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00:06
Surely there must be a better tag than ?
I think Russian is superfluous.
And usage is a bit meaningless.
So I thought (having the same ELU experience as you), but then looked at the actual questions.
I think JSB killed usage on ELU.
@Vitaly The name fits the question?
11
Q: Where outside the former Soviet Union is the Russian language widely used?

Stepan VihorWhere, outside the former Soviet Union, is the Russian language so widely used that the knowledge of the other language in practically not required for traveller etc.? In Ukraine, for example, Russian is so widely used that most of the books are in Russian, and in talk-shows people answer the qu...

8
Q: Is Russian widely known in Georgia?

lechlukaszIs Russian so widely known in Georgia, that one can expect to be able to communicate with people in Georgia in shops, buses, hostels etc.? Older people should know Russian well from the times of Soviet Union, but what with younger people? Is it safe to assume that the knowledge of Russian is eno...

here's hoping that we get someone like JSB…
Who would do such hateful work?
00:10
Not me. I can barely tolerate trying to explain anything in the comments.
5 mins ago, by Vitaly
Surely there must be a better tag than ?
Not only I'm getting a knee-jerk reaction to it, but it conceivably might prove to be a continual source of misunderstanding in future.
That tag is more than a little ambiguously loaded.
00:29
I would much rather study Russian than Physics right now.
Oh, I'd much rather read about spider toxins than peruse the list of tags right now. Which (the former) I'm going to do.
Sounds like fun!
Hmm. So the mature spider toxin sequence is typically not produced as a “one-off” but rather as a collection of variants that can differ significantly or by as little as one amino acid.
I have to memorize this: seems like a good conversation-starter.
@Mahnax Can you think of an evolutionary advantage it confers?
00:50
Hmm…
If the spider's prey develops a resistance to the toxin, it would take just one slight change in the chemical makeup for the venom to be effective again.
[?]
Oh, wait.
@Mahnax Yes! According to the text I'm reading, such hypermutation allows spiders to 1) optimize toxins with new functionalities 2) target different receptors in multiple species of insect or even differentially spliced versions of the same receptor within an insect.
Oh, cool!
That is actually really interesting.
01:10
@Vitaly Chicks did that.
@Vitaly Right, the basic functions of natural mutations I guess.
01:25
> Although it may be safely said that a tarantula bite is not dangerous to humans, it is usually deadly for dogs (Isbister et al., 2003).
I am not making this up!
I find it interesting that some spiders inject less venom per bite when dealing with small and harmless prey than when dealing with large and aggressive prey.
This implies that the spider knows what kind of prey it is dealing with before the bite.
Which corroborates my hypothesis that spiders are our supreme overlords because, come on, that seems smarter than anything some humans are capable of.
01:42
Spiders are our supreme overlords?
Do you have any other evidence?
Oh, have faith!
OK!
faiths
Am I faithing correctly?
I have to acknowledge that you are faithing with incredible skill. How do you pull this off?
If you focus really hard, squint your eyes, clench your abdominal muscles, and flap your arms as a pigeon flaps its wings, then you can faith like me.
02:02
@Vitaly Why does this surprise you?
@Mahnax What a lovely sight.
@Cerberus Haha.
@Vitaly I do not contest this.
Innit tho!?
You mean innit tho!
Better?
02:05
À la Lauren from the Catherine Tate Show.
@Mahnax Yay!
@Cerberus OK.
So uhm the idea is that we all simply switch to the Russian room from now on?
Sure!
Why?
I'm kidding.
It makes more sense to stick around in the English room.
02:09
Oh I thought you were Very Serious.
No.
Not Very Serious.
Sorry to disappoint.

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