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01:20
In Greek mythology, Medusa (; Ancient Greek: Μέδουσα "guardian, protectress") also called Gorgo, was one of the three monstrous Gorgons, generally described as winged human females with living venomous snakes in place of hair. Those who gazed into her eyes would turn to stone. Most sources describe her as the daughter of Phorcys and Ceto, although the author Hyginus makes her the daughter of Gorgon and Ceto.Medusa was beheaded by the Greek hero Perseus, who thereafter used her head, which retained its ability to turn onlookers to stone, as a weapon until he gave it to the goddess Athena to place...
Did you know that when Medusa fell in love with some guy, she would only look at him below his waist?
01:36
Why not the other way around?
 
2 hours later…
03:11
> a woman who, while disguised as a man, became a decorated soldier in the Russian cavalry during the Napoleonic wars. She was the first known female officer in the Russian military. Her memoir, The Cavalry Maiden, is a significant document of its era
Nadezhda Andreyevna Durova (Russian: Наде́жда Андре́евна Ду́рова) (September 17, 1783 – March 21, 1866), also known as Alexander Durov, Alexander Sokolov and Alexander Andreevich Alexandrov, was a woman who, while disguised as a man, became a decorated soldier in the Russian cavalry during the Napoleonic wars. She was the first known female officer in the Russian military. Her memoir, The Cavalry Maiden, is a significant document of its era because few junior officers of the Napoleonic wars published their experiences, and because it is one of the earliest autobiographies in the Russian language...
 
1 hour later…
04:19
Swift observes, “reasoning will never make a man correct an ill opinion, which by reasoning he never acquired.”
@CowperKettle A cool chick.
New York is hosting the US open tennis tournament, with full crowds, very vocal ones, yelling and cheering, and almost entirely unmasked (yes, unmasked!). No one’s commenting on the superspreader issue.
 
2 hours later…
07:37
Wouldn’t it be cool now to have an electric vehicle in the US South, where it may be three weeks or so to restoration of electric power.
 
2 hours later…
09:24
Hii guys , I need some help.
I do like to learn stuff but I don’t enjoy revising.
Any advice .
 
2 hours later…
11:07
@S.M.T Revising what? Revisiting the study material, you mean?
12:05
@M.A.R. Example : Word meanings
Physics , chemistry , maths
Learning about music
Anything.
12:30
@Xanne You can have a hybrid plug-in, it's very handy
One guy on the local webforum wrote that he filled his hybrid plug-in car last time in May.
And his car is cheap, and only has a range of 90 km per full electric charge.
But it suffices, since he only rides it inside Yekaterinburg, which is a very compact city.
So he rides it mainly on electric power, and only in rare cases the battery fully discharges and he has to switch to gasoline for some time.
The year 2021 is the first year when I came across an actual person on the local forum who rides an electric car.
I wonder how long it will take till I see an electric car in the city, or ride one.
I recall that in about 2005 I first saw a woman reaching into her pocket inside a tram car in Yekaterinburg and speak on a mobile phone. It was weird. Before that, only rich people who rode their own cars used mobile phones.
It went fast after that, and by 2010 mobile phones were everywhere.
In 2011 a nurse even used a touchscreen phone in a clinic I was staying in.
In the 1990s, my uncle had a mobile phone but he only used it on special occasions, always taking care to use a cord phone if it was available. This was so expensive, and this despite the fact that he owned a furniture factory.
Today I have two mobiles. ))
Although they are ancient and very, very slow.
12:49
@Xanne Maybe electric cars should go hand in hand with making the power network more robust?
Or use hybrid cars.
@CowperKettle Pretty cool.
13:13
> Footballer Jean-Pierre Adams has died at the age of 73, after being in a coma for the past 39 years.
> He had been in a deep coma since 1982, following an anaesthesiology error while he underwent an operation to treat a ligament rupture injury.
He was 34, went to have a routine surgery, and that was it.
13:47
TIL the opposite of a noobie is an obie.
14:23
This is the last room...and also/even the most important one
Also or even?
15:38
@Curio also
or nothing. you could emphasise and
16:28
@CowperKettle I've read that in the Soviet Union, educational authorities were proactive in promoting students who were talented in the sciences and mathematics.
I don't know if this is true, but it seems plausible.
Do you know anything about this?
16:44
@FaheemMitha I guess this is so in every country. If you are talented, you can participate in Olympiads and get transferred to specialized classess, schools or even to a bigger city.
> The team found that the Delta variant virus was 5.7-fold less sensitive to the sera from previously-infected individuals, and as much as eight-fold less sensitive to vaccine sera, compared with the Alpha variant—in other words, it takes eight times as many antibodies from a vaccinated individual to block the virus. medicalxpress.com/news/…
17:26
Even antibodies from people who had been infected by the Delta variant?
17:45
@CowperKettle I don't think this is true of every country. But the USSR, or at some people in it, thought of itself/themselves as socialist, at least part of the time.
And were Olympiads the only way to get attention?
 
3 hours later…
20:31
@S.M.T sorry, I still don't understand what's the problem. You want to learn all those things, but what is it you don't enjoy?

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