibly prestigious university in Berlin. He found it "funny" (provincial) that people so often register "Humboldt University" as "Humboldt State". One of these things is not like the other!
alexjplant|8 months ago
patwolf|8 months ago
scroot|8 months ago
itsmartapuntocm|8 months ago
schiffern|8 months ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegram_style
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headline#Headlinese
Per the convention, "Virginia" is shortened to its acronym VA. So although it's written "VA Tech" it's meant to be read aloud (or in your head) as "Virginia Tech."
anton-c|8 months ago
VA tech does not have the most agreeable ring compared to the others you listed tho that's for sure.
fhdkweig|8 months ago
fvrghl|8 months ago
analog31|8 months ago
loudmax|8 months ago
Incidentally, the author is the wife of physicist Sean Carroll. She certainly knows how to abbreviate Virginia Tech, but Ars Technica's editors will want to influence the title to appeal to a global audience.
"VA Tech" is a reasonable balance between writing something unambiguous for a global audience, but short enough to be interesting. Nobody's going to be interested in an article titled "Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University scientists build a better fog harp."
Of course, you still need to read the article itself to find out what the heck is a "fog harp," and why we need a better one.
atvrager|8 months ago
glumbum|8 months ago
But seriously, I'm so glad to hear that Violent Assault Tech scientists have made the Fog Harp more efficient. Finally I can reliably surprise my victims! This truly is Value Added Tech, and in such high quality Vinyl Acetate that I'll never worry about Vaginal Atrophy again!
pimlottc|8 months ago
gowld|8 months ago
btreecat|8 months ago
unknown|8 months ago
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