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00:00
@tchrist: ^
If she's right, Florida is soft-pedaling the Covid-19 cases by ~15%.
@Robusto That's just the deliberate malfeasance. It doesn't take into account that we don't catch most cases.
But deliberate malfeasance is the point. Once again the Republicans think they can paper over the truth.
They're talking about renting cruise ships for overflow hotel rooms at the RNC convention in Jacksonville. No good can come of that.
They'll lose Florida because of anger over the virus explosion there if they do this in the currently explosive climate. And if they cancel it again you know who will be apoplectic.
Just the cases we know about have been crazy over the past three days.
The ones in Florida, I mean.
00:15
@tchrist I can think of some good that can come of that.
Think of the convention room allotment strategy planners as the death panels we didn't expect. No end of hay to be made of that.
The hubris of those who pretend to be able to plan anything months in advance will not go unnoticed.
Be it by the gods of Olympus or of the ballot booth.
The problem is, only the lower tier will be relegated to the cruise ships.
But I suppose they'll all be rubbing shoulders and glad-handing, and breathing in each other's faces.
All that jowl slappin'.
It's interesting that they're worried about plots by Democrats, yet the most fiendish plot the Democrats could foist upon them can't rival the damage their own stupidity will do.
00:37
They aren't really worried about ploys by Democrats; that's just part of the long con scam.
Part of the Outrage Machine™ that includes Faux News and Rush Limbaugh and others of their ilk.
00:55
I didn't know those were called joeys.
> In wombats and marsupial moles, the pouch opens backward or down. Backwards facing pouches would not work well in kangaroos or opossums as their young would readily fall out.
Similarly, forward-facing pouches would not work well for wombats and marsupial moles as they both dig extensively underground. Their pouches would fill up with dirt and suffocate the developing young.
Kangaroo mothers will lick their pouches clean before the joey crawls inside. Kangaroo pouches are sticky to support their young joey. Koalas are unable to clean out their pouches since they face backwards, so just pri
The pouch is a distinguishing feature of female marsupials, monotremes and possibly most extinct non-placental mammals including eutherians like Zalambdalestes (and rarely in the males as in the water opossum and the extinct thylacine); the name marsupial is derived from the Latin marsupium, meaning "pouch". Marsupials give birth to a live but relatively undeveloped fetus called a joey. When the joey is born it crawls from inside the mother to the pouch. The pouch is a fold of skin with a single opening that covers the teats. Inside the pouch, the blind offspring attaches itself to one of the mother...
01:35
@CowperKettle it is even less in your power to tell Canadians what to do.
Before you take on improving the world, clean your room first.
If you can't even bring order to the two square yards right beside you, that's all the proof we need that you have no say whatsoever in curing all hunger and ending all world wars.
@CowperKettle you've been photographed with murderers, too. There's photographic proof of that.
Putin has not murdered anyone. That's the whole point. You are clutching for straws.
You could improve the world yourself, right now. Instead you tell other people how they aren't. That's just sad.
@RegDwigнt Um, Washingtonians?
> Are female leaders better at fighting a pandemic?

I compiled death rates from the coronavirus for 21 countries around the world, 13 led by men and eight by women. The male-led countries suffered an average of 214 coronavirus-related deaths per million inhabitants. Those led by women lost only one-fifth as many, 36 per million.
@tchrist nah, more like Ekaterinburgians.
@RegDwigнt That’s Miles Vorkosigan’s wife!
@tchrist if female leaders were better at anything, we'd have female leaders.
> Let’s start by acknowledging that there have been plenty of wretched female leaders over the years. Indeed, according to research I once did for a book, female leaders around the world haven’t been clearly better than male counterparts even at improving girls’ education or reducing maternal mortality.
> “Countries led by women do seem to be particularly successful in fighting the coronavirus,” noted Anne W. Rimoin, an epidemiologist at U.C.L.A. “New Zealand, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Iceland, Norway have done so well perhaps due to the leadership and management styles attributed to their female leaders.”
01:45
@tchrist Well of course not. Girls don't like other girls.
@RegDwigнt Unless they're flexitarians.
@tchrist confirmation bias. Look for countries led by red cars, and suddenly all the countries you look at are led by red cars. It's quite amazing!
> There has been solid research that it makes a difference to have more women on boards and in grass-roots positions, but evidence that they make better presidents or prime ministers has been lacking — until Covid-19 came along.
I don't trust any ref I haven't forged myself.
Qui bono.
Or cui, even, if you feel like being fancy.
Mar 12 at 3:15, by tchrist
The leader of the free world spoke today. Serious words that needed saying.
Mar 12 at 3:15, by tchrist
I'm going to miss Merkel.
> “We often joke that men drivers never ask for directions,” observed Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel of the University of Pennsylvania. “I actually think there’s something to that also in terms of women’s leadership, in terms of recognizing expertise and asking experts for advice, and men sort of barreling ahead like they got it.”

He has a point. Those leaders who handled the virus best were those who humbly consulted public health experts and acted quickly, and many were women; in contrast, male authoritarians who botched the response were suspicious of experts and too full of themselves.
01:49
@tchrist Good, Germany spent the last twenty years looking for the one person that would.
Mar 12 at 3:30, by Cerberus
So are we all.
@Cerberus has been brainwashed by Beatrix. Don't listen to Cerberus.
People in the real world don't think you're entitled to anything just because you were born into a family.
What is it about authoritarian leaders that has made them particularly ineffective at guiding their countries through this pandemic?
Oh they are very effective alright. It's just that they are very effective at their goals, not ours.
That.
> While women have generally outshone men as international leaders, that does not seem true within the United States. Some female governors have done better, others worse, so there isn’t an obvious gender gap at home.

It’s also possible that this isn’t about female leaders but about the kind of country that chooses a woman to lead it.
Plenty of men would never vote for a woman, period.
@RegDwigнt Bojo almost blew it though.
01:54
Orban and Bolsonaro and Lukashenko are doing exceptionally fine, and it's only a matter of days that we can welcome Berlusconi back.
All is fine and well.
Also, Trump 2020.
@RegDwigнt But not their nations. And I was just thinking of Berlusconi.
You are not alone. 50 million Italians are right on your side.
Not in that way.
Jul 29 '14 at 0:12, by RegDwigнt
Every country has the government it deserves.
I first was made to think about female leaders and the coronavirus pandemic by Madeleine Albright, who mentioned it.
01:56
If you truly deserved Hillary, you'd have Hillary.
> "By the age of 50, every man has the face he deserves."
All this talk about gender is incredibly sexist anyway.
Just like all that talk about black lives is incredibly racist.
I wasn't talking about gender.
I was talking about sex.
You write the words "black lives" on a poster, you are a racist. There is no two ways about it.
There is no such thing as "black lives". There is life, and there is not.
> The president stressed the unity of a graduating class that came “from every race, religion, color and creed.”
01:59
I know quite a few people that are shaking their heads in disbelief at y'all kneeling down on one knee for 8 minutes 46 seconds. That is the exact gesture that killed the man. What exactly are you commemorating.
Is it just me, or did he really just mention not four things but rather each of two things twice?
1. race
2. religion
3. color
4. creed
1=3, 2=4
Yes I'm following.
Oh fuck they're all howling again.
It's 8pm.
Hour of the howling housebound.
But you are forgetting that he could write anything at all. People on the Internet don't care about reading what others say. They only care about writing themselves.
@RegDwigнt I'm sure he didn't write it. He could barely read it.
02:02
Yeah well thankfully it doesn't matter if all you care about is your own writing.
And he had another neurological glitch while giving it. He missed his mouth with the glass of water and had to reach up with the other hand to guide it in safely the second time.
A week ago he couldn't even stand up straight, leaning back and forth all over the place. And had to be helped down the stairs. These are all clear neurodegenerative tells.
Yeah. Well. On the plus side, he didn't fuck up a whole Ukraine just to help his son not lose a measly $1 million.
He's kinda busy fucking up a whole nother country altogether.
There was something in the news today about some huge bribe that got busted in Ukraine.
You should have voted Sanders, is what I'm saying. But you never will.
Because it's nowhere as entertaning as reading BS on Twitter.
@RegDwigнt How can you know I didn't?
02:06
Oh I don't know jack shit. I'm just talking aloud.
That's my white privilege.
I liked Mrs Warren better. She didn't get so angry as Mr Sanders.
Bernie seems bitter at times. Maybe just frustrated that it's taken him fifty years to get people to listen to him.
I watched this last night. Cringe factor over nine thousand.
Lindsay is one smart girl. Lindsay for president.
@tchrist yes, that. Who wouldn't be bitter at this point. Other than Cheney and Wolfowitz and Perle.
@RegDwigнt Lindsey is barely smart enough to get re-elected in South Carolina, if that.
I have the luxury of not giving two shits, is what I'm saying. Other people are not quite as lucky.
They could be, but they chose not to.
He's a brown-nosed, fawning sycophant, not a senator.
Doesn't matter.
Current chair of Senate Judiciary Committee. Again, doesn't matter. Rerunning the Clinton email non-scandal because Trump told him to. Four years later. Dumb reruns.
02:14
I'm not up to date on Lindsey the So-Car girl. I only know of the Lindsay that I think is in NYC or something.
@RegDwigнt I saw Woody Guthrie.
She did an exceptional documentary on The Hobbit once, and that's how I came to trust her.
Woody was prolly cranking on his Trump song.
@tchrist well this land is your land.
> Mister Trump made a tramp out of me;
Mister Trump has made a tramp out of me;
Paid him alla my bonds and savin's
To move into his Beach Haven;
Yes, Trump has made a tramp out of me.
@RegDwigнt America the Beautiful was written here, you know.
Like here here.
02:17
Yeah. Well.
Apr 5 '11 at 15:16, by RegDwight
It's called the American Dream for a reason. In Europe, it's called Reality.
It was these purple mountain majesties, these amber waves of grain.
@RegDwigнt Gay.
Inorite.
Note the date. Ah, good times.
Nine fucking years ago.
Now think of the way the things will be nine years from now.
That was...so unfathomably long ago.
Trump 2028.
I really don't think Ivanka will make it.
02:20
He'll lose, thankfully. To Huckabee.
Sarah?
Any which one.
They say a man can dream. There's a reason they don't say a woman can.
I regard before me at nearly arm's reach a brace of gentle does at dusk browsing my verdant waves of grass.
Rain brings grass, grass brings deer, deer bring lions.
Ilsebill salzte nach.
Award-winning first sentence from a novel by a Grass.
Der schönste erste Satz war ein im Jahr 2007 veranstalteter Wettbewerb der Initiative Deutsche Sprache und der Stiftung Lesen. Gesucht wurde der schönste erste Satz in der deutschsprachigen Literatur. Die Gewinner des Wettbewerbs wurden am 6. November 2007 in der Alten Oper in Frankfurt am Main gekürt. Den Hauptpreis gewann der Anfang des Romans Der Butt von Günter Grass: „Ilsebill salzte nach.“ == Wettbewerb == Für den Wettbewerb kamen alle in deutscher Sprache verfassten Romane und Erzählungen sowie Kinder- und Jugendliteratur in Frage. Besonderes Gewicht wurde bei diesem Wettbewerb auf...
Note how the novel is actually called "The Butt".
Truly now, how can you do any better than that.
@RegDwigнt People pretending they know what the world will be like even eight scant weeks from now are braggadocious blusterers of no repute. Like those planning the 2020 Republican coronation.
02:25
I gave up caring about the future some twenty years ago.
I don't even know what day of the week it is now. Haven't know for twenty years.
Grass is a 1989 science fiction novel by Sheri S. Tepper, and the first book from her Marjorie Westriding series, known as the Arbai trilogy. Styled as an ecological mystery, it presents one of Tepper's earliest and perhaps most radical statements on themes that would come to dominate her fiction, in which despoliation of the planet is explicitly linked to gender and social inequalities. Considered to be among her best work, as well as being a definitive work of science fiction literature, Grass was nominated for both the Hugo and Locus award in 1990. It was included in the SF Masterworks classic...
@RegDwigнt Take no heed for the morrow, for the morrow shall take care of itself: sufficient unto each day are the weevils thereof.
I live my life "hand-to-mouth", as they say in German. It's a bliss. You should try.
Fix the things that you're responsible for. Fuck the rest.
Paycheck to paycheck?
Yeah that might actually be the etymology I think.
But I'm talking metaphorical here.
Day to day. One step at a time. Buddhism. You know.
@RegDwigнt “It is not our part to master all the tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succour of those years wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know, so that those who live after may have clean earth to till.”
Where "tide" is the old Germanic zeitsense.
The ages to come.
02:30
Yes yes I'm equipped with the necessary background to follow.
Adn "in the fields that we know" is a ref/riff to Lord Dunsany, believe it or else.
Time and time waits for no man.
Beyond the Fields We Know is a collection of fantasy short stories by Irish writer Lord Dunsany, and edited by Lin Carter. The title is derived from a description of the location of the border of Elfland used over one hundred times in Lord Dunsany's best-known novel, The King of Elfland's Daughter. It was first published in paperback by Ballantine Books as the forty-seventh volume of its Ballantine Adult Fantasy series in May, 1972. It was the series' fourth Dunsany volume, and the second collection of his shorter fantasies assembled by Carter. Dunsany is considered a major influence on the works...
I've not read anything of his. Too many other writers. Is my excuse.
It was a repeating refrain in Dunsany's tales of the Perilous Realm (Faërie).
02:32
Call me shallow but I'll go listen to Sting's Fields of Gold right now.
Who plans for the centuries? Who makes plans on a scale beyond a mortal timeframe?
Go listen.
Night falls.
Also as my dad is reminding me of right now, it's my fucking birthday today. Did I mention I never knew the current date?
You don't know what day it is? But it's your birthday?
Well yes. Story of my life.
Your mother shall have called you.
02:34
She warned me earlier this week that she would.
@tchrist I stopped caring about that nonsense at the age of 25.
You cannot hold back the tide that way.
I've not celebrated a birthday since. Though I reserve the right to build the LEGO Technic Porsche 911 tomorrow.
Celebrate is something else.
Sep 5 '18 at 20:00, by RegDwigнt
Stopped aging. Not physically but mentally.
@tchrist Is my point. But then again is it really. Who's in charge of what words mean if not myself. And why are they in charge and not me.
It is only right that your mother of all people should celebrate your nativity. The opposite of you.
@RegDwigнt Now Humpty, take care.
02:37
Mothers be like that.
@tchrist it's always been my favorite book since long before I even stopped caring.
@RegDwigнt You are not alone.
It's a good idea actually. I should re-read it tomorrow. Last I did so was circa 1989. Countries still existed that no longer do.
@RegDwigнt Many and more.
Tanniel is the man.
Or however you spell him.
Probably with two Es.
Sir John Tenniel (28 February 1820 – 25 February 1914) was an English illustrator, graphic humorist, and political cartoonist prominent in the second half of the 19th century. He was knighted for his artistic achievements in 1893. Tenniel is remembered especially as the principal political cartoonist for Punch magazine for over 50 years, and for his illustrations to Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871). == Early life == Tenniel was born in Bayswater, West London, to John Baptist Tenniel, a fencing and dancing...
Yeah there you go.
To think I should have lived to be goodmorninged by Belladonna Took's son, as if I was selling buttons at the door!
02:40
Never once did I dream of having that exact same moustache one day.
The things corona will do to a man.
Earlier today my godsons laughed their asses off.
On words meaning so many things, per Alice.
All mimsy were the borogoves.
@RegDwigнt At your pupal butterfly?
Or larval moth?
At my walrus and carpenter, minus the carpenter and minus the walrus, just the facial hair.
I'm the Cheshire walrus. The first and last thing that you see is the moustache.
They also come in all-black.
02:44
Yes. That. Very good.
Woolly bears, we call them.
Almost quite as red, too.
Don't look like Hitler; the Austrians will not disapprove enough.
Pyrrharctia isabella
Hm, is the first part fire-bear?
Screw it, it's graec.
My godsons' granddad was bored just like myself and grew a moustache, too. When he shaved it off, he made sure to first shave off the bits that made him look like Hitler.
It's a fun thing to do. And it's been 80 years. You can't laugh at Hitler now, you never will.
What is it about you Eastern Europeans? Steven Brust also has a precocious 'stache.
02:48
My godsons are one-quarter Italian and three-quarters German. That's about as Non-Non-Arian as it gets.
But Nonna Arian was their grandmother.
Hm. Maybe before I listen to Sting I'll go listen to Zucchero first.
Never a wrong choice.
My eyes won't stay open. How are yours not closed?
I've been drinking.
Also, birthday hormones. Pure excitement!
Oh that. Biphasic rhapsody, coda maudlin.
Happy birthday.
02:50
Jesus Christ Zucchero looked young.
Thank you, Tom.
@RegDwigнt It no likee me cuntree.
The fuck.
That still a thing?
Or again, rather?
Parently.
I protest.
Careful: Boulder is having a protest-generated corona spike.
02:52
Oh right. What with the Mary Juana.
See. I always told you to not legalize shit.
Yes the protesters did apply self-mellowing agents ere their march.
You pass around just one bong, bang fifty people have corona.
I studied maths I can't tell numbers apart. Way below me.
Communal joints are not a good idea today. Kids!
02:54
It's the only discipline where the whole point is to become worse at the thing you think you're studying.
Maths?
Or bongs?
Oh you don't need to study bongs.
Man.
@tchrist Well anyway. At least you're bonging to get to that figure. Here people are trying to sing Bach to get there.
You saw this? Same motet I sent you that exceptional recording of Herreweghe of.
Always goosebumps me, that one.
Oh it's the whole thing.
02:59
I'm not on board with some of the tempi, notably the penultimate movement. But the thing is, is what our choirmaster told us in the Skype rehearsals. It's truly amazing how little difference in sound depth you hear comparing to what you'd expect.
Alas.
You'd think it'd be all muffled to the point of torture. But go ahead listen to the sound without looking at the screen and you wouldn't even know.
Wouldn't even know ... what?
That everyone was wearing a mask.
03:01
We're looking forward to the H mass six months from now. As if nothing had happened.
For the conductor, it's imaginable. For the singers proper, less so.
We'll probably lose a chunk of money because they'll have restrictions on how many people can come and listen. Probably two in three seats empty. But us, we'll have fun either way. Fingers crossed.
@tchrist is what I'm saying. This is but one of many examples that have been emerging. Go and listen. You'd think it'd be worse. You'd think it'd be bad. But it's good.
On that note, it's 5 am and I should probably be off myself.
Still not listened to Sting, either. I shall do now.
i feel like I'm watching HBO's Watchmen!
But who's watching you watching the watchmen. That is the question.
God.
Me in the mirror's mirror.
03:05
Soli Dei gloria.
Amen.
Amen.
Good night!
Your singers are marvelous.
Good night.
Well those are not ours. But close enough. Ours are not considerably worse.
January 3rd, mark the date, come and listen. I'll sing for you.
 
10 hours later…
12:51
@RegDwigнt Merkel did various things wrong. But she is stable, decent, polite, and always looking for consensus.
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in body, potentially bad keyword in body (97): If your mom’s vagina was a video game,it would be rated E for EVERYONE! ✏️ by Mario Auditore on english.SE
@Cerberus And she looks so damned good compared to the idiots in power in Britain and the US.
@RegDwigнt Your group? Nice. If not, still nice.
 
2 hours later…
15:01
- I have two news for you, a bad one and a good one - which should I start with?
- Start with the good one
- There are no bad news
- And what is the bad one?
- There are no good news either.
What do you call this structure - a row of columns in a circle?
It's at the Kharitonov Palace garden in Yekaterinburg.
In Russian it's called Rotonda
15:29
@CowperKettle Rotunda?
@tchrist This is some bullshit
@M.A.R. Is your face bare of beard and mustache?
I might need a shave in a few days
Maybe I wouldn't, in light of your question
Let's find another trait common in those eight countries that did better at handling COVID.
I bet you'll find more than you can count.
And I bet they will be more relevant
@CowperKettle "kindly stranger" always got me
16:05
@Robusto no, we are still reduced to virtual rehearsals. Those are Czechs, actually.
Here things are opening up only slowly. Much faster than expected, but still very slowly. The local government's current limit is 10 singers at a time. But the church is always a couple weeks behind that, and we are formally a sacred choir, not a secular one.
So the current limit for us is like five singers, tops. So our soloists have already been singing Sunday masses for the last couple weeks but that is it.
Still it looks like the very next virtual rehearsal might well be the last one, and then at least the voices can start practicing together in groups of 10 or even 20. We'll see.
Anyway. Yeah the Czechs made some noise in the larger community. Everyone's been talking about that performance for the last couple weeks.
@Robusto Good in the sense of 'civilised', perhaps?
I mean, her appearance is not particularly glorious.
16:20
@Cerberus well yes, I'm not talking about her qualities as a person. I am talking about her qualities as an employee.
You are basically saying, the street sweeper does not clean the street but hey, at least he always irons his clothes and his shoes are really nice.
Am I?
Those are good qualities, and I will even say they always matter in every job. But there are also job-specific qualities.
@Cerberus "Merkel does many things wrong, but at least she's polite".
Yeah you are, I should think.
Being polite does not make you a good saxophone teacher. It only makes you a nice person. But you still have to actually know how to hold the saxophone.
I have no beef with Merkel. If only because her sitting on the throne for 15 years makes everyone shut up about Putin sitting on his for a mere eight.
@RegDwigнt You've cut my sentence.
No I recited from memory.
4 hours ago, by Cerberus
@RegDwigнt Merkel did various things wrong. But she is stable, decent, polite, and always looking for consensus.
16:31
You of all people should not be complaining about not remembering stuff 100% verbatim.
You didn't have a tab open?
@Cerberus I see no quantifiable difference between the full quote and my summary of it.
@Cerberus well technially no, I didn't have a tab open, I had like five trillion.
Then wear these.
You should be thankful I didn't misquote you by quoting Trump instead.
@Cerberus but I am.
You can't imagine how thankful I am.
16:33
I promise to try.
How good of you.
It might take a while, but I'm actually quite good at imagining things.
Imagine a square triangle.
Ah, you're back to talking about Merkel, I see.
I just imagined a pentahedron
16:35
I just imagined 100 million tourists in the streets of Amsterdam.
Merkel was a pentahedron?
Well, she's certainly toured Amsterdam.
We have some tourists, but few.
Especially few foreigners.
My neighbourhood is currently just fine.
17:26
Word of the day: pin boning
18:09
A monopteros (Ancient Greek:ὁ μονόπτερος from the Polytonic: μόνος, only, single, alone, and τὸ πτερόν, wing) is a circular colonnade supporting a roof but without any walls. Unlike a tholos (in its wider sense as a circular building), it does not have walls making a cella or room inside. In Greek and especially Roman antiquity the term could also be used for a tholos. In ancient times monopteroi (Ancient Greek: οἱ μονόπτεροι) served inter alia as a form of baldachin for a cult image. An example of this is the Monument of Lysicrates in Athens, albeit the spaces between the columns were walled...
Looks also like a monopteros, but without a roof
 
2 hours later…
20:11
@CowperKettle I have no idea why what you're looking for is not rotunda
@Cerberus In English, when something "is looking good" it doesn't have to mean physically. It usually means in some other positive way.
@CowperKettle Colonnade, perhaps?
In classical architecture, a colonnade is a long sequence of columns joined by their entablature, often free-standing, or part of a building. Paired or multiple pairs of columns are normally employed in a colonnade which can be straight or curved. The space enclosed may be covered or open. In St. Peter's Square in Rome, Bernini's great colonnade encloses a vast open elliptical space. When in front of a building, screening the door (Latin porta), it is called a portico, when enclosing an open court, a peristyle. A portico may be more than one rank of columns deep, as at the Pantheon in Rome or...
@CowperKettle I have some bad news for you. In English, news is a mass noun, which requires a counter: a bit of news, a piece of news, etc. Or else use it as a modifier: a news story.
Nobody ever has "a news" for someone.
@RegDwigнt Completely understandable.
 
1 hour later…
21:27
@Cerberus: Do you use "Automate" or anything like it on your Android phone? I listen to a lot of podcasts and audio books when I'm out riding or walking, and I absolutely hate the phone automatically lowering the volume. The problem is, the gain on spoken word recordings is generally lower than on music, yet the phone never makes that distinction nor allows for it.
I mean, it's my phone, I should be able to have it at the volume I want.
22:06
@CowperKettle circular collonnade, perhaps. The rotunda is the space created by the architecture.
 
1 hour later…
23:06
food makes everything become possible
23:21
> The Overflow Blog
Steps Stack Overflow is taking to help fight racism
Lol.
Steps Stack Overflow is taking to jump on the bandwagon.
@Robusto no, it's a rotunda alright. Same word in every language.
Colonnada is likewise the same word in every language.
It's almost like the Tower of Babel never happened for architects, of all people.
It's quite curious. Musicians can't agree on what to call things, programmers certainly can't. But architects be like, why invent twenty names for something that already has one.
Sometimes a crazy Dutch will smoke one too many and translate "nave" to "schip", but that's about the most thrill you can expect to get out of it. Still the same word.
Hard to think of another art form where the terminology is so conservative and universal. Classical ballet, maybe.
23:40
how to deal with so frequent hunger?
23:56
@RegDwigнt I think of a rotunda as being inside a building. Like the one in the Capitol building in D.C.

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