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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 23:00

00:05
@Cerberus I've spent plenty of time in ultra-progressive spaces and have never heard anyone argue that. Obviously it would go against the principle of using someone's preferred pronouns, which might be he or she.
@alphabet Well, I assure you that some people want this.
@Cerberus Sure, and some people think the moon landing was a hoax.
I don't know if you have some kind of point to make.
@Mitch *poolboy
00:27
@Mitch Well duh, of course Oklahoma drivers are friendlier and nicer: Massachusetts drivers are sixteen times denser!! What else would you possibly expect of a toxic swarm like that?
It's just flame biat, ignore it.
blame fiat
You biatch.
@Cerberus You hear that ALL THE TIME these days. It's like someone's lost track of the person they've just now mentioned. It becomes an impersonally distanced pronoun shorn of specificity.
00:34
Incidentally, I wonder about this vowel shift.
@tchrist Luckily, not all the time!
Prune juice.
I don't get while people do it.
It really makes me have to read it twice.
Sloppy language.
Oh, well.
I first heard President Bush the Dimmer do it.
Good old days.
I remember my friend cried when he was reëlected.
My Dutch friend in Holland, mind you.
Sloppy language = sloppy thought.
00:36
Indeed!
Well, "reëlected". I cried when the Supreme Court ditched Gore.
And now.
Some would cry if Bush Junior won against Trump, with tears of joy.
It's easier to have sloppy language with no thought.
Another way to put it.
They is an impersonal pronoun when used with a singular referent. It's a distant unknown, or someone you prefer to consider such.
It's fuzzy.
Indiscrete.
@HippoSawrUs What's wrong with bonkers?
00:42
Building on slop is not recommended.
@think_meaning_buildß Some there are who live on slop.
And others who will drag one down into it.
Pigslop.
Theirown.
Tailsoff.
Enenough.
@tchrist Even then, it is ugly.
00:51
Do you find the royal "we" ugly?
@Cerberus It's ok when the referent is someone, anyone and such. It's subversive otherwise.
Sneaky.
@tchrist I suppose then I don't mind too much.
Subversive is a bit strong haha.
We are not amused.
Smokescreen.
Smokescream.
Smoke em if you got em.
A lot of people don't think of the word "if" as a conjunction.
00:55
That is silly.
It is a conjunction—no buts, ifs, or maybes.
Be real. Most people have no idea what a conjunction even is.
They all suffer from conjunctionitis?
@think_meaning_buildß I feel like you're calling me a pig.
Oink oink
And I mean it to sting.
Oh, no, you have pig flu again?
00:57
12 mins ago, by tchrist
Pigslop.
I could go for a slop right about now.
A bit peckish
A bit piggish I should say
Hahahaha that's porcine humor for you
Verb lop.
Will you change your icon if you have the pig flu?
And here you thought there was no lower form of humor than a pun
It would be a pig pun
@Cerberus What? Is that a symptom?
I should think so?
I mean, you don't look very porcine.
01:00
Good because I had an itching to maybe do so
itswineflu
And that itch looks more like a rash now
@Mitch Don't scratch.
@Mitch I told you!
@Cerberus Conjunctivitis occurs when the conjunctiva becomes swollen or inflamed. This swelling can be due to an infection, an irritant, dry eyes, or an allergy.
Mom always said at dinner " Don't pick at your food .. it'll never heal."
01:02
@think_meaning_buildß Swollen ifs?
Indeed!
Followed by disjunctionitus.
@think_meaning_buildß A problem at a higher level.
Yes, one of many things could make it true.
01:09
To be distinguished from disjunctitis?
Santa never says yo.
No hats this year?
@think_meaning_buildß Hats are no more.
:(
thnx 4 the info
The professionalism of math overflow has won out, this year.
01:30
@Cerberus I've heard people argue that you can talk about anyone using they/them pronouns, but in reality I haven't seen anyone do that exclusively. It's pretty well established, however, that they/them can be used for strangers whose gender/pronouns you don't know (or the opposite, when talking about someone the listener doesn't need to know the gender/pronouns of). It is extremely bizarre to, for example, hear someone refer to their mom (a cis woman) with they/them (which I have in fact seen, but only because the person speaking was a weirdo, not because of any ideology).
> On Tuesday, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation advised Americans to share a secret word or phrase with their family members to protect against AI-powered voice-cloning scams, as criminals increasingly use voice synthesis to impersonate loved ones in crisis.
It should contain at least 8 symbols, including uppercase and lowercase letters, and numbers
@Laurel Apparently you can find a couple thinkpieces online saying that someday we ought to abandon he and she entirely. But I don't think anyone's actively pushing for this.
02:02
There's this stupor again, like I'm filled with a stress hormone, and I just sit and read anything. I want to run a ParkRun today, I hope I get out of this torpor in an hour.
It seems like I can't upload 2.95MB image here.
It keeps saying "Uploading" forever. Have they updated image size limit?
I also can't upload big files somtimes, so I just resize them
02:24
@alphabet There's always someone with a niche opinion…the bio says they/them for the author (not a rare thing to see) but I wonder if they actually use they/them for everyone else in the world in practice. It's much easier to have an opinion that's "wouldn't it be nice…" than to put something that radical into practice
02:42
This is Saturday's game, by the way.
I am straying...
But the 4th one didn't seem to have any clues that could have got me closer.
And the 5th one looks hard.
03:12
@Cerberus Indeed, I'm examining it.
Did you get the 4th year?
I am also examining the 5th.
@Cerberus Almost.
What clues did you use?
And did you get the other ones?
@Cerberus No clue for #4 year, just feeling. Distances #1 to #4: 900m, 3km, 97km, 14km
Well done!
03:16
Years: 12, 1, 2, 1
I'm afraid #5 will spoil the trend.
Wow very nice.
5 will definitely destroy my trend.
I will keep it open for a while, doing other things.
Yes. I'm ruling out Amsterdam ;-)
Are you quite sure?
I mean, I would want to get the exact canal.
Argh...
The problem with 5 is that the region where it could be is the opposite of centred on a point.
And...it might not even be in that region.
03:23
@Cerberus Got it!
1 km, 12 years
#WhenTaken #284 (07.12.2024)

I scored 948/1000👑

1️⃣📍972 m - 🗓️12 yrs - 🥇179/200
2️⃣📍2.6 km - 🗓️1 yrs - 🥇199/200
3️⃣📍96.5 km - 🗓️2 yrs - 🥇193/200
4️⃣📍14.2 km - 🗓️1 yrs - 🥇198/200
5️⃣📍1.1 km - 🗓️12 yrs - 🥇179/200

https://whentaken.com
I deserve to get some sleep now.
OMG you are a beast.
How did you do it??
@jlliagre Did you use a particular clue?
Or was it more like a gamble between a couple of places?
Oh, and did you use any of the new hints?
@Laurel Well, I have seen people on the Internet refer to their boyfriend by they. And not in isolated cases.
Maybe it is for very young people in America only.
 
2 hours later…
05:24
Connections
Puzzle #544
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟦🟦🟦🟦
🟪🟪🟪🟪
Wordle 1,266 5/6

⬛⬛🟩🟨🟩
🟩⬛🟩⬛🟩
🟩⬛🟩⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
 
2 hours later…
07:15
@CowperKettle I resized to 1.60 MB still not uploading.
This screenshot got uploaded successfully. Weird.
But those specific images I'm trying are not uploading. Image size limit is 3MB right?
07:54
@Vikas That's odd
Seems like there's something in those particular images.
If I download an image from Pexels and upload it would work.
Maybe the system thinks it's pornography
704 kb, loaded fine
The other reason I think, could be the program I used to resize them. Maybe it did something in the images. But I'm not sure if it really matters, once it's exported to JPG.
 
1 hour later…
09:10
@Cerberus I didn't used any of the new hints. Spoiler
> After being diagnosed with a brain tumor, Jacobi documented her symptoms and published a paper on the subject titled Descriptions of the Early Symptoms of the Meningeal Tumor Compressing the Cerebellum. From Which the Writer Died. Written by Herself.
Mary Corinna Putnam Jacobi (née Putnam; August 31, 1842 – June 10, 1906) was an English-American physician, teacher, scientist, writer, and suffragist. She was the first woman admitted to study medicine at the University of Paris and the first woman to graduate from a pharmacy college in the United States. Jacobi had a long career practicing medicine, teaching, writing, and advocating for women's rights, especially in medical education. Her scientific rebuttal of the popular idea that menstruation made women unsuited to education was influential in the fight for women's educational opportunities...
09:47
@jlliagre use* ;)
@Cerberus usually it's because it carries over from where people deem it appropriate to where it's superfluous. At least in my case, can't speak for non-ananas
Anas?
@Vikas Yes, typical mistake from a native French speaker because we use a past participle in such a construction (Je n'ai pas utilisé, never je n'ai pas utiliser which is awful albeit pronounced the same).
 
2 hours later…
12:05
@jlliagre Very common mistake in India too.
I used to correct my friend in Facebook comments lol
Is there any chat room for testing?

Sandbox

Where you can play with chat features (except flagging) and ch...
👍🏾
@Cerberus Growing up with Indonesian sexless pronoun, using a single word for both is nothing new to me, of course, but using plural "them" throw me off.
@tchrist Agreed; should have told myself: this is subjunctive, so need to use a different tense. Compared with my sister who went to the USA a few years earlier, I still have a hard time automating my sense of prepositions and tenses. Her social environment has been with a lot more native speakers, so I'm sure it has become unconscious for her a long time ago.
I wonder whether psycholinguistics has been applied to ESL and to machine learning translation. Her "English grammar neural net" must have been closer to a native American speaker's net compared to mine.
@HippoSawrUs Sven Yargs wrote a good answer already. I learn something new everyday.
12:26
16
Q: How did “to wish that” come to hate the present tense in the subordinate clauses it governs, and why is it alone in this?

tchristInspired by this earlier question, I've realized that we have no canonical question addressing the stranglely one-of-a-kind special grammatical rules demanded by the verb wish of its subordinate clauses. This question seeks to remedy that situation. How did the verb to wish that come to requir...

12:41
@tchrist I'll have to read all the answers in detail, partly to expose myself more to the history of English as well as more advanced grammatical categories. I like how you tag the question as a "puzzle" and how the answers then do some kind of post-mortem analysis on how the community of English speakers decide that using subjunctive for "wish" is now normative. And secondly, to advance etymological theories that "justify" it. Humans are prone to rationalizations :-).
I tested image upload in Sandbox. It seems like if image size is around 1MB or above, it will not upload, without displaying any error. I could upload when I resized it to 700KB.
Could it be because of my Internet? I have 40 Mbps connection. I never faced this issue before.
@tchrist Sometimes I just write a sentence without much care for grammar, so here's the corrected version of the above message: @Cerberus Growing up with Indonesian genderless pronouns, using the same singular third-person pronoun for both genders is nothing new to me of course, but using a plural "them" for singular third-person pronoun still throws me off.
 
2 hours later…
14:31
#travle #724 +1
🟧✅🟩✅🟩✅✅✅
https://travle.earth
This is idiotic. Nobody would go that way.
14:43
Wordle 1,267 5/6

⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛🟨🟩⬛
🟨⬛⬛🟩🟩
⬛🟨🟨⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
15:14
Wordle 1,267 5/6

⬛⬛🟨⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛🟩
⬛🟨⬛⬛🟨
⬛🟨🟨⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
15:39
Wordle 1,267 5/6

⬛⬛🟨⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟨⬛⬛⬛🟩
⬛🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
#WhenTaken #284 (07.12.2024)

I scored 870/1000🏆

1️⃣📍1.9 km - 🗓️0 yrs - 🥇200/200
2️⃣📍5.3 km - 🗓️0 yrs - 🥇200/200
3️⃣📍1.5K km - 🗓️3 yrs - 🥈158/200
4️⃣📍54.2 m - 🗓️4 yrs - 🥇196/200
5️⃣📍165 km - 🗓️28 yrs - 🥉116/200

https://whentaken.com
#travle #724 +0 (Perfect)
✅✅✅✅✅✅✅
https://travle.earth
@Robusto I did ;-)
@jlliagre For real or in game?
@Robusto In game. I didn't visit three of these countries, even less travelled that way. I was joking. I agree travle is becoming silly. You often just have to remember meaningless "shortcuts".
Agreed.
15:48
@Robusto If you're interested, the inauguration seems to be moved to 6pm local time, so 12pm EST. Looks like France24 also provides YouTube streaming here. CNN has an article on it. The inauguration will be preceded with Macron giving a speech around 6pm local time.
@GratefulDisciple Cool, thanks.
A concert will follow at 9pm local time featuring Lang-lang and Yo-yo ma (the only two I recognize). Hopefully this is streamed as well. DG article of the line up.
@jlliagre I had such a good start on WhenTaken, then blew it at the end.
@GratefulDisciple Lang-Lang always sounds like a panda to me. ;-)
@Robusto I don't like his antics either :-) Hopefully, given the setting, he would be more subdued and mainstream in his body and facial movement.
@GratefulDisciple lol
Connections
Puzzle #545
🟨🟪🟩🟨
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟪🟪🟪🟪
🟦🟦🟦🟦
15:53
Oh, new shiny blocks!
@Vikas a true friend
@Robusto The DG Livestream is here but requires subscription to STAGE+. Looks like a new model for enjoying concerts, no doubt influenced by Covid. (I'm not a member.)
Éponine Thénardier (; French: [epɔnin tenaʁdje]), also referred to as "Ponine", the "Jondrette girl" and the "young working-man", is a fictional character in the 1862 novel Les Misérables by Victor Hugo. The character is introduced as a spoiled and pampered child, but appears later in the novel as a ragged and impoverished teenager who speaks in the argot of the Parisian streets, while retaining vestiges of her former charm and innocence. == In the novel == === Life in Montfermeil === Éponine is born in 1815, the oldest child of the Thénardiers. As children, Éponine and her younger sister Azelma...
A whole article about a character in a novel.
I've listened up to the moment where the uprising of 5 July 1832 starts
Daily Octordle #1048
6️⃣5️⃣
8️⃣7️⃣
9️⃣4️⃣
🕚3️⃣
Score: 53
Daily Sequence Octordle #1048
5️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🔟
🕚🕛
Score: 68
16:17
Connections
Puzzle #545
🟨🟪🟩🟨
🟪🟦🟩🟩
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟩🟪🟦🟪
🟩🟪🟩🟩
:-(
Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Dec. 7, 2024

T I G H T R O P E
✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ 💔 💔 ✅ ✅ ✅ 🎉

My Score: 1700
@jlliagre Why the sad face? Those puzzles are hard, and you only made one error.
Same as me, btw.
Messier 74 (also known as NGC 628 and Phantom Galaxy) is a large spiral galaxy in the equatorial constellation Pisces. It is about 32 million light-years away from Earth. The galaxy contains two clearly defined spiral arms and is therefore used as an archetypal example of a grand design spiral galaxy. The galaxy's low surface brightness makes it the most difficult Messier object for amateur astronomers to observe. Its relatively large angular (that is, apparent) size and the galaxy's face-on orientation make it an ideal object for professional astronomers who want to study spiral arm structure...
A very cool photo
16:45
@Robusto I only found a single group while you found all of them. The blue and purple ones were out of reach for me anyway.
Daily Octordle #1048
8️⃣7️⃣
🔟3️⃣
🕛5️⃣
🕚6️⃣
Score: 62
@jlliagre They need to mark success/failure better then.
@Robusto Success is a single color row.
@jlliagre Yes, but who has the time to notice that? ;-)
@jlliagre You can do historical Connections to get practice. That's what I did. Once you do, you start to see the subtle sorts of relationships they're looking for.
@Robusto True but Spoiler
17:11
1
Q: Proposal to award the gold Copy Editor badge multiple times

tchristNearly four years ago during major updates to how the review queues worked and following discussion on the matter, we decided to award the gold Steward badge multiple times for any given review queue (such as for Low Quality, Suggested Edits, etc) whenever the next thousand review instances on t...

17:52
@jlliagre That is true. As I say, it's a very hard quiz. And especially if you're not a native English speaker (and a well-read one).
@tchrist I take it you don't agree with @Xanne's meta post and my response.
18:05
@alphabet If that's not already on the billboard, someone with a spray can and ladder should make it so.
and maybe then later someone else with a different colored paint in a spray can and a different ladder (it would be weird if it were the same ladder but different people?) would tag it with a comma between pool and boy to restore the minced meaning.
@Mitch ladders make me anxious
They feel like unfinished design. Like someone wanted to make them safe but thought that wasn't marketable enough
@CowperKettle I don't get it. Is it a joke about a gender reveal party?
@Robusto I also found that group pretty easily. But the rest I wasn't patient enough to think whether "sun" and "storm" belong in the same group or "legs" and "wings".
@jlliagre I'm starting to like travle. learning all the small obscure counties of all these places.
Except...
1) the name. I don't know how to pronounce it. I think they're trying for the actual pronunciation of 'travel' just spelled Britishy, but it doesn't feel right.
@M.A.R. I don't know how they make these puzzles, but they are quite adept at grouping items by tangential attributes.
2) any country path from Africa to anywhere has to go through Egypt/Israel, and America, both North and South, are very boring.
@M.A.R. You should see how -they- feel, all these people walking all over them.
@Robusto They try to have a few words that could be in multiple groups.
@Mitch Yes. That's the beauty and the difficulty of the game.
@Mitch How about going from the US to St Pierre and Miquelon?
18:20
@Robusto And sometimes there is a theme that kind puts all words in one category. eg all three letter words, or all words from show tune titles.
I made that last one up.
They should use it as a theme.
I'd totally do that puzzle.
@Robusto Is that possible (in the game) do they cut up Canadian provinces?
@Mitch Yeah, those are the ones I usually wait for until the end, when you have the first three and have merely to go through the formality of clicking all elements in the bottom row.
Pretty much all I've ever gotten is a country in Africa and a country in Eurasia.
@Mitch That's not a province. It's a separate country, or something like that.
@Robusto You'd think at that point you'd finally figure out what the description of that last group is but more often than not it still looks random to me.
@Robusto Oh. It's France.
@Mitch Yeah. Like when they expect you to add the same prefix to all those words. Sheesh.
18:23
As in not just some protectorate or non-country territory like Guam for the US, but France considers those (meaningless) islands as France.
France France.
Sovereign territory of the terroir de la France.
We should conquer St Pierre and Miquelon (the two of us could probably manage that) and then thumb our noses at @jlliagre in chat. What do you say? You in?
Allons Enfants de LAAAAAAAAAA Patrie, da da da da da da da dum
France Mere probably wouldn't even notice. They have other problems right now.
@Robusto I could do it myself but it'd be kind of a pain, it'd be nice to have an extra pair of hands.
I'll make the brownies in case we get hungry.
18:28
@Robusto Oh... that's sorta fun. Or they all end in numbers. just out there patterns. Fun but exasperating.
@Robusto I doubt France won't notice. Remember the Malvinas?
@Robusto Nice. And we can pick up some maple syrup on the way back.
@jlliagre That was the UK, not France. Or do you think you own all the islands?
@jlliagre France? -I- didn't notice.
We're freedom fighters, baby. Watch out!
18:31
Hey can I join in or is Middle East too much heat right now?
Free St Pierre and Miquelon!
@M.A.R. Sure. You'll have to bring a treat, though.
@Robusto Nice! I'd take more but you want to leave some for others.
The news always seems more interesting when I'm not following it. Suddenly S. Korea is on fire, France is on fire, well, more than it was before, Syria is having a terrorist cancer relapse
@Robusto Baklava it is
@Robusto Also a good coat and gloves.
@M.A.R. OK, you're definitely in.
@Mitch Um, we might want to wait till summer ...
18:33
Hold on... is there a bridge from the mainland to the islands?
Got you covered in the mittens department too. Just don't mix them with baklava
@Robusto OK...they're not going anywhere.
Yeah, let's hold off till ... July? When things are too hot down here they ought to be just fine up there.
@Mitch they phase in and out of the islands. It's an ability unique to the French.
We can fill our canteens with iced tea.
18:37
@M.A.R. There's probably a ferry.
BTW, I'm "playing" Disco: Elysium (quotes cause it's more like an interactive novel than a game) and I'm laughing my ass off
I totally recommend it
@M.A.R. Is there disco music?
If not, I'd feel like that would be false advertising.
@Mitch that's what you said about the tooth ferry and she hasn't shown up yet
I should really throw the teeth out
@Mitch the main character is pretty disco, yeah
Seriously, it's super well-written
@M.A.R. I think you should just give the teeth back to who you took them from.
@Mitch the interest rate isn't worth it by now
18:43
BTW, the tooth fairy is gay.
Too much detail
So is the tooth ferry.
Wait, is the tooth ferry actually the boat that Charon captains? THe one on the way to Hades?
You could send your dead teeth to Hades. That would teach them.
They're gonna get them and not know what to do with them.
Kind of perplexing to get such a package.
Not creepy enough. And not enough sex for Greek mythos
Then it would be instructive in many respects.
18:49
@Robusto Are you sure? Yet Malouines sounds very much like Saint-Malo demonym.
Notre Dame cleaned up nicely.
A reminder to drink lots of milk to maintain healthy bones
@jlliagre Easy there, mon frere. Next thing you'll be wanting Louisiana back.
@Xanne We were lucky with that fire, that gave the opportunity to clean it.
@Xanne my first reaction was holy crap it's been 5 years already since the fire?
18:52
@Robusto What? Not French either??
@jlliagre Luck? I think it was an inside job, to garner pity from the world.
@Robusto wait...
@Robusto Make sense.
@jlliagre Not since Napoleon I sold it.
It was a metaphor for French politics
18:53
wasn't it an actual inside job? like somebody inside tipped over one of those incense things?
@M.A.R. France is just jealous that the US got a would-be dictator for president. Now they're trying to one-up us.
Then things got a bit incense
@Robusto Yeah it's not a good look
@Robusto today I was reminiscing with friends about a pharma class on viral infections where the prof said "don't think Americans are hot stuff. They're even bigger idiots than us Iranians"
@M.A.R. I have no rebuttal.
18:56
The context was eradicated diseases coming back due to antivax parents' child neglect but it still applies
Wow... that's pretty stupid
@Robusto Napoléon Who?
Nov 13 at 22:21, by Robusto
Q. What are the boundaries of stupidity?
A. Canada and Mexico
—Stephen King, writing after the election
@jlliagre Napoleon ee
@jlliagre Napoleon I, meaning the first one.
18:58
@tchrist I thought only Hugh Grant still said that
@Robusto What a strange name for a realtor.
I think there were 14 Napoleons in all.
The real Hugh Grant is dead. The current one is a robot operated remotely by an MI6 agent.
@HippoSawrUs You've been watching Love, actually, haven't you.
Jerrold Laurence Samuels (May 3, 1938 – March 10, 2023) was an American singer, songwriter, record producer, and talent agent. Under the pseudonym Napoleon XIV, he achieved one-hit wonder status with the #3 hit novelty song "They're Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!" in 1966. Samuels occasionally revisited the Napoleon XIV character to record other songs, usually comedy records with an insanity theme. Under the name Scott David (his son's name), he cowrote "As If I Didn't Know" with Larry Kusik, a top-10 hit for Adam Wade in 1961. Samuels also wrote "The Shelter of Your Arms", a top-20 hit for Sammy...
@M.A.R. That would explain his youthful appearance.
19:01
I feel sorry for all those institutionalized Napoleon's. Not much respect given them for their station.
@Robusto Napoleon XIV lived in King of Prussia, weird.
This is called "Napeleoni"
@jlliagre Yeah that's strange. How could he possibly afford such a nice place?
19:03
Торт "Наполеон"
@CowperKettle hmmmm, so who came up with it first? squints
I mean, obviously after Napoleon
@GratefulDisciple Wow, thanks. Posed well and a great answer.
Very long
@jlliagre It's monarchs all the way down there.
@Robusto and Elon.
@jlliagre Yes. Our unelected leader.
19:20
@Mitch I don't think I've seen that one.
I don't even know the name of the one with Julia Roberts.
Just a girl asking a boy to love her, that one
I couldn't tell you the name of that for a million dollars
I've seen them all twice, I think
They all run together
@HippoSawrUs Mitch can't go more than a million and a half. You should work on it.
I really do love Alan Rickman…
I'm going to watch it, maybe again
I can't remember these things
That's a millefeuille.
Kind of.
> Why did the health insurance CEO get shot?
Because their bulletproof plan to deny claims didn't cover incoming projectiles.
19:26
This is a Napolean to me. How the local French pastry shop makes them.
YES
If only we had projectiles
@Xanne Napolean?
Then we'd have health coverage
@jlliagre No, it's a Napoleon.
Napoleon?
19:29
Napoleon V or VI, I can't remember.
Notting Hill, really?
A mille-feuille (French: [mil fœj]; lit. 'thousand-sheets'), also known by the names Napoleon in North America, vanilla slice in the United Kingdom, and custard slice, is a French dessert made of puff pastry layered with pastry cream. Its modern form was influenced by improvements made by Marie-Antoine Carême. Traditionally, a mille-feuille is made up of three layers of puff pastry (pâte feuilletée), alternating with two layers of pastry cream (crème pâtissière). The top pastry layer is finished in various ways: sometimes it is topped with whipped cream, or it may be dusted with icing sugar, cocoa...
He was the sweetest of the Napoleons.
Someone owes me $100,000 just for effort
@HippoSawrUs Does projectile vomit count?
Archive October 15, 2024
Connections Puzzle #492
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Working on the archives just to stay in shape.
 
1 hour later…
20:36
@Robusto I long ago upvoted both question and answer. I certainly agree that there's a problem. I am less than certain on how best to address the problem. Even if this were for certain driven mainly by "reviewer badge greed", there is no existing mechanism to change the number of daily reviews one can do, let alone in just one queue. It's not a per-site setting that SE staff can tweak for us, at least as far as I know. The CV/day does have one of those, but ours is set to 24 like most sites.
I've been trying to keep half an eye on unmerited closures and reverse them if I feel strongly enough about it. There are all kinds related issues here, like how the migration path is guaranteed to work only for moderators.
Before any developer work could even be contemplated, I imagine that SE would ask us see what we can make happen without that, such as by posting another ELU meta post asking people to, in effect, chill, or by having a quiet private word with individuals we feel are overdoing it. We can also do review-only suspensions if need be. What we DO NOT WANT is public naming and shaming.
@jsw29 No, not really. Plus the public SEDE lacks that information. We'd have to prevail upon a friendly CM to crunch the numbers for us, because only Stack Exchange employees have access to raw vote information at that granularity that they could collate it. — tchrist ♦ 4 mins ago
Remember I did some preliminary cursory examination and discovered that the CV review queue leaderboard did not line up with how the actual CV ranking worked out. In some cases it was out of order, but in other cases it was totally in left field.
I wish people would edit to make the question more answerable instead of just close voting everything as a sort of knee jerk reaction to seeing a low quality question appear.
And I don't think that last sentence needs knee in it. It's a jerk's maneuver.
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