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09:09
@Robusto My Book of Sirach caption contest entry:
10:06
Turns out Ancient Romans had saunas:
The laconicum (i.e. Spartan, sc. balneum, bath) was the dry sweating room of the Roman thermae, contiguous to the caldarium or hot room. The name was given to it as being the only form of warm bath that the Spartans admitted. The laconicum was usually a circular room with niches in the axes of the diagonals and was covered by a conical roof with a circular opening at the top, according to Vitruvius (v. 10), from which a brazen shield is suspended by chains, capable of being so lowered and raised as to regulate the temperature. The walls of the laconicum were plastered with marble stucco and painted...
 
2 hours later…
12:26
Current weather. +2C, or +35.6F
2*1.8+32=35.6
 
1 hour later…
13:34
Finally my genius is recognized:
> Tired: Abolish daylight savings, use standard time always

Wired: Abolish daylight savings, use daylight time always so it's bright later in winter

"Fired up": Every 6 months set the clock back 1 hour, so we get that nice extra hour sleep in we don't have to make up TWICE a year
Maybe each town an city should simply use the true astronomical time
The most complicated national flag
With some nice pixel art
A floral enhancement on the Vosmogo Marta street today
Vosmogo Marta means Of the 8th of March
The 8th of March street is named in honor of the International Woman Day
International Women's Day (IWD) is a global holiday celebrated annually on March 8 to commemorate the cultural, political, and socioeconomic achievements of women. It is also a focal point in the women's rights movement, bringing attention to issues such as gender equality, reproductive rights, and violence and abuse against women.IWD originated from labor movements in North America and Europe during the early 20th century. The earliest version was purportedly a "Women's Day" organized by the Socialist Party of America in New York City February 28, 1909. This inspired German delegates at the 1910...
14:18
@Xanne hm. I think I've forgotten it as well. Or maybe you are getting me confused with someone else...
@Robusto thank you. It's an old piece, but I think I know what little treats you mean, and those were indeed added rather recently for this arrangement specifically.
Peculiarities of the German syntax.
Could mean, "Police shoot a man armed with a knife".
Or it could mean, "Police shoot with a knife an armed man".
knife guns now standard issue
14:42
@CowperKettle That's actually rational. And we have the technical means to organize it (lat/lon calculations for sun position, and coordinate schedules and calendars across people).
Everything any of us has thought has already been done.
Many times over.
I'll have an original thought, one day
2
I'm used to living all my life in the Moscow+2 time zone. It's now 19:50 here, but 17:50 in Moscow.
And 02:50, the next day, in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.
All rail and air tickets used to be in Moscow time for simplicity's sake, but about 10 years ago they switched to local time.
As a kid, I remember hearing on the radio at 17:00, "dear comrades, listen to the exact timecast. When you hear the long beep, it will be 15:00 in Moscow, 17:00 in Tuymen, ... , and midnight in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky".
This phrase "..and midnight in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky" became a kind of popular cliche phrase.
"Petropavlovsk? You mean the city where it's always midnight?"
Video titled "Midnight in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky"
The radio record from the Soviet times.
15:07
ME: Wow, this 6% grade feels more like 8 or 9%!
BIKE: Maybe that's because my front tire has been flat for the last quarter mile, dummy.
It's a free work out!
There once lived a scientist, and he had three sons. He taught the first son from his youth that there are three main things in life: drugs, sex and rock-n-roll. He taught the second son that the main things in life are work and family. And he taught his fird son nothing.
Because it's always important to have two internvention samples and one placebo sample.
15:44
@RegDwigнt English is clearer, definitely. Police shoot man armed with knife.
Or Police shoot knife-wielding man. Either way it's clear no knife is being shot from a gun.
16:01
@RegDwigнt Same in Dutch.
And many other languages, like Latin or Greek.
What amazes me when I re-listen to my audiobooks on Nazi Germany, is that German nazism was clearly more inhumane a regime than Soviet communism. The question is why, with Germany having a more educated population, more advanced society. Does it mean that the US may turn into a Nazi-type dictatorship as fast as Germany? We will have a very, very hard time fighting it.
When an adverbial phrase is between two verbs, you cannot tell syntactically to which it belongs.
@CowperKettle I don't know if you can extrapolate from that.
The US is currently the most advanced country in terms of technology etc.
And if it flips into a nazi state, God help us all.
The Soviet brutality was largely based on indifference to people. Nazism was actively in pursuit of brutality in the name of an ideal (base though it was).
@CowperKettle Well, I fear for that too. 30% of Republicans want an armed insurrection.
16:08
Yes. In the USSR, the deaths in the GULAG peaked in 1942, because of the lack of food during the war. As the management became more trained, deaths in the GULAG fell, and by 1950 inmates in the work camps even recieved salaries.
And the tale was that they were being "re-educated", not exterminated.
Like, you go through the camp and become a proletarian.
With the German Nazism, it was very weird. The idea was to wipe out or drive away other nationalities.
@Robusto The NSDAP's voting support peaked at 37% in 1932, and then actually fell even before Hitler came to power.
You knew I was going to say that.
So 63% were against the nazis. And a sizable chunk of the 37% were only hysterically pro-nazis, because of the economic meltdown. Temporary voters who voted to show their protest.
I made a chart of the greatest atrocities in history. datawrapper.dwcdn.net/1drMi/1
The size of the bubble is people killed per year, as a proportion of world population size.
@Mitch not that, specifically
16:16
The y coördinate of the bubble is the total number of people that perished because of it, again as a proportion of world population size.
@Cerberus Nice chart!
Some lovely massacres, right?
I had to google "An Lushan" ))
Oh. The poet Du Fu lived through that massacre.
Him I do not know.
Perhaps the bubbles should be rectangles, the horizontal length corresponding to when they began and when they ended.
And the height to the deaths per year.
I read a Russian biography of Du Fu, and remembered that there was a terrible war during his life. He wrote poems about this war and devastation.
16:23
Jan 19 at 3:03, by Mitch
Aug 21 '20 at 20:23, by Mitch
Jul 5 at 20:43, by Mitch
Apr 29 at 15:07, by Mitch
Mar 2 at 18:13, by Mitch
Dec 31 '18 at 22:48, by Mitch
Nov 9 at 14:20, by Mitch
Oct 18 at 14:11, by Mitch
Jun 1 at 19:04, by Mitch
May 17 '17 at 19:08, by Mitch
there's nothing new under the sun
@Mitch it's difficult to get under the sun, especially since there is no up in space
@Cerberus So, in the grand scheme of things, really, WWII was not close to the worst.
In space, the astronaut is the deictic centre
@MattE.Эллен this depends a lot on your interpretation of the laws of gravity, but then again, I never studied law.
@CowperKettle How dare you. You talk to your mother with that mouth?
@CowperKettle since the earth is in space and I am on the earth, I am the (deitic) centre, and the sun is always under me!
@Mitch I've seen a summary, but never delved into the case law
16:28
> A son is a curse at a time like this,
And daughters more welcome far;
For, when daughters grow up, they can marry, at least,
And go to live on a neighbor's land.
But our sons? We bury them after the fight,
And they rot where the grass grows long.
(Du Fu, 750)
But this was before the Lushan Rebellion.
@Robusto It just means it is possible.
> Shall they return to beatings of great bells
In wild trainloads?
A few, a few, too few for drums and yells,
May creep back, silent, to still village wells
Up half-known roads.
(Wilfred Owen, The Send-Off, 1917)
@MattE.Эллен "Behold the Underminer! I am always beneath you, but nothing is beneath me! "
@Mitch No, indeed.
@Mitch No, indeed.
16:31
Ape.
Indeed, no or not.
@Cerberus I might ape you, but I am an orc
I think Matt did that on purpose !!11
An evil orc.
@Cerberus The more I learn about Genghis Khan, the less I like.
16:33
Odd.
At least he liked dogs. That's something you can't hold against him.
The Sack of Bagdad is also in the chart.
@Mitch !!
At least he killed humans. That's something you can't hold against him.
Has anyone here ever made a Scratch game, by the way?
I've seen demonstrations of Scratch (the programming language) but I've not tried it myself
@Cerberus No I think you can.
@MattE.Эллен Is that another one of those Apple things?
think of how much faster the world would have over populated if it weren't for genghis khan
@Mitch I don't think so. it's a visual programming language, primarily for teaching
16:36
Classic survivor's bias. You only came to that conclusion because you're alive.
I suppose you're right. no accounting for what the dead think
unless @Cerberus can ask them?
@MattE.Эллен oh...MIT.
@MattE.Эллен It's great fun.
Very easy to do stuff with.
@Cerberus The Envelope of Manila is already in the post.
@MattE.Эллен Hey, mind the GDPR!
16:39
@Cerberus is it fully online now? I seem to remember it went from a desktop GUI to a website
@Mitch Wait, what?
@MattE.Эллен It is!
Perhaps the desktop version also exists?
The online version is a second iteration. originally everything was saved locally
some people didn't like the cloud-ifying, so I think an open source alternative has been made, but I acn't remember what it's called
maybe I saw Snap!
16:59
I've just downloaded the desktop version of Scratch frrom their website, it works fine.
I only made a very lame card game in C#. Just to exercise my skill while learning. Using buttons etc. It was looking horrible.
> In particular, they decided to leave out some features, to avoid confusing young users. The tl;dr explanation of Snap! is that it added those missing features. When the article says "In Scratch, it is not possible to..." please bear in mind that Snap! was designed to teach computer science courses to teenagers. A decision may be good for the Scratch target audience, but not for the Snap! target audience.
I made whackamole for android :D
@CowperKettle I have got some of the way to making Freecell in javascript, but I've not bothered finishing it.
I hit a strange bug where cards would grow in size for no reason, so I gave up
As a kid, I tried programming my ZX Spectrum, but never figured out how to fill and read an array.
I only had example programs in Basic varieties that were from other computers.
I mean I had some books with snippets of Basic code, but it was compatible with other computers.
So the most I did was a program that solved school level equations.
ax²+bx+c=0
This kind.
17:12
nice
I wrote a python script for solving Countdown maths problems
I got very frustrated watching the show and not being able to do it by hand :D
@MattE.Эллен Impressive, and you even have a review!
@Cerberus lol, yeah :D I might have some influence over the reviewer ;) (i.e. that's my girlfriend)
Liliya Chanysheva has been arrested for "extremist activity". She is former head of Navalny's regional headquarters in Ufa.
She should have fled from Russia, like many former heads.
Now they might send her to penal colony.
For "extremism".
I don't understand Putin's motives. Is he a control freak? What is the end game of trying to be in control of everything happening in a country?
17:21
Ahh nice ploy.
@Cerberus I didn't ask her to, so it is genuine in a sense!
I guess Putin is similar to billionaires, in that they seem driven by the need for as much wealth and power as possible, even though it doesn't help anyone, let alone themselves
OK, you've imprissonned everyone who thinks differently to you. Now what? Sit back and wait to die, assured in the knowledege that noöne outside prisons is speaking against you?
Or is he afraid that there will be reprercussions if he's ever dethroned?
@MattE.Эллен I believe it!
@MattE.Эллен I think he is very much afraid of that.
Look what happened to many other dictators.
And he is always afraid he could be dethroned at any moment.
Large demonstrations could lead to revolutions.
17:37
@Cerberus I think a lot of people in Russia like him? i don't know. But I would expect if he did step down, nothing would come of it and he could be wealthy in peace. I'm not saying there shouldn't be consequences, more that there wouldn't be.
17:48
@Cerberus Is the Trojan War considered prehistory? (Homer notwithstanding.)
@Robusto No, because they had writing.
Interestingly, the asteroids that orbit in Jupiter's Lagrange points are called Greeks (the ones preceding Jupiter) and Trojans (the ones following).
The Mycenaeans did, and people in the area.
But you could say it is on the brink of history?
@MattE.Эллен Well, you see what happened to many other dictators.
Luke Mubarak.
@Cerberus Yeah, the sources are no more historical than the Bible, I think.
> Whether there is any historical reality behind the Trojan War remains an open question. Many scholars believe that there is a historical core to the tale, though this may simply mean that the Homeric stories are a fusion of various tales of sieges and expeditions by Mycenaean Greeks during the Bronze Age.
It is not known with certainty.
But the Bible has a ton of stories that are not historic at all.
17:54
Schliemann found what he thought was Troy.
I think the current archaeological location of Troy is pretty uncontroversial?
> On the basis of excavations conducted by Schliemann and others, this claim is now accepted by most scholars.
BTW, did you ever read Circe, the novel?
Aug 26 '20 at 0:23, by Robusto
BTW, in the realm of fantasy/mythology, you should have a look at Circe by Madeline Miller.
I have not!
But I read a favourile review of it.
You should. It is a marvel.
She also wrote The Song of Achilles, which I didn't think I would like after reading Circe, because how do you follow an absolute masterpiece? And while it was not on the same level of achievement as Circe, it was still quite good.
You might like it, though, as it is told from the point-of-view of Patroklos, Achilles's lover.
Both are fine novels.
@Robusto All right, I put it in my reading application on my phone.
18:24
> You already know Circe's story from the Odyssey, but Madeline Miller's first-person take on Circe was splendid. This is a story not merely of the daughter of the titan Helios, but a fully fleshed exploration into how a woman achieves power and nobility, and in this retelling she even eclipses the hero of the epic she appears in. In fact, it would not be a stretch to say that Miller has changed the game and shown us what true heroism really is.
@Cerberus: From a review I gave the book ^
 
2 hours later…
20:34
@Robusto Sounds good!
 
1 hour later…
21:52
@MattE.Эллен I feel like it's not all him, like he's not the one saying 'Hey that weird lady held up a piece of white paper. Obviously an insurrectionist. Send her away'... he's not the one saying it. But he's allowing others to do that sort of thing for him. Lots of his followers are petty and insecure and bullying and they are the ones who are abusing their powers.
22:19
@Mitch Good point.
22:45
@Cerberus Sack of Bagdad. Diet of Wurms. Envelope of Manila. There's gotta be more.
@MattE.Эллен at least that's how I do it.
a wink and a nod and that lady with the blank sheet of paper will never see the sky again
@Mitch Envelope?
Is that some sort of battle?

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