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00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

00:27
T90 assembly line, Uralvagonzavod
01:03
I wonder how many tanks Russia builds per year now.
01:40
@Cerberus You wonder what the limiting factors for that are.
So one does.
But I think even America is not able to make a great many tanks each year.
01:55
Resources are always finite.
But the financial resources arrayed against him exceed his.
If it were simply a matter of money, he would lose. It's much more complicated than that, though.
It is certainly true that the West is becoming conscious of the potential for a long conflict in Ukraine drawing down its own stocks of war matérial.
I'm not sure whether the building of tanks is that expensive for Russia, when you consider its huge oil and gas revenues?
There is the infrastructure, factories and stuff; raw materials; parts; skilled personnel.
The factories and skilled labor can't be ramped up instantly. Putting your nation on a war footing would be possible, but not instantly.
02:22
Exactly.
I don't know whether and how fast the production can be increased substantially.
Two guys on a nationally broadcast program complaining that Stalin didn’t deport western Ukrainians.
So, if it's nationally broadcast, why can't people post it on YouTube or other social media?
02:38
Here's a YouTube channel with translated bits in English youtube.com/@russianmediamonitor/videos
Thanks pal.
"You probably meant Koreans are ants". How helpful, Google.
 
2 hours later…
04:53
A famous Russian video in which a self-styled doctor describes how to treat hemorrhoids by sticking a live cucumber up there, without tearing it off its stem.
 
1 hour later…
06:32
Dennis H. Klatt (March 31, 1938 – December 30, 1988) was an American researcher in speech and hearing science. Klatt was the pioneer of computerized speech synthesis and created an interface which allowed for speech for non-expert users for the first time. Prior to his work, non-verbal individuals would need specialist support to be able to speak at all. Stephen Hawking used a version of this speech synthesizer, based on Klatt's own voice, and which Hawking chose to keep even after others became available. == Biography == Dennis Klatt was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on March 31, 1938. He received...
 
1 hour later…
08:21
@CowperKettle I was perplexed until I found that: merriam-webster.com/dictionary/butt-dial
@jlliagre Oh! :)
> "From 2000 to 2019, the prescriptions for antipsychotics for children and adolescents in England doubled from an annual period prevalence in 2000 of 0·057% (95% CI 0·052–0·063%) to 0·105% (0·100–0·111%) in 2019"
One child/adolescent in 1000, that's not much.
"In like Flynn" is a slang phrase meaning "having quickly or easily achieved a goal or gained access as desired". == Origins == Barry Popik of the American Dialect Society and Nattalie Grebenshikoff of the Gold Coast Literary Society found an example from 1940, as well as this from the sports section of the San Francisco Examiner of 8 February 1942: “Answer these questions correctly and your name is Flynn, meaning you’re in, provided you have two left feet and the written consent of your parents”. To judge from a newspaper reference he turned up from early 1943, the phrase could by then also be...
> Two large military tents were set up in the yard of Yekaterinburg's Military Conscription Office
Back in September, when the mobilization was announced, only a single such tent was installed, so locals are getting nervous.
The military officials said the tents are for some undefined "regular operations", which is odd, since activities were announced ceased in December.
Nobody knows, but people have no belief in the government's statements any longer when it concerns such matters.
@Xanne Somewhat related verb of the day: to corpse (of an actor, to laugh uncontrollably during a performance in theater)
In theatre (especially in the illusionistic Western tradition), breaking character occurs when an actor ceases to maintain the illusion that they are identical with the character they are portraying. This is a more acceptable occurrence while in the process of rehearsal but is considered unprofessional while actively performing in front of an audience or camera (except when the act is a deliberate breaking of the fourth wall). One of the most common ways of breaking character is corpsing, in which an actor loses their composure and laughs or giggles in a comedy scene or scene requiring ludicrous...
> One of the most common ways of breaking character is corpsing, in which an actor loses their composure and laughs or giggles in a comedy scene or scene requiring ludicrous actions.
> In the film A Knight's Tale, Mark Addy breaks character in the first sword fighting scene after Paul Bettany's character gives a rousing speech and no one responds. The crowd were actually Czech men and women who did not understand the speech or that they were supposed to cheer; only after Addy yelled did they remember to cheer.
Galkin used to be constantly on the TV before Feb 2022.
Now he is the enemy of the people.
His surname derives from galka, jackdaw in Russian.
A female noun.
Galkin is "galka" + possessive ending "in"
 
2 hours later…
12:04
> The study in which five octopuses were submerged in water laced with MDMA. After absorbing the drug, they proceeded to cuddle with each other, instead of playing with the Star Wars figurines that would normally have intrigued them.
 
1 hour later…
13:30
> I spend my time telling people about the benefits of dried grapes.
It’s about raisin awareness.
14:08
15
Q: Why can't I see any images on the roll of film that I've removed from my camera?

kulaksızI am very new to photography. I bought a Zenit 12xp and color film for it. I loaded the film in the camera but I can't take any photos. When I take a picture and remove the film and hold it up to the light, I don't see anything. Is there something I missed?

Reminds me of giving a cell phone to a palaeolithic hunter and wondering why it doesn't work.
14:34
> After meeting Zelensky in a Lviv today, Poland’s President Duda said at a press conference that the decision has been taken in Warsaw to transfer some Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine (about 12 tanks), but that it will only happen as part of a coalition.
Word of the eve: hors de combat
Not be confused with combat horses.
15:02
> From Middle French fors, from Old French fors, from Latin forīs, or more likely derived from dehors (in Middle and Old French defors).
> hors la ville ― outside the city
Latin foris - gate, opening, entrance -- From Proto-Italic *fworis, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰwṓr, from *dʰwer- (“door, gate”).
dʰwer - in Russian the word for door is dver' (дверь, with a soft sign at the end)
Late Latin dē forīs, from Latin dē + forīs (“outdoors”).
Adverb: dē forīs (not comparable)
  1. (Late Latin, proscribed) from outside
  2. 5th century C.E., Cledonius (Grammatici Latini v.64.22–3)
  3. De intus et de foris uenio non possumus dicere quia praepositio aduerbiis numquam iungitur.
  4. We cannot say 'I am coming de intus or de foris' because prepositions never attach to adverbs.
> De intus et de foris uenio non possumus dicere quia praepositio aduerbiis numquam iungitur. -- We cannot say 'I am coming de intus or de foris' because prepositions never attach to adverbs.
Cledonius was a grammar Nazi
> domo me eripuit
He saved me from the house?
> Domo me eripuit, verberavit, me invito abduxit meam; homini misero plus quingentos colaphos infregit mihi.
> This fellow dragged me from my house, beat me up, took away a girl without my consent, and rained more than five hundred blows on my poor head.
Adelphoe (also Adelphoi and Adelphi; from Greek ᾰ̓δελφοί, Brothers) is a play by Roman playwright Terence, adapted partly from plays by Menander and Diphilus. It was first performed in 160 BC at the funeral games of Aemilius Paulus. Exploring the best form of child-rearing, the play inspired Molière's The School for Husbands.Adelphoe was Terence's last play and is often considered his masterpiece. == Plot == Demea, father to Aeschinus and Ctesipho, decides to separate his children and raises Ctesipho while allowing his brother Micio to raise Aeschinus. Demea is a strict authoritarian father, and...
> It is thought that Terence abruptly died, around the age of 25, likely in Greece or on his way back to Rome, due to shipwreck or disease. He was supposedly on his way to explore and find inspiration for his comedies.
Did not make it to Club 27
 
1 hour later…
16:33
@CowperKettle Hors-d'œuvre
16:50
Is dawn (the early morning) masculine or feminine?
Also forest.
@Vikas In what language?
@CowperKettle e-ripio is from e(x) + rapio, "drag out, snatch out of".
@tchrist English.
@Vikas English does not have grammatical genders of its common nouns.
I read at a forum that English nouns don't have gender.
@tchrist Oh
@tchrist Since you mention common noun, does it mean other types of nouns may have gender?
There are eight types of nouns lol
According to Google
17:07
Consider: "the happy forest". You do nothing to "the" or "happy" to make them align with "forest" according to the noun-class of "forest".
Generally speaking, in English, words don't have gender; only people and animals have gender.
@Vikas Good luck with that.
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople Well, they have sex. :)
Grammatical gender is different from a creature's sex.
Is there any site or dictionary where I can check each noun type?
@Vikas There is no such thing.
@tchrist Yeah, good point.
17:08
For example I type the noun and it gives me noun type.
Oops
@Vikas I don't know what you mean by "noun type."
The noun type of animal is the same as that of aardvark and that of antlion: nouns beginning with A. :)
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople For example forest is common noun. I want to know type of dawn, kettle, candle, dew etc.
Perhaps mass noun / proper noun and the like?
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer, shortened url in answer (148): Do we use article for social media or not, and why?‭ by Mohammed Hafees‭ on english.SE
17:10
A common noun is one that is not the name proper to some owner.
I'm sure there will be dictionaries that have this, or word lists.
Cow is a common noun; Zeus, the name of that god.
@Vikas Almost all nouns, other than the names of people and places, are common nouns.
And water is a mass noun.
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople I see.
17:12
A mass noun is uncountable.
As a few examples, "forum," "noun," "gender," "type," "word," "people," "animals," "site," "dictionary," "thing," "point," "aardvark," "dawn," "kettle," "candle," and "dew" are all common nouns.
Is glass a common noun?
@Cerberus Milk?
Yes, "glass" is a common noun.
Pretty much every noun that can be written with a lowercase first letter is a common noun.
17:12
@Vikas Not if it's Philip Glass.
@tchrist LOL
@Vikas Yes, like milk.
Anyway, I was thinking to use a noun in a username that I want to use for some forums. I was thinking to use a masculine noun since I'm male. But in your opinion, does it even matter if I just use common noun that has no gender?
In some ways, whether something is countable or not depends on the use.
@Vikas If you want gendered nouns, learn French!
17:15
Didn't knew it would become complicated lol
@Vikas A male would be a masculine noun. :)
@Vikas English doesn't really have masculine nouns, aside from nouns that literally refer to male people and animals, like "boy" and "tomcat."
@jlliagre Yeah I read that some nouns have gender in French?
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople OK
No, that's wrong.
All of them
17:16
All nouns have gender in French.
Not some.
That said, it just so happens that "Dawn" is a reasonably common female name, so people might think of the word "dawn" as being somewhat feminine.
@tchrist But it's already used!
@tchrist Oh
@Vikas Grandfather.
Stallion.
You must pick a male creature.
If that's what you want.
It's curious.
I think most English speakers would say that the words "forest," "kettle," "candle," and "dew" seem neither masculine nor feminine.
I think most nouns in Hindi also have gender. Maybe all.
17:17
Ship is somewhat feminine in English.
The only place sex happens in English is with the selection of he-vs-she for referring to things that have that particular sex.
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople This will simplify things for me.
> No sex please, we're British.
@Vikas What does it mean for a noun to have gender?
Every Hindi noun has a gender — masculine or feminine. A noun's gender determines its inflection. Adjectives must agree in gender as well, and verbs change to match the gender of the subject. Looks like French.
@Vikas No, anything goes, masculine or feminine or neuter.
17:19
That you have to use only "pretty" and not "handsome", or vice versa?
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople Oh, more simple.
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople By the way, what is this about LGBT people, did something happen that I missed?
I think they're all considered Qs now.
@Vikas will they be the sort of forums where your gender would matter?
@Cerberus 👍🏽
17:20
If not, then you don't have to find something male-sounding
I know David Sedaris would like to be G but apparently he's something else now, and he doesn't remember voting for being de-G'd.
Just call yourself Superman.
If you use a feminine name, people will refer to you as a woman, which can be funny, but nothing wrong with that.
Whatever you say, Tabitha.
@tchrist Geriatric? I'm afraid the change is irreversible
I might consider Suppiluliuma.
He was a king, but many might address me as a woman.
It's such a cool name.
@M.A.R. Not only forums actually. Examples: Discord, Intel/AMD community, Dell Community, Adobe community. I'm tired of using my existing username because that username contains my real name with some number (a unique username) that is part of my Email address, which I don't want to make public at all places.
One of my usernames on forums is actually '[sth]cardboard'. I don't think it's odd or especially weird, and it works
@M.A.R. OK. Cardboard is also common noun right?
Because it's a thing.
@M.A.R. It doesn't taste great
@Vikas so just pick something you like. It could be "BattlestarGalacticaLover" or "Santa's little chimney" or "Vik".
17:25
@Cerberus I don't want that experience 😀
@Mitch not a requirement for working
'McLovin' is a good male name
@M.A.R. No, but it could be improved.
@Cerberus But since common noun is neither masculine nor feminine, people won't even be able to guess I'm male or female, no?
'CardboardWithSalt'
@Mitch what if it's "tastycardboard"? Then it's tasty per definition
17:28
@Vikas Many physical objects will have -some- association with gender... eg flowers are usually associated with women, and sportscars with men.
@Mitch CardboardWithSaltFried
@M.A.R. OK, I'm slowly being convinced
@Mitch Hmmm.
@Vikas hmmm... add batter, then yes.
also then take away the cardboard and it'd be perfect.
@M.A.R. Coder, programmer, hacker, developer, data analyst, software engineer, computer scientist. Soon as you pick one to self-identify as, someone will come around and tell you no, that's wrong, you're actually this other thing. Doesn't matter whether you voted to become that. Your word isn't flashy and trendy anymore, and no, you don't get a vote.
17:30
You cut the middle man and just have fried salt?
This is as usual making me hungry but it's OK because I am in the middle of eating lunch.
so kinda perfect actually
in other words, thanks you guys!
@Vikas That's right.
Unless you can think of a way in which they would be able to.
@M.A.R. and batter
salt by itself is ok i guess
substantially improved with batter
@Cerberus OK
it's... better with batter
you know where this is going
17:32
@tchrist I could call myself a contrarian and call it a day
Don't fight over it
because
then
you'd
get
tired
a better batter battle
wired
@Mitch add some butter
and if your batter is dairy based
a better butter batter battle
17:33
Oh boy
and if
Arnold Schwarzenegger self-identifies as Johannes Sebastian Bach. He even says, “I’ll be Bach.”
and if you ;'re copying this straight from Dr Seuss
and you're doing this in a bottle
it's a better butter batter bottle battle
and if this bottle is on a poodle eating noodles
@Mitch and if the fight is exceptionally serious
it's a serious battle?
17:36
A bitter better butter batter bottle battle
And if the fight's about haggling for prices
> In Persian 'sangak' means little stone. The bread is baked on a bed of small river stones in an oven.
A bit bitter better butter batter bottle battle baiter
@Cerberus The "reinstate LGBT people" thing is a bit of a joke. A lot of people support Monica Cellio and so they put "reinstate Monica" in their display names. I support LGBT people, so I decided to do "reinstate LGBT people."
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople Oh, I see.
Monica is very much pro all the letter people, did you know that?
I'm not sure if I did.
17:40
Now you do.
Your name suggests that people were fired because they were gay here.
Yeah, that's a good point. I never really thought of how the name would be interpreted by people who aren't familiar with what happened in 2019.
Maybe putting "reinstate LGBT people" in my display name was a bad idea. But in any case, my little joke has certainly gone on long enough, so I'll go ahead and change it back to my actual name.
@jlliagre So I don't need to learn French :D
Y'know, this reminds me of a little linguistic problem I've faced.
My car's name is the Beast. I'd like to translate his name into some other languages, but in most of the languages in question, the most obvious translation for "Beast" is a feminine noun, so I don't want to use that.
A 19th century joke that aged well.
@Tanner-reinstateLGBTpeople In Russian, chudovishe (beast) is neuter.
17:49
@tchrist Asking me? What does it mean for a noun to have gender? => I think we mostly use it for way of communication. If we consider "sunlight" as male and use it in a Hindi sentence, it looks a little odd. Other than that it doesn't matter, I think.
No, that's not what I meant.
Oh. So?
For Polish, I think I'd go with "Bydlak." It has a name similar to "beast," it's masculine, and it even starts with a B.
*has a meaning similar to "beast"
You have a sentence. It has a noun of a given gender in it. Now you change that sentence by replacing that particular noun with one whose gender is different from the one you're throwing away.
Yes, and there's a Russian offensive term bydlo derived from it. A lout, an uneducated man.
17:51
Is the new sentence still grammatical, or do you have to change other pieces as well?
@tchrist In Hindi?
Yes.
@tchrist Okay. Yes, I will need to make a few adjustments. Maybe not be applicable but pretty sure we have to make adjustments.
Suppose in English we have the sentence: "I gave him a cow." If I replace the word cow with the word anteater, the sentence is now ungrammatical.
Because you have to change the article "a" to be "an".
@tchrist Yeah
We also have to make such adjustment.
17:55
That's what I would expect.
Electricity has gone (meaning there's a power cut right now).
I'm not sure BTW, if that's correct English
It's missing an article.
I am just taking an example
The electricity is gone.
Okay
17:57
Or: Our power is out.
Okay, so electricity in Hindi is usually feminine.
So you can see I replaced it with masculine noun "dog" and sentence changed a bit.
Actually two words changed. I highlighted only one.
> In ſtead whereof ſhe made him to be dight
In womans weedes,​that is to manhood ſhame,
And put before his lap a napron white,
In ſtead of Curiets and baſes fit for fight.
Word of the day: bases -- A kind of skirt (often of velvet or brocade, but sometimes of mail or other armour) which hung from the middle to about the knees, or lower.
Unrelated: This question asks for a word or phrase that can substitute for some missing items at the beginning of a list: english.stackexchange.com/questions/277198/…
The Google translate is not so accurate or it doesn't understand what I want to translate. So some differences because of that.
I read it and I thought... "cetera et"?
Obviously, people don't actually say "cetera et," and that seems like kind of a shame.
18:09
@tchrist oh wait I assumed dog is masculine. But in fact it's also a common noun XD Too complicated.
But I seriously doubt it. Dog has a gender no?
Female dogs are bitches.
Oh so dog is used for both?
I mean a bitch is also a dog?
That's why we call them dogs, irrespective of gender.
In dog-breeder speech, yes.
OK. In the example I used to explain that Hindi thing, replace dog with "Vikas" then. It would be correct. But I guess you already understood what I meant.
Just like how a female horse is a mare and a male horse is a stallion. A male human is a man and a female human is a woman.
Female cattle are cows and male cattle are bulls.
A female pony is a filly and a male pony is a colt.
18:13
Hmm. But we lack a proper word for male dog then? 🤔
Just like male human == man
female human == woman
female dog == bitch
male dog == dog
Anyway ignore it's overthinking
18:30
@Vikas They are Bow-wows or better ouah-ouahs, a he-ouah-ouahs and a she-Ouah-Ouah!
In the English language, animals have different names depending on whether they are male, female, young, domesticated, or in groups. The best-known source of many English words used for collective groupings of animals is The Book of Saint Albans, an essay on hunting published in 1486 and attributed to Juliana Berners. Most terms used here may be found in common dictionaries and general information web sites. == Generic terms == The terms in this table apply to many or all taxons in a particular biological family, class, or clade. == Terms by species or taxon == == Usage of collective ...
And once you has mastered all of those, we'll move on to the sounds that animals make. :)
18:50
@tchrist dogs have a lot to say in English
I've never heard a dog day 'bowwow'
Which reminds me of a joke
So a man is thinking of buying a dog
The owner says that his dog is a -talking- dog.
The man says prove it
Brick.
So the owner asks the dog 'What is the outside of a tree called?'
The dog says ' Bark'
Epidermis.
18:53
The man says that's interesting but don't all dogs day bark?
> Putin replaces general in charge of war in Ukraine after three months in post
Russia’s chief of the general staff, Valery Gerasimov, was appointed as the new commander of the combined forces group for Moscow’s “special military operation” in Ukraine by defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, Reuters reports.

Gerasimov will be replacing Sergei Surovikin, a notorious general who opened fire on pro-democracy protesters in the 1990s. He was appointed Russia’s first overall commander for the war in Ukraine on the same day Vladimir Putin was dealt a humiliating blow after an explosion on the Kerch br
Ok says the owner. He asks the dog 'What does sandpaper feel like?'
The dog answers 'Rough'
Apparently Putin prefers commanders with checkered pasts over those with chess pasts.
The man says that's interesting but isn't that something all dogs say?
> Sergei Surovikin, a notorious general nicknamed “General Armageddon” by the Russian media, who was appointed as overall commander of the army in October, would stay on as a deputy of Gerasimov, the defence ministry said.
18:56
Ok says the owner He then asks the dog 'Who is the best baseball player ever?'
@Mitch Armageddon tired of hearing all these ten-year-old jokes recycled foreverz.
And the dog answers 'Ruth'
And by ten year old jokes, I do not mean those that first came out ten years ago, either.
The man says that's enough this ain't no talking dog and storms off.
We all watched the cartoons, Mitch.
18:57
The dog then says 'What? Should I have said DiMaggio?'
@jlliagre You mean the male dogs?
@Mitch tell me simpler jokes.
@Vikas ok
First some dirty jokes
What's brown and sticky?
A stick
That's a good language one
The next one isn't a riddle more of a dirty thing to say
A white horse fell in a mud puddle
That's it. Those are the only dirty jokes I know
@Vikas that was a long joke, the talking dog one
It depends on some tenuous things, like knowing many ways that dog barking sounds are written in English
Bark, ruff (sounds like 'rough' which happens to be the feeling of sandpaper...
'ruth' is not a word anyone has ever used for a dog sound except for in this joke.
Babe Ruth had the record for most home runs ever (until Hank Aaron)
And 'Joe DiMaggio was a very good baseball player of the same era (1950's)
So that joke would have been understandable (maybe) during the 1950' and 1960's
@Mitch Is this a joke too? Because it definitely made me laugh 😂
19:12
But it also shows @jlliagre some of the many ways that you say dog sounds in English
@Vikas yes. The 'whats brown and sticky? A stick' is a joke.
It's very....
@Mitch No I mean this particular message.
juvenile
@Vikas oh. Well... No. It is not a joke. It is telling you I'm about to tell you a joke. In fact a dirty joke (meaning salacious or obscene)
There's a YouTube channel where a girl tells dirty jokes only. Gives her lots of engagement.
Five years ago my boss said why do you use Microsoft OneNote it's shit. Use Evernote. But I'm still stick to OneNote and I find it very helpful. Throughout the years, my usage has increased exponentially. Contains lots of information now.
@Vikas That was a joke that requires knowledge in French, English and Dogs. French baby talk say a un ouah ouah for a dog (pronounced "wah-wah") and that's gender neutral. As you know, English prepend "she-" or "he-" before an animal name to state its gender, especially "she-dog" to avoid using "bitch" for some reason. She-ouah-ouah is pronounced exactly like Chihuahua, a famous dog breed.
@Vikas in OneNote can you take pictures of text and search the text (that is in the picture)?
19:19
The Chihuahua or Spanish: Chihuahueño is a Mexican breed of toy dog. It is named for the Mexican state of Chihuahua and is among the smallest of all dog breeds. It is usually kept as a companion animal or for showing. == History == DNA studies suggest that native American dogs entered North America from Siberia roughly 10,000 years ago, and were then isolated for some 9000 years until the arrival of the first Europeans; these pre-contact dogs exhibited a unique genetic signature that is now almost gone. A study based on sequencing of ancient dog genomes, published in 2020, suggests that this pre...
@Mitch I will check.
That might be a she-chihuahua on the picture.
2
@jlliagre he-wolf' 'she-bear' is really old fashioned. Nowadays you'd just say 'female wolf'
I'm old fashioned.
But young in spirit!
19:22
I have old spirits in my bar, though.
"my friend here will have a cider, and I...I'll have a hot toddy!'
Clarence the angel from 'its a wonderfully life'
@Mitch it's available only for PC or Mac. You can take photo and then there is inbuilt OCR option. Can't do in android app though. Could have been a good feature.
Cripes can't get the link to work right on the phone
There we go
@Vikas the built in OCR is amazing
For evernote
I've never used OneNote
And I don't use evernote
I just saw it once
Google lens does it enough for me
I usually only need it at once and not to search back through it later
@Vikas I'm almost through the first season of Panchayat and I have lots of questions
Mostly about generalities but also about some objects
@Mitch I will test it later.
What is the vegetable they keep bringing as a gift? The long green gourd?
They keep saying it is not an eggplant which makes me think that maybe it is
Just green instead of brown
19:36
@Mitch I use that or office lens. But I rarely need this feature. Maybe because I am not used to it.
@Vikas I've been using Google lens on Panchayat to translate signs in Panchayat. Like the painted slogans on the walls
@Mitch You can post them here I'll reply next time I'm on PC! Typing on phone ain't productive.
@Mitch Ah good idea. I really wish you haven't missed one slogan inside their office. It was shown in beginning.
There was a funny slogan too. Not sure in this season or 2nd. Then they argue about it.
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