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00:06
@Cerberus Yes. I was totally unaware about this syndrome
No dog or cat has been rained by it yet today.
00:42
@CowperKettle But you posted it because of the funny name on this day, I praesume?
01:13
@Cerberus No. What is funny about the name?
Maybe it's funny in Dutch?
I just came across this logo on Twitter
@CowperKettle Cooling & Freeze.
Ah!
The heat wave has stopped here. It will only reach +26°C today
But inside the flat, it's hot, because the building has accumulated the heat.
When a heat wave arrives, it's cool for a day or two inside the building, until it accumulates the heat.
@CowperKettle How hot did it get during your "heat wave"?
Better.
It will be 33 degrees here tomorrow, 38 the day after.
I wish I could welcome you to my world.
01:21
It will be 40 degrees in the south.
@Robusto It was +35 this year
Near the sea, no less.
In Zeeland.
@CowperKettle OK, that's pretty hot for your latitude. Was the humidity bad as well?
@Robusto I don't know about humidity, the weather log doesn't show it: gismeteo.ru/diary/4517
@Cerberus Yeah, that is very bad for Europe. I've been in Paris when it was around 30 °C and that was already impossible.
01:23
Here's another weather log, which might include humidity pogodaiklimat.ru/weather.php?id=28440
yesterday, by tchrist
user image
There are many columns in the table, but I don't know what they mean
@Robusto Because you have more air conditioning?
@tchrist Hmm not sure I read that correctly: I thought 100 F was 37 C?
Here's a chart with relative humidity (Отн. влажн %) hmn.ru/index.php?index=8&value=28440
@Cerberus Well, virtually nothing in Europe has traditionally been air-conditioned. My wife and I went and saw a movie just to get out of the heat. Being in a city at that temperature is much worse than being in the country at the same temp, because cities store heat and then radiate it at night.
01:25
Yes.
Air conditioning has kind of exploded here, though.
Many people are getting at least a mobile unit.
It's pretty nice.
Yeah.
But I'd still rather have a cool night for sleeping.
I got one, too.
Now imagine if all of India got air conditioning.
Let's hope we can build solar panels at the same speed.
Or that we can get fusion energy even faster.
01:30
Would be nice.
01:50
Word of the day: goldbeater's skin
02:15
Memes about Dmitry Medvedev, after his statement about the upcoming "Judgement Day" for the West.
@Cerberus No, 37 is rather famously but misleadingly 98.6.
But I think that your forecast has warmed since last I looked.
Hi guys, Im making a canonical post on ELL, what should I include in it? (its about passive voice)
ell.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/5702/… - Nobody's on ELL chat so I came here :P
 
1 hour later…
03:39
> VChK, NKVD, FSB. Authorities in Magadan, Kolyma region, have opened a monument to the three generations of Soviet/Russian special services, the ones that were engaged in repression of people, including the deporting of Ukrainians to Kolyma & torture of political prisoners.
Hmm.
By how much, one wonders.
04:12
> dementia-free older adults (n = 14,648) taking vitamin D3 supplements for over 146 days/year were 1.8 times more likely to develop dementia than those not taking the supplements
04:38
That would be pretty huge.
But we've seen so many assertions made and disproven or nuanced...
@CowperKettle This message led to a horrible dream for me. Putin nuked somewhere outside North East India. I could feel it in atmosphere in India. So I bought iodine tablets in hurry feeling like we all are going to die. A local doctor laughed at me why you buying this it's not gonna protect you.
After that I saw many war related dreams I can't exactly remember what happened. All I know someone was shooting towards me from a long distance but their bullets were not reaching me.
In March this year, I had a dream where I could see explosions of munition dumps somewhere over the horizon, on the far outskirts of Yekaterinburg.
Several days after the start of the Special Operation, I was walking in the park, and two women passed me, and I heard one say: "this night I had a dream in which my son was conscripted into the army", the other replied "I had the same dream recently".
 
1 hour later…
05:54
@Cerberus yes, we're groping at the dark until we can come up with meaningful mechanisms of how dementia progress that studies confirm
@DialFrost i think how detailed the answers are is mostly irrelevant to the average learner, but a TL:;DR; that doesn't leave them confused is going to be the best thing about that post
06:13
@M.A.R. oh, so you think its fine? (im happy to receive feedback from a language pro! :)
06:57
Word of the day: drey (the nest of a tree squirrel, flying squirrel or ringtail possum)
(origin unknown)
07:45
Today I saw banks here still use Internet Explorer.
What's a good term for an (email) address that forwards email to a forwarding address? (I had preferred the term 'forwarding address' itself, but that seems to be used for the final destination.)
In the city of Archangel, a man went out shopping in a t-shirt with a crossed-over portait of Putin, and was detained by the police. His wife only managed to find out his whereabouts several hours after he left the flat, because he did not take his phone.
@Řídící interim email address?
> Iran, whose President Ebrahim Raisi is hosting the meeting, has already warned that any Turkish military action in Syria could “destabilise the region”. The Tehran summit will also enable Erdogan to hold his first meeting with Putin since Russia invaded Ukraine in February.

“The timing of this summit is not a coincidence,” Russian analyst Vladimir Sotnikov told the AFP news agency. “Turkey wants to conduct a ‘special operation’ in Syria just as Russia is implementing a ‘special operation’ in Ukraine.”
08:30
My cat, Lolita, died yesterday morning, and I miss her. I always greeted her when I got up, got home, and the like, made sure she had food and water when I left the house.
6
@Xanne Sorry to hear about that. I've never had any pets but some months ago I also felt the pain about the death of a stray puppy.
08:45
Thank you.
Wordle 394 4/6

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That one succumbed nicely to strategy. Or perhaps it was mere tactics.
#Worldle #178 X/6 (91%)
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
09:12
#Worldle #178 3/6 (100%)
🟩⬜⬜⬜⬜↗️
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬜↗️
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr

I had never heard of that place before but I found it anyway :-)
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Wordle 394 3/6

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09:24
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Wordle (ES) #193 5/6

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https://wordle.danielfrg.com/
@jlliagre Cheating is not allowed :P
I had no clue. Never paid attention on that side of globe.
@Vikas I didn't cheat! Linguistics lead me to the answer.
09:39
@Vikas Actually, I knew that place and recognized it at first sight but under a different name (like if I knew Celon but wasn't aware it's Sri Lanka now)
@Xanne I'm sorry to hear that!
Ceylon i mean.
09:52
Okay.
10:14
> 'I find antiquity a rewarding study, if only because, while I am absorbed in it, I am able to turn my eyes from the troubles which torment the modern world.' (Livy, 27 BC)
 
2 hours later…
12:22
@CowperKettle I can't imagine a car replacing a child in one's life.
#Worldle #178 3/6 (100%)
🟩⬜⬜⬜⬜⬆️
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬜↗️
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
_________________
Wordle 394 5/6

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@Robusto Me neither.
The actual TV report does not say that a car can replace a child. The parents just used the money to buy a car, because their son wanted a car like this. And they made their first trip in the car to the cemetery.
The report is subdued and sorrowful.
12:54
@CowperKettle backs away from bottle of multivitamins
13:07
@CowperKettle I'd have taken the money and thrown it back in the face of the government that attempted such a "condolence."
On my first run after a 3-month pause, my hear rate reached 200 bpm three times.
On the second run, a week later, it only reached 181 bpm once.
So, even a single run in a week is enough to train the heart.
And a small run at that. Only 4 km.
@CowperKettle Yes, but 200 bpm is a sign that your heart was seriously out of shape. And the closer you get to the "in shape" numbers the more you have to work at it. Even TdF cyclists lose their peak fitness over a surprisingly short period of time.
Yes, I was surprised at 200 bpm. I really got tired at about 3 km.
But a week later, I was not tired even after 5 km. Calf muscles were close to giving up, but the breathing was normal.
So even one small run in a week is great.
In 2020, my calf muscles started to give up at about 30 km. That was my longest run. I don't know what else starts to give up, if one trains one's calf muscles to the maximum.
Not even calves, these were not very giving up. The muscles "inside the feet" were clumsy at about 30 km, but I felt that I could run an additional 5-7 km.
But it was a clumsy run, with feet moving awkwardly. The parts below the calves.
Make sure you don't insure yourself, if your feet muscles perhaps cannot stabilise you as well, when you run over a bump or something.
13:17
Fever in Paris...
You're almost there!
The last time I was in France, it was also 40 degrees.
@Cerberus Okay! I'll try to give a wide berth around all insurance companies.
Yes, the new normal.
@CowperKettle Haha oops.
@jlliagre Nice!
13:23
@CowperKettle Better than nothing, but I don't think you can conclude anything from a single data point. You might just have been in extremis for a different reason that day.
I'm glad I don't live in downtown Paris.
@jlliagre Whew!
> Mom: enroll in the Army, son. They will understand that you're an idiot only then you're already a Major, and they will be thinking of what to do with that so long that you'll retire with a pension. (Bulgarian joke)
@CowperKettle There's a term for that:
The Peter principle is a concept in management developed by Laurence J. Peter, which observes that people in a hierarchy tend to rise to "a level of respective incompetence": employees are promoted based on their success in previous jobs until they reach a level at which they are no longer competent, as skills in one job do not necessarily translate to another.The concept was explained in the 1969 book The Peter Principle (William Morrow and Company) by Peter and Raymond Hull. (Hull wrote the text, based on Peter's research.) Peter and Hull intended the book to be satire, but it became popular...
13:45
@jlliagre I suspect the number of air-conditioning units has increased sharply in France as well?
@jlliagre You should be glad you don't live in downtown Pervouralsk
Or downtown Mogadishu.
Mogadishu and Pervouralsk temperature are currently both around 25°C, not that I would prefer be there though, temperature is not everything.
@jlliagre My point exactly. In Paris at least you have compensation for the temperatures.
Wow. Tomorrow, Pervouralsk will be one degree C hotter than Mogadishu. And with Putin's efforts, the living standars might also become close in those two noble cities.
13:59
@Cerberus Yes air-conditioning is on the rise, but more in Southern France than in the North. It's common in stores, hotels, workplaces but much less in individual houses.
14:15
@jlliagre Nobody used to have it here.
The song wasn't written about July, for good reason.
@Cerberus That's because you didn't use to have anything close to as many days over 85 or 90 in the average year as we all seem to be having now these days.
Indeed, we did not.
@Robusto Ella had a different song dedicated to July
@tchrist In Boston, the mid-80s were considered a heat wave, mainly because of the humidity.
@CowperKettle Nice.
14:24
@Robusto Or Chicago, same. Growing up Milwaukee "never" had 10 days over 90, and we hated them.
A Cole Porter tune, if I'm not mistaken.
@tchrist Yup.
Apparently they have 26% humidity right now, so it doesn't feel quite so bad as 92, merely 89. :)
I dunno, I remember it from the mid-1990s, when I first bought a CD of Ella Fitzgerald
Now here in Colorado we get a month or two, or three, of days over 90.
It will probably be over 90 every single day for the next two months.
@CowperKettle See, you need to understand the history of these tunes. And all the performers who covered them. Like did you know that Coltrane's "My Favorite Thing" was actually a tune from The Sound of Music?
@tchrist When I make my annual pilgrimage to California in August, the desert is almost always ~110° at least.
14:30
There's a touch of cloud in the air this morning, and we'll see some spotty monsoon thunderstorms by mid-afternoon, but that won't stop it from hitting 98 or 100 before then.
I'm safe inside.
And I'm sick anyway.
Damn.
But it hang there for three years, so somebody must have copied it ))
That's pretty cool.
I hope your name is not in/on it?
I hope so too. My name is not in it.
14:35
@jlliagre Donc y-a-t-il de la fièvre à Paris en juillet pas seulement en février? :)
Feverary would be a better name for our month.
@tchrist Enfiévrer tu veux dire ;-)
@CowperKettle That is good.
I didn't know that "monsoon" could be used for anywhere but the Indian area.
@jlliagre It is a peculiarity of the American Southwest that we use that term in a particular context here.
The North American monsoon, variously known as the Southwest monsoon, the Mexican monsoon, the New Mexican monsoon, or the Arizona monsoon, is a pattern of pronounced increase in thunderstorms and rainfall over large areas of the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico, typically occurring between June and mid-September. During the monsoon, thunderstorms are fueled by daytime heating and build up during the late afternoon and early evening. Typically, these storms dissipate by late night, and the next day starts out fair, with the cycle repeating daily. The monsoon typically loses its...
It does not mean cyclonic activity, at least, not usually.
14:46
This is why June in the desert southwest is usually the hottest month.
I associate the monsoon with rain and wind, not necessarily cyclones.
Maybe I'm confusing it with your father's storm, the typhoon.
> A monsoon often brings about thoughts of torrential rains, similar to a hurricane or typhoon. But there is a difference: a monsoon is not a single storm; rather, it is a seasonal wind shift over a region. The shift may cause heavy rains in the summer, but at other times, it may cause a dry spell.
Huh.
@jlliagre "The major monsoon systems of the world consist of the West African and Asia–Australian monsoons. The inclusion of the North American Monsoon and South American monsoon with incomplete wind reversal has been debated."
A monsoon () is traditionally a seasonal reversing wind accompanied by corresponding changes in precipitation, but is now used to describe seasonal changes in atmospheric circulation and precipitation associated with annual latitudinal oscillation of the Intertropical Convergence Zone between its limits to the north and south of the equator. Usually, the term monsoon is used to refer to the rainy phase of a seasonally changing pattern, although technically there is also a dry phase. The term is also sometimes used to describe locally heavy but short-term rains.The major monsoon systems of the world...
@Robusto Because they forget to close Pandora's lid?
Mainly because of management expectations and giddy confidence in the flawed estimation process.
14:58
@Robusto Yes.
Surely thou jestest! Ic erst wist thee the gestour on reading thine assertion that Standard English hath of olde its first person singular ydropped. — tchrist ♦ 1 hour ago
15:35
It's pretty simple, though. Something I would never think to do on any system of mine.
Just as I would not light a fire in my house and then pour gasoline on it.
16:12
Didn't get 4th in 1st row.
Yeah I watched it last year ( or the year before last year).
> During a final crew meal before returning to stasis, he suddenly chokes and convulses. A small alien creature bursts from Kane's chest, killing him, and escapes into the ship, with Ash dissuading the rest from killing it.
I remember.
16:18
@Vikas It's referring to the movie 'Alien' and the scene where the alien baby, which was growing inside this guys stomach, leaves the stomach by the nearest way, straight out, exploding all over the place leaving just a hole
Okay. So does it mean there was blood on toilet?
so the bathroom lioked, under UV, like a huge mess of spattered blood all over the place, just like when the alien baby burst thorough that guy's chest
Okay.
@Vikas Like it had been.
That's alsoa TV trope... UV shows old blood stains that may have been cleaned up to the naked eye but remnants are still visible only with the UV light.
Okay. But I still don't get overall comic. What was the relation of invisible blood to it?
Or does it want to show that people can do anything to get insurance claimed?
16:21
So in Ocean's 11, the hotel inspector goes into a nice well made up hotel room, but then inspects the room with a UV light and finds all sorts of mess.
@Vikas No. It's that they've tried cleaning a lot, but the UV light shows that they really didn't clean all that well even though they tried their hardest.
It looks clean to the naked eye, but the UV light shows that it is in fact messy. They can't try any harder to clean, so they are giving up.
And by giving up , they are going to the far extreme of burning the house down.
oh
This may help
I get it but still I don't get it. What was the message?
Is it a funny comic? Should I laugh? Or does it have something to learn from?
XKCD is notorious for sometimes being hard to understand (you have to know a lot of pop culture in addition to the expected all branches of science).
OK.
16:26
@Vikas You should snort ever so slightly as though someone somewhere in another part of the house laughed once into a pillow.
In any case, I believe it is much easier to recover a computer after a fork bomb than a house after a fire.
A beautiful story I read in school: A house is not a home
It had house that burnt.
But they "recovered" what mattered to them most.
Won't spoil it. It's beautiful story. Heart touching at that time in school.
@jlliagre Ah. I get it now. It is simple unless you overthink it like me.
"Never use a UV light in your bathroom"
Also what is the importance of "Title text"?
Is it a supportive text for comic?
16:43
@Vikas rollover your cursor on the comic image and the balloon help will popup after a few seconds. in that is some extra text. XKCD uses it to add extra explanation or maybe an alternate punchline.
OK.
There used to be a site called 'Explain 'Explain XKCD' ' which would explain the entries on the site 'Explain XKCD'. YOu know because sometimes the explanations of xkcd themselves are hard to understand
Yeah it is too detailed. Not so easy to understand.
Maybe these comics are for advanced users.
 
1 hour later…
17:59
> Turkey’s president says Ankara will “freeze” Finland and Sweden’s NATO membership bids if the Nordic countries do not keep promises on “terrorism” made last month.
Looks like it's not easy yet.
I think they want promises fulfilled (or at least start fulfilling) before they join NATO.
@DialFrost oh, I'm definitely not in the position to answer that I'm afraid. Other regulars here are much more in touch with grammer and seentax
The last time I opened CGEL was two years ago, and that was by accident, I was looking for something else
@Vikas they're stirring shit up and playing both sides, been doing it for a decade. I doubt they'll end this game any time soon.
18:21
@Vikas I pride myself on being a very advanced comic user with a 78.5% chance of XKCD comprehension and 18 "big success: understood that reference" gold medals
@M.A.R. They == Turkey?
@M.A.R. Good. I've never been into comics. I would read a few kids comics in Hindi newspaper in childhood, though.
I used to enjoy them because that was the only source of entertainment in free time.
intransigence
Wow what a difficult word.
18:41
@Vikas Advanced what?
18:58
@tchrist Experienced readers.
Just read this article to understand Turkey.
The English was very difficult to understand including the difficult politics involved.
What does "Western vocation" mean here?
I also read there are elections in Turkey next year. So maybe things will change after that.
20:04
20:14
@Vikas Difficult like intransigence (fr:*intransigeance*) and vocation are often simple for native French.
I also read there are elections in Turkey next year. So maybe things will change after that. I wouldn't hold my breath.
@jlliagre Nope.
@tchrist Nope to what?
20:43
@jlliagre Holding one's breath.
While waiting for change from Turkey.
That's the same folly we see here when people hold their breath waiting for Joe Manchin to actually vote with his party for a change.
Unfortunately, he wasn't elected by his party so he sees no reason to vote with them. He will vote with the people who elected him and let the devil take the rest of them. Same with Erdoğan.
 
3 hours later…
23:26
@M.A.R. aww ok
23:39
@jlliagre I wonder though whether their use of "Western vocation" means a calling to the Western way of life, or maybe just Western jobs. Vocational training institutes no longer require a permission slip from God to enter that vocation. :)
> As plausible as these explanations are, underlying them is also Erdoğan’s own discomfort with Turkey’s longstanding Western vocation, symbolized by its membership in NATO as well as in the Council of Europe. He is instrumentalizing the issue of Sweden and Finland’s membership to weaken this vocation, if not break it, to eliminate remaining institutional checks on his one-man rule.
Maybe it just means they're being called to the West.
23:59
> These values and institutions are an impediment to his one-man rule as well as his ideological goal of eventually breaking Turkey’s traditional Western vocation.
Apparently yes.

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