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00:02
Yeah.
I still cheat and read books on my Kindle in bed. That helps to quiet my mind.
Naughty.
blushes
All right, quire or quare ... which is more common in Latin?
I have one guess left in Latin Wordle. Not worried about spoilers, because almost everyone else has passed the time for my today's puzzles.
Q U _ R E
I do not know what quire is.
Then I'll try the other one.
00:06
You are at yesterday's puzzle, it seems.
For me.
Yes.
Latin Wordle 106 6/6

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And yay!
Congrats.
Just the tip I needed.
We have quaero, but requiro.
Praefixes often change the vowel of verbs.
Hmm, GT defines Latin quire as meaning who.
00:07
Cado (fall) and caedo (let fall), but occido (2x).
I'm sure they can be wrong, or at least misleading.
Maybe it exists.
What is GT?
Google Translate.
Which I get tired of typing.
It does seem to exist, probably archaic.
Two of the three instances are quotation of (unusual) words, it seems.
@Cerberus Yeah, it must be difficult to deal with Latin, since it can be from so many different eras.
From archaic all the way to Church Latin of the Middle Ages.
00:11
OK it seems to be the infinitive of queo.
So it is irregular and extremely rare.
Hah. But that wouldn't prevent Wordle from using an obscure form.
Can you judge at a glance what era a piece of text is from?
As in the last quotation from the link above, it then means "be able to" (inf.).
@RobustosupportsUkraine Probably not!
If it is archaic, probably.
If it is Christian, quite possibly.
Ugh.
I'm sick of all the religion that is floating around today.
It being Domingo de Pasqua and all.
Where is it floating?
Ah, Easter.
00:14
Well, I think anyone who saw our family's celebration today would not have been able to tell whether we were Germanic pagans or Christians or whatever.
We eat the traditional stuff.
@Cerberus Rabbit?
And we get together from all over the country.
But that is all.
@RobustosupportsUkraine Hah, poor thing.
No: eggs, chocolate eggs, matzes.
Mustard sauce, but that may be a family tradition.
Are matzes like Jewish matzoh?
00:16
Yes.
Unleavened crackers.
Ours are traditionally round, though.
Yes.
What did you eat?
For breakfast, oatmeal.
For lunch, smoked salmon.
And for dinner, chicken rollups.
We go to the cottage at on Christmas Day and Easter, so we cannot really cook an elaborate meal there.
00:18
Ah, gravad lax?
Is that an Easter thing?
@Cerberus No, wild Alaskan smoked salmon.
I think there is something about smoked salmon and some holidays?
I honestly don't know.
I like smoked salmon.
I just like salmon, and it's really good for you as well.
LOTS of Omega-3 fatty acids.
Keep the blood flowing through all the nooks and crannies of your circulatory system.
00:20
It may be my favourite fishy ingredient.
Mine too.
When I'm not eating that I eat sardines.
Which are also good.
Olive oil is also very good for you.
As are leafy greens and the like.
Mostly we eat salads for dinner, so we get those ingredients.
How many kcal does such a salad have?
I don't know, but not very many I'm sure.
The bulk of it is greens, shredded carrot, celery, some sunflower and other seeds, olive oil and balsamic vinegar dressing, a few nuts, a few berries, some grated cheese and a few croutons.
Not highly caloric.
It tastes good and it's filling.
I would bet it's under 500, easily.
You can put fish in it. Salmon or sardines or anchovies.
Sounds good, but then where do you get your energy?
I get my energy from oatmeal in the morning.
And I usually have crackers with the fish at lunch.
00:30
How many calories do you eat in a day?
It depends.
Today I had about 2000. But I burned about 3300 so far, due to a good ride.
I eat less on days I'm not riding.
Then what is the source of those 2000?
Oatmeal, some crackers, fish, and a salad do not naturally add up to 2000.
@Cerberus I also eat noshes on rides.
A Clif bar is about 250 calories.
00:34
Candy bars are chock full of fats and sugars, yes.
Yeah, but Clif bars are not really candy.
They have calories and sugars, because you don't want to bonk on your ride.
Which I have done a few times and don't recommend.
Today's ride was about 80 km.
Sure.
So I had two Clif bars, for a total of 512 kcal.
Also a good sized coffee in the middle of the ride.
And ... I had some ice cream after dinner. ^_^
Because I deserved it.
Total climbing was about 335 meters.
I burned 1258 kcal on the ride alone.
Very windy, and mostly in my face.
Plus I only had one co-rider, so we each had to pull half the time.
A ride like that, I usually like a group of 4 or 5.
00:53
Nope.
@Laurel: I see you have been quite active on the site. Well done, new moderator!
01:10
@Mitch I have not heard of any Dutch claim on Charlemagne.
I would rather say Dutch culture hardly existed yet.
It is a mixture of Frisian, Frankish, and Saxon, I think.
With some Celtic heritage, perhaps.
Charles V was Flemish, though.
> Television is a popular way to lobby Mr. Trump, and some candidates try by running ads far away from their voters. When Mr. Trump was staying at his Bedminster, N.J., golf course last summer, Jim Lamon, a Senate candidate in Arizona, paid for an ad on Fox News in New Jersey.
02:08
@RobustosupportsUkraine Thanks, I appreciate it :D
 
1 hour later…
03:09
Drink milk or die. :)
@Cerberus Certainly he was born there, and spoke "both Belgian languages" natively. "Charles was born in the County of Flanders to Philip of Habsburg (son of Maximilian I of Habsburg and Mary of Burgundy) and Joanna of Trastámara (daughter of Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon, the Catholic Monarchs of Spain). The ultimate heir of his four grandparents, Charles inherited all of his family dominions at a young age."
I've certainly heard debates about whether he ever came to speak decent Spanish, but no one doubts his Flemish.
Or Dutch, or whatever they call it then and there and here and now.
Wikipedia says he styled himself a new Charlemagne, but I don't know that that's connected to any Dutchiness.
03:33
@tchrist Yes, I know.
 
1 hour later…
04:58
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Blacklisted website in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (95): My glasses has "prescription?" (comparing with fashion glasses) What is a better/correct term?‭ by scott roger‭ on english.SE
 
2 hours later…
07:07
Hello guys.
What is the name of a document signed when an employee receives an asset from a company (for a temporary use) like laptop, car or a phone. In this case the employee taking the asset over needs to sign a document in which declares that the asset is received. Later this asset is reclaimed by the employer and again such document is signed.

Hope you understand me
A receipt, perhaps.
I searched in the internet and the closest I get is "takeover certificate".
But further reading the definition rejected the term more or less
It’s just a document acknowledging receipt of the laptop. When it’s returned, you get a receipt acknowledging that they got it back.
@Xanne so you suggest the correct term is "receipt acknowledgment" ?
Slava Ukraina!!!
Slava Ukraina!!!
2
07:46
Can anyone recommend me alternative phrase for "Core Strengths"?
It's a heading in subsection of my resume. To me it looks a little boasting. I need it more professional and less boasting.
08:03
@Hairi The piece of paper is a receipt. One word. We really do have single words for some things.
 
1 hour later…
09:08
@RobustosupportsUkraine it's difficult to get enough Omega 3 from any fish
Of course, that presumes that one would require pharmacologically significant amounts of Omega 3
@RobustosupportsUkraine that's my biggest problem right now, I don't tend to eat less on days that I don't do cardio
09:49
@CowperKettle when I strain myself I feel like I've dislocated the kidney
@Xanne oh yeah? What's the word for having a single word for something?
10:30
@tchrist the entirety of Asia and Africa are 70-100% intolerant and without toes?
11:09
How to say to someone come and visit me when on a journey to other place but in order to come to my place he/she needs to deviate from the route little bit?
May be to
Come by
Pass by
12:03
@CowperKettle How much more delusional can they be. A holly war of invading neighboring country and killing women and children
 
2 hours later…
13:45
@Hairi they wouldn't be doing it if it wasn't holy. Holy is code for "we're doing something atrocious".
@M.A.R. So try to do some cardio most days. Even a good walk will help.
I haven't been riding as much since my surgery, mainly because we've had terrible weather with lots of wind. But on days I don't ride I always do a decent walk.
@RobustosupportsUkraine uni + commute takes up to 11 hours
No free time during university stay?
Some days when a zealous young instructor wants a truckload of work I can't even find time to relax and have dinner
@RobustosupportsUkraine some 10 minutes between classes
And well, because of Ramadan I have 12-2 to myself, but I spend it staring at a screen in the library
I feel your pain. But the only solution seems to be to eat less on days you don't get enough exercise. I know how hard that can be.
13:53
It's peak studying this year I suppose. It won't always be this time-consuming
Still, try to eat healthier foods. The biggest bar to weight loss is snacking (and snack food).
@RobustosupportsUkraine yeah, but anyway I don't commit as much as I could to it either. Low-key I like that I'm losing weight at this slow pace. There's no hurry to get to healthy BMI in six months or twelve.
Unfortunately, I never got healthy weight. I'm slightly underweight.
@Vikas no special reason?
@Vikas Healthier than being overweight.
13:56
I'm a bit paranoid about this stuff. Have a CBC handy
My mother-in-law is underweight and she's 102.
@M.A.R. Poor life style and not so good diet. Also, I guess my weight has always been like that, more or less.
I ignored my own condition for a miserably long time
@RobustosupportsUkraine Maybe.
Some time ago I read an article that claimed chronic undereating was the key to longevity. I don't recall how thoroughgoing that article was, but it perfectly described my mother-in-law.
13:58
@RobustosupportsUkraine I can't describe the first meal I had after a functioning kidney cleared my blood of excess trash.
The food was garbage by all objective standards. Pretty unhealthy for hospital food too I bet.
Too salty maybe. Cooked and recooked.
It was the best meal I've had in my life.
Haha, I'll bet.
There was this study that found the average BMI of kidney transplant patients to be 29.4
That's borderline obese, right?
@RobustosupportsUkraine well, I think most responsible nutritionists have probably switched to waistline instead, but dialysis patients aren't exactly Schwarzenegger
@M.A.R. In my 20s I had a girlfriend who was into fasting. I did one with her, but never again. Total fast for three days, except for lemon juice and water. On the fourth day we were allowed a broth made of beet leaves. It made me glow. I thought it was the best thing I'd ever tasted.
14:03
That's kinda excessive, three days!
@M.A.R. Yeah, the BMI is kind of a "one fit sizes all" metric.
And chronic steroid use doesn't help either. It redistributes fat, and lowers its metabolism. In extreme cases, patients get humps
Literally a lump of fat behind the neck
I hate steroids. My body doesn't react well to them. I had a terrible experience with prednisolone a couple of years ago.
Some young women inject dexamethasone to get a moon face
The lengths women go to be "attractive" are sad.
14:06
@RobustosupportsUkraine right? They're pretty easy to hate. They're safe in that they "won't make your heart stop". So they're ubiquitous. And that taste, just awful
The prednisolone (plus the thyroiditis I was experiencing at the time) made my heart go wild. 130 bpm at rest! And because I have an athletic heart it was pounding like a triphammer. I was afraid to take my blood pressure, but I'm sure it was way high. I went to urgent care as soon as it opened and they said to stop taking it.
It seems a strange coincidence that I had the thyroid problem and then two years later I got diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
#Worldle #87 2/6 (100%)
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
@RobustosupportsUkraine I don't think anyone can tell for sure right now, but that sort of thing is common with cells like thyroid cells
Wordle 303 4/6

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@M.A.R. Which sort of thing?
@RobustosupportsUkraine hyperplasia, benign tumors etc.
#Worldle #87 X/6 (98%)
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Wordle 303 3/6

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Impressive!
14:18
@M.A.R. My tumor wasn't benign.
@RobustosupportsUkraine nor was your luck, although I dunno what else, besides chance, turns benign growth malignant
@Cerberus Sure, but it seems that the language that Charlemagne grew up with was probably Old Low Franconian which eventually became Dutch. And language, while separable from general culture, is a good sign of which culture.
But also there's the complicating issue of the very distinct culture of European nobility...but I don't know how separate it was at the time of Charlemagne).
If the Dutch don't claim him, then it's very unlikely he was some proto-Dutch person.
It's complicated stuff. I'll just stick to my own simple small-molecule drugs
@M.A.R. I'm sure having multiple CT scans over the last five years didn't help.
@M.A.R. I want the biggest molecules possible for my drugs
14:22
@Mitch I hear Charlemagne was a small-molecule guy.
@Mitch 1st world problems
I mean, Musk or some other idiot could make it their personal project to conjugate acetaminophen with a huge pointless protein
Speaking of molecules, I happened to rewatch Alien recently. In it they say the aliens must have "some kind of molecular acid for blood." But wait, aren't all acid reactions molecular?
@M.A.R. first world aspirations
@RobustosupportsUkraine "molecular acid" is not a term I've ever heard in any technical context
That's why it jangled in my ear.
14:25
I want the biggest possible ever bonsai tree. The ones they have now are so small
@Mitch if you do that you can sell acetaminophen for 10000 dollars a vial.
People will buy it if you call it NFT
@M.A.R. nice!
Wait... Back in a sec... i have to go see something. I'm hearing some stupid animal just outside rummaging around in the leaves.
@Mitch You are the shortest giant I've ever not seen.
Wordle (ES) #102 3/6

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@RobustosupportsUkraine a transition metal cation is not a molecule, and it can be a Lewis acid, but it doesn't matter that it's not a molecule. It's like caring about classifying nine as a single-digit number when multiplying multi-digit numbers
@M.A.R. But aren't acids based on molecular structure? Metal + hydrogen + optional oxygen?
HN03, HCl, H2SO4 are a few of the ones I remember from chemistry.
14:33
Me too.
@RobustosupportsUkraine there are several theories on what's an acid and what's a base. One is based on whether they release hydrogen ions or hydroxide ions in water, obviously limited to an aqueous medium. The other is based on whether they 'donate' or 'accept' H. The last is about whether they donate or accept a pair of electrons that they will share in the orbital of the bond between them
There is a song in Bollywood like "Concentrated H2SO4 burnt all my childhood life"
@M.A.R. But that still describes a molecular interchange, doesn't it?
Most people are familiar with the first, developed by Arrhenius in 1813. Gen chem students are familiar with the second, the Bronsted-Lowry theory (1880s I think). The third is the most expansive, and is Lewis's theory (1930s)
Little Willie was a chemist
Little Willie is no more.
What he thought was H2O
Was H2SO4!
14:38
@RobustosupportsUkraine the corrosiveness and other properties we expect from strong acids and bases does not translate to a few of Bronsted-Lowry ones, and to none of the ones that only the last theory can explain
@M.A.R. That seems to be well above my pay grade in chemistry.
@RobustosupportsUkraine it's just labels, really. Lewis acids and bases are classified a dozen other ways, some more familiar.
Well, all of science is labels. The physical realities exist and interact whether they are labeled or not.
Fe^2+ is a Lewis acid, but not a Bronsted acid, or an Arrhenius acid. It won't dissolve spaceship floorboards
you are dashing all my plans for spacecraft floor destruction
14:44
And yet there are no space ships yet, so you have plenty of time to work that problem.
To dissolve a great range of stuff, you not only need a strong acid (conventional definition), you also need some strong reducing agent
Aqua regia isn't just acidic
@M.A.R. And you need quantities commensurate with the object to be dissolved, don't you?
@RobustosupportsUkraine Hahhahahahhahahahahhahaha
I have understood a pun/poem first time in this room!
@RobustosupportsUkraine Yep, definitely
@M.A.R. Which is why in Breaking Bad, they would not have been able to dissolve a human body in a tight-fitting barrel using hydrofluoric acid.
To say nothing of the other problems associated with that substance.
14:49
@RobustosupportsUkraine the boy or crazy 8's friend?
@M.A.R. Starting with Crazy 8's friend.
Also, where do you get a barrel full of HFl?
Breaking Bad 😍 I watched it exactly a year ago. Was glued to my laptop.
My impression was it wasn't dissolved, for it to dissolve it would have taken forever. Buuuut we were spared a body with no skin
HFl? Never read in my school.
@RobustosupportsUkraine don't ask me, we didn't even have safety goggles in my high school's lab
What did we have? I don't remember.
14:52
I think the medical examiner would have taken one look at the residue and said, "Yeah, I'm not touching that. Death by natural causes."
@Vikas HF
We didn't have labs in school
Never saw acids.
@M.A.R. That's right. Fluorine is just F. I get an F on my periodic-table quiz this morning.
They looked pretty dull. But I'm sure their lack has meant more for you than they themselves.
@M.A.R. This sounds familiar
14:54
@RobustosupportsUkraine I demand a . . . a Periodle or something, where I can show off how I memorized it one time because I thought it made me smart
We had and used acids in chemistry class in high school. But nobody thought to give us lab coats, and so we would wind up with strange holes in our clothes.
The iron in our body is the same Fe metal in periodic table?
It could not be otherwise, else it could not be called iron.
@Vikas yep. Not the metal itself of course, but its ions, which behave much differently.
@M.A.R. Well, more useful than my learning all the US state capitals.
14:56
Everything is governed by electrons moving here and there. But that's like me saying programming is governed by keystrokes.
And certainly more useful than learning, say, 100 digits of pi.
@M.A.R. That is why magnets don't attract us.
@Vikas oh, that's another huge rabbit hole entirely. They do attract what they can in your body. Just very, very, very weakly.
You produce a magnetic field, and an electric field. Heck, you have a wavelength, don't ask me how.
@M.A.R. But it doesn't have any physical metal properties like real iron objects?
@M.A.R. A person's wavelength is the distance one's hand moves while waving a greeting or farewell. QED
14:59
A charged ion creates an electric field. If a charged ion moves, it creates a magnetic field as well. You constantly have sodium and chloride ions moving in and out of your cells, and all sorts of ions circulating in your blood. They don't ever cancel each other out.
Ok
@M.A.R. Don't cations and anions cancel each other out? Like potassium within a cell and sodium without?
Perhaps balance is a better word.
@Vikas the micro and the macro world are pretty separate. Each one is governed by its own rules. It's like a whole different universe there.
@M.A.R. My son, a biologist, once tried to explain that to me. Hilarity ensued.
@M.A.R. Ok. As a kid, I wondered if there's iron in our body or blood, why doesn't it hurt and cause injuries to our veins/arteries. Like a real iron metal object does.
15:03
@RobustosupportsUkraine neutrality, sure, more or less. But not equilibrium: The very definition of a living thing is disrupting the equilibrium with its surroundings into a steady state. The cells are always more negative than their outside. If they fail to be, they're dead. In the entire body, much more physical and macroscopic phenomena determine what goes where.
@Vikas I always strive to be as curious as I was as a kid and I always fail. I started failing around junior high school when marks started to matter
The iron in your body is always surrounded by thousands of atoms. That's how it's transported in the blood, stored in cells, eaten and excreted
Actually, too much iron is a very serious health condition. The iron builds up and makes crystals that indeed rupture your cells. That's how my grandpa passed away
@M.A.R. Failing is much better. I wish I had failed in my school and college exams at least once. I never failed because cramming system was so good! Sometimes it can give life direction much early.
@M.A.R. Iron is also a very serious health condition for stars. Once the fusion cycle starts working on iron, out go the lights.
It's very serious because the body doesn't have a way of excreting iron, as it does with lots of other ions. It just "happens" when people bleed or when cells in the intestine die
@RobustosupportsUkraine I knew there was something about iron I hated!
I always liked zinc. Mom told me once as a kid that zinc is good for the body and it stuck
@M.A.R. 👍🏽
@M.A.R. It is probably good in healing skin and protecting it.
@Vikas it does all sorts of stuff, but iron is more important, both for its roles in the body and clinically
15:11
Wördl 303 6/6 🔥2

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wordle.at
@M.A.R. Government schools here often have iron pills. For someone who needs in case of iron deficiency. I hated their taste.
@Vikas don't they also distribute milk?
I wonder what @Mitch found in the bush
@M.A.R. Milk isn't common I guess They provide "midday meal". It includes dalia/khichdi at least.
The Midday Meal Scheme is a school meal programme in India designed to better the nutritional standing of school-age children nationwide. The programme supplies free lunches on working days for children in primary and upper primary classes in government, government aided, local body, Education Guarantee Scheme, and alternate innovative education centres, Madarsa and Maqtabs supported under Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, and National Child Labour Project schools run by the ministry of labour. Serving 120 million children in over 1.27 million schools and Education Guarantee Scheme centres, the Midday Meal...
They might give milk powder.
The photo on that Wikipedia article is heart touching.
@RobustosupportsUkraine Because you can't fuse iron.
Iron Sunrise is a 2004 hard science fiction novel by British writer Charles Stross, which follows the events in Singularity Sky. The book was nominated for both the Hugo and Locus Awards in 2005.Singularity Sky depicts a future where human societies have been involuntarily taken from Earth and widely distributed across the Milky Way galaxy, seemingly at random, in the wake of a technological singularity which has led to the onset of strong AI, in the form of the Eschaton. The events in both novels take place consecutively some time after the immediate aftermath of the singularity. == Background... ==
> Meanwhile, a young and hopeful planetary civilization is murdered by the apparent use of a causality violation device which causes their sun to explode without warning (the "iron sunrise" of the title), and their defense systems to deploy automatically against the homeworld of the suspected perpetrators of the atrocity.
> For elements lighter than iron on the periodic table, nuclear fusion releases energy. For iron, and for all of the heavier elements, nuclear fusion consumes energy. Chemical elements up to the iron peak are produced in ordinary stellar nucleosynthesis, with the alpha elements being particularly abundant.
Oh, they can try, but it costs them more than it produces.
The iron peak is a local maximum in the vicinity of Fe (Cr, Mn, Fe, Co and Ni) on the graph of the abundances of the chemical elements. For elements lighter than iron on the periodic table, nuclear fusion releases energy. For iron, and for all of the heavier elements, nuclear fusion consumes energy. Chemical elements up to the iron peak are produced in ordinary stellar nucleosynthesis, with the alpha elements being particularly abundant. Some heavier elements are produced by less efficient processes such as the r-process and s-process. Elements with atomic numbers close to iron are produced in...
In nuclear physics, a magic number is a number of nucleons (either protons or neutrons, separately) such that they are arranged into complete shells within the atomic nucleus. As a result, atomic nuclei with a 'magic' number of protons or neutrons are much more stable than other nuclei. The seven most widely recognized magic numbers as of 2019 are 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82, and 126 (sequence A018226 in the OEIS). For protons, this corresponds to the elements helium, oxygen, calcium, nickel, tin, lead and the hypothetical unbihexium, although 126 is so far only known to be a magic number for neutrons...
I never knew that sense of magic number before.
In computer programming, the term magic number has multiple meanings. It could refer to one or more of the following: Unique values with unexplained meaning or multiple occurrences which could (preferably) be replaced with named constants A constant numerical or text value used to identify a file format or protocol; for files, see List of file signatures Distinctive unique values that are unlikely to be mistaken for other meanings (e.g., Globally Unique Identifiers) == Unnamed numerical constants == The term magic number or magic constant refers to the anti-pattern of using numbers directly in...
Was all I knew.
15:38
@tchrist Well, you can (otherwise there would be no iron), but the process takes more energy than it produces. Which causes star collapse.
16:16
@RobustosupportsUkraine plans undashed
@M.A.R. I found nothing. It was probably some stupid animal making a racket in the leaves.
 
2 hours later…
18:00
@Mitch how do I know I can trust you? Maybe you're a body snatcher right now.
Or here to vaccinate me with MS Access
Or put ions in my water to make holes in my floorboard
18:34
Causes losses to others without benefiting yourself. This is the exact model Faux News goes after with their programming.
@M.A.R. I long ago decided it was easier to run an Apache server on my machine with PHP/MySQL than to get around the cumbersome ineptitude of MS Access. Has it gotten any better in the last quarter century?
Speaking of appealing to the stupid people:
"Their game. Your skin."
18:57
@M.A.R. I first read that as "I put lions in my water..."
So I felt like you had a lot more problems going on than just dealing with your floor.
19:22
@Mitch Me too!
 
1 hour later…
20:47
SUTOM #101 2/6

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https://sutom.nocle.fr (French)
When you see the explosion, you can tell that many sailors must have been killed.
> The sinking of the Russian warship Moskva is causing tension back home, where some families are reporting sailors dead or missing despite a defense ministry claim that the whole crew had been evacuated.
> “There are dead, there are wounded, there are missing. My son called me when they were given phones. They left their documents and [their personal] phones on the [ship]. He calls me and cries from what he saw. It was scary. It is clear that not everyone survived,” said the mother, who spoke on the condition of anonymity out of fear for her safety.
1984 is alive and flourishing in Russia.
Lucky again.
21:18
Latin Wordle 107 6/6

⬜🟩⬜🟨🟨
⬜🟩🟩⬜🟩
⬜🟩🟩⬜🟩
⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩
⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
@Cerberus Same here. This is the one you said yesterday was hard. And you were right.
@RobustosupportsUkraine I think this must be the same one.
As you can see, I failed...
I should have waited until I was sober.
Ha.
Yeah, I lucked into it at the end.
Another 4/5 completion trap.
Funny that we got nearly the same patterns, with the first letter being the guessing game.
21:38
Apparently so.
Mass tourism is back.
I have several friends who live by these canals.
@Cerberus Looks like it would be easy to fall in if the crowd got boisterous.
They fall in all the time.
It is a major load on firemen, policemen, ambulances.
At least this canal has a low wall and some ladders.
22:20
@RobustosupportsUkraine There are elements like gold and uranium, and those you can't fuse to (or from) either, that I know of. So you can have transferrous elements without those having been produced via solar fusion.
I might have the edge case wrong, but I thought that iron was the last thing you could fuse to (not from) and get anything worth having out of it energywise. Don't worry about it.
You can try to fuse iron all you want, but you run out of net energy trying.
22:40
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] No whitespace in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (97): How long should a list item be?‭ by user451278‭ on english.SE
@RobustosupportsUkraine I merely know of its existence, it sounds like the sort of software that only we would use in the 2020s until we catch up with the world
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Offensive answer detected, potentially bad keyword in answer, toxic answer detected (158): Non-racial alternative for "Chinese fire drill"‭ by Osee Love‭ on english.SE
23:01
> Latin Wordle 108 4/6
⬜⬜⬜⬜🟨
⬜🟩🟨⬜🟨
⬜🟩⬜🟩🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
This is better.
23:45
@tchrist That's what I said. :)
8 hours ago, by Robusto supports Ukraine
@tchrist Well, you can (otherwise there would be no iron), but the process takes more energy than it produces. Which causes star collapse.

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