« first day (4548 days earlier)      last day (670 days later) » 

00:29
@jlliagre Scotland
00:44
@Mitch Scotland is next to be fired?
00:57
@tchrist Chat own you.
@jlliagre Loons.
01:18
@jlliagre There are only loons not loans in Catalunya and Cataluña. Catalogne sounds like bovine cologne.
Or worse.
> After the publication of Ringworld, many fans identified numerous engineering problems in the Ringworld as described in the novel. One major one was that the Ringworld, being a rigid structure, was not actually in orbit around the star it encircled and would eventually drift, ultimately colliding with its sun and disintegrating. This led MIT students attending the 1971 Worldcon to chant, "The Ringworld is unstable!"
No Welsh loons in Walloonia either.
Time to sleep, je n'arrive plus à suivre...
2
Haha.
The British are using the French pronunciation instead of the native one.
But for the Walloons they have an /u/ not an /o/.
So I don't know why they have Catalunya with an /o/ not an /u/. It confuses me.
I think in the Catalan case it may have something to do with the Occitan, Catalonha.
But that's just spelling, not pronunciation.
> Catalonia (/ˌkætəˈloʊniə/; Catalan: Catalunya [kətəˈluɲə]; Spanish: Cataluña [kataˈluɲa]; Occitan: Catalonha [kataˈluɲa])
See, just weird.
Everybody says /u/ but the Brits.
01:39
Russian policeman was sentenced to 7 years in jail for talking over the phone about Ukraine bbc.com/russian/news-65302538
> Critical remarks about the Russian army made in a telephone conversation were considered public on the basis of the testimony of a witness - a law enforcement officer who tapped Vedel's phone.
> Lawyer Daniil Berman pointed out during the first interrogation that a private telephone conversation cannot be considered a public dissemination of information. In addition, the materials of the Klokov case did not contain permission to wiretap his phone, the lawyer noted.
@tchrist Everybody, c'est vite dit: Katalonien, Catalogna, Catalonië, Καταλονία, Каталония...
Exonyms.
No different than English.
I went 50 years and never heard it said non-natively.
I've worked there. I'm pretty sure I heard people speaking English about it. Maybe not. But I know I'd never ever heard it said in the foreign way.
Why would they?
01:52
I'm sure I never ever thought about it in English, and when I did, we just used the Spanish word. I went to college in Spain, but there was no English. I doubt I knew about the province in English before then. Nor, apparently, afterwards.
Yeah, to be honest I can't remember ever speaking English in Catalunya. I can't think of when I would have.
But we talked about the province a lot in college. It just never came out with an /o/ in it. Ever.
When I was a kid, French people named the "Big island" Majorque. Nowadays, almost everybody pronounce it "Mayorque" and possibly write it Mallorque or Mallorca.
Native Spanish and Catalan speakers speaking English always use the native pronunciation. They don't translate /u/ to /o/.
@jlliagre Yes, I remember that change. It confused me, too.
Crap, I don't know how to say that in English now.
I really feel like I remember the "zh" pronunciation (French "j") when I was little.
Mallorca, or Majorca, is the largest island in the Balearic Islands, which are part of Spain, and the seventh largest island in the Mediterranean Sea. The capital of the island, Palma, is also the capital of the autonomous community of the Balearic Islands. The Balearic Islands have been an autonomous region of Spain since 1983. There are two small islands off the coast of Mallorca: Cabrera (southeast of Palma) and Dragonera (west of Palma). The anthem of Mallorca is "La Balanguera". Like the other Balearic Islands of Menorca, Ibiza, and Formentera, the island is an extremely popular holida...
Apparently it changed in English, too.
@tchrist They do as long as they can. They systematically add an /e/ before /sp/, /st/, /sk/ and the likes.
@jlliagre Yes, because they don't have a "liquid s".
I don't know that anything west of Italy ever can in Romance.
@Cerberus Well, that's the point. He didn't openly declare it. He declared it in private conversations and emails within Fox.
02:07
@Robusto Which appeared under discovery. And looked horrible.
Although this is more fun:
@tchrist Somewhere each of those horrors has a very ugly self-portrait getting seamier and more maggotty by the day.
He helped cost them almost $800 million. I couldn't see how Murdy could have kept him.
Wait. It is million.
I get confused.
You'll have to start over counting from 1 every time you lose track.
I'm too spacey now. I wish it was billion.
02:12
I've made the very same mistake. Probably wish fulfilment.
Funny, though, how million doesn't have the feeling of prodigious mountain-climbing that it used to.
I can't imagine it doesn't sting.
02:39
No, I'm sure it does.
03:03
I just love her energy.
@Robusto Yes I mean openly to those people, so it can be verified.
@jlliagre Oh, that's interesting. I think we can use both the spellings Majorca and Mallorca.
@Cerberus Which consonant sound do you use for it though? Does it vary by spelling or not?
I think in English I mostly only ever hear the /j/ sound that starts English yes these days in English. I know I used to hear the sibilant from English leisure or even the affricate from English judge. In Spanish it works a bit differently because those are all conditioned/variable allophones of each other, but of course it isn't even a Spanish word.
So my brain won't record what was said for it in Spanish, only in English can I ever hear those being said differently.
(Since they make different English phonemes, but not different Spanish ones.)
I think I say it "thickly" in Menora, Mallorca, e Ibiza, but I've got some mental/semantic/phonetic satiety going on right now.
I don't think I've ever heard English speakers say /l/ but I imagine the Brits may.
I'm not a good predictor of these things.
I love that one of the isles is named Dragonera.
@CowperKettle Exactly.
03:38
OED gives: Brit /məˈjɔːk(ə)n/, /məˈljɔːk(ə)n/, /məˈlɔːk(ə)n/, U.S. /məˈjɔrkən/, /məˈlɔrkən/, /mɑˈjɔrkən/, /mɑˈlɔrkən/.
For the adjective/demonym.
When spelled Mallorcan. When spelled Majorcan they give: Brit. /məˈjɔːkən/, /məˈdʒɔːkən/, U.S. /məˈjɔrkən/, /məˈdʒɔrkən/.
04:05
Word of the morn: Hoosier (the official demonym for the people of the U.S. state of Indiana)
04:16
Curiously, the basic connection structure of the hippocampus was described as early as 120 years ago by Ramon y Cajal. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trisynaptic_circuit
@tchrist I guess it's similar here, both spellings being pronounced the same, except that I've never heard /dʒ/. And /j/ is by far dominant over /ʒ/, which I'm not sure I ever hear these days. Uneducated people will probably say /l/ for the ll spelling. Purists may attempt the actual Spanish pronunciation, which I don't know how to transcribe.
04:41
@Cerberus A few dialects still have /ʎ/ but it's definitely in the minority now, because it's usually /ʝ/ now under yeísmo, even in Madrid.
Yeísmo (Spanish pronunciation: [ɟʝeˈizmo]; literally "Y-ism") is a distinctive feature of certain dialects of the Spanish language, characterized by the loss of the traditional palatal lateral approximant phoneme /ʎ/ (listen) (written ⟨ll⟩) and its merger into the phoneme /ʝ/ (listen) (written ⟨y⟩), usually realized as a palatal approximant or affricate. It is an example of delateralization. In other words, ⟨ll⟩ and ⟨y⟩ represent the same sound [ʝ] (listen) when yeísmo is present. The term yeísmo comes from one of the Spanish names for the letter ⟨y⟩ (ye). Over 90% of Spanish speakers exhibit this...
And foreigners usually approximate /ʝ/ as /j/, as may some native speakers especially in the Americas.
The /ʎ/ in old-style millón would be heard by English speakers as sounding kinda like English million.
Portuguese spells that sound "lh".
You can hear the sound in speakers of Portuguese, Galician, Catalan, and some speakers of Northern Spanish, especially bilinguals with one of those others I just named.
> A notable case is the name of the island of Mallorca: since Mallorcans tend to pronounce intervocalic /ʎ/ as /ʝ/, central Catalan scribes assumed the authentic (and correct) name Maiorca was another case of this and hypercorrected it to Mallorca. This new form ended up becoming the usual pronunciation, even for native Mallorcans.
That's from the yeísmo page.
05:50
I saw a dwarf climbing down a prison wall. It was a little condescending.
 
3 hours later…
08:25
Word of the noon: Beefsteak Nazi en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beefsteak_Nazi
 
4 hours later…
12:19
> A criminal case is launched against the Yekaterinburg man for swearing at a boy for wearing a Z hat. The man faces up to 5 years in jail.
12:51
"Big whirls have little whirls that feed on their velocity; little whirls have lesser whirls & so on to viscosity"
13:16
#Worldle #459 2/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨⬅️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐🏙️
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
@CowperKettle Argh...that's not what the hippocampus does (Or the neocortex). The hippocampus is a -mediator- of storing memories in a retrievable fashion (but it doesn't store the memories itself, and it is nothing like a 'semantically based index to a db').
📷 #WhereTaken🌎 #58 4/6
🟦🟦🟦🟨⬜↙️
🟦🟦🟦🟦🟨↖️
🟦🟦🟦🟦🟨⬇️
🟦🟦🟦🟦🟦🎉
⭐⭐⭐

wheretaken.teuteuf.fr
That's my only complaint. The tweet is about an LLM model with connection to a db of facts. That dude is trying to make an analogy between LLMs and the brain, and trying to use the much less well understood brain physiology to attempt to explain LLMs.
...when you can just use usual existing computer concepts to explain LLMs.
🌎 Apr 25, 2023 🌍
🔥 22 | Avg. Guesses: 4.63
🟧🟥🟥🟥🟥🟩 = 6

globle-game.com
#globle
My first guess was adjacent to the answer. Sometimes you kill the bear, sometimes the bear kills you.
13:40
@Robusto Sometimes the bear is your friend. Sometimes the bear just wants to be left alone.
13:54
@Mitch Ah! Thank you for the explanation
@Mitch and we don't know what these neurons really do. We just know that oh, a memory was recalled, and that specific circuit fired.
Those tech geeks better keep their opinions to things they barely understand, and not things they don't even barely understand
@M.A.R. snort
@CowperKettle this guy's face really reminds me of the movie Parasite
That particular guy is no dummy (he has the 'science/tech' credentials). But the analogy is poor.
He is done with this shit.
14:01
@M.A.R. The dad of the poor family?
Hmm
That kid made a poor fashion choice.
@Mitch I can't bear that kind of talk.
Looks old enough to be a dipshit
Parasite (Korean: 기생충; Hanja: 寄生蟲; RR: Gisaengchung) is a 2019 South Korean black comedy thriller film directed by Bong Joon-ho, who co-wrote the screenplay with Han Jin-won and co-produced. The film, starring Song Kang-ho, Lee Sun-kyun, Cho Yeo-jeong, Choi Woo-shik, Park So-dam, Jang Hye-jin, Park Myung-hoon and Lee Jung-eun, follows a poor family who scheme to become employed by a wealthy family, infiltrating their household by posing as unrelated, highly qualified individuals. The script is based on Bong's source material from a play written in 2013. He later adapted it into a 15-page film draft...
@Mitch The boy's father is fighting in Ukraine, so he had little choice
14:07
Daily Quordle 456
7️⃣8️⃣
6️⃣9️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle
Not as good as yesterday's.
The boy is only 11 years old, not the age when one understands something, especially if his dad is over there.
@CowperKettle huh, okay
14:24
@Robusto I'll bear that in mind.
@CowperKettle Yeah, and he was supporting his father.
Yeah if he was an adult it would have probably been different
@Mitch And those are the bare facts of the matter.
@CowperKettle What is the general attitude about non-parental adults chastising children for 'transgressions'? eg suppose a kid is doing something mildly dangerous or ugly, like riding a bicycle with no hands or spitting or climbing a chain link fence into an abandoned lot?
In the US currently there is a big taboo against saying anything, even if no one else is around.
In Germany though adults will immediately step in and say something to the kid.
In France, the adult will help the kid over the fence.
haha. France.
@Mitch It has gotten very close to the USA.
Prior to 1991, a lot of adults would berate a kid if they overheard him using swearwords in the street.
Now, people are afraid to engage.
14:37
Jail is a good disincentive
No, it's not. It's a disincentive.
But that incident seems a bit... capricious.
Yes, this man was a bit weird to pounce on a 11 yo boy. It's out of the ordinary. Probably he has high blood pressure or something. Grumpy.
But had this not been related to the Z symbol, the police would not have cared.
Nobody would budge over such a trifle.
So that's why I ask about the general feeling (because the war is so special - no one is going to jail for yelling at a kid to pull up their pants)
@CowperKettle Not to make comparisons but..
he's going to make a comparison
Yes, it's purely because of the war. I would slap a fine of about 1000 rubles (10$) on the man and let him go, if I were the police.
14:40
Grumpy guys in the US have guns
Yes, I read about a grumpy old man who shot an innocent black guy
Through his door.
The guy went to the wrong house, confused the addresses.
Wanted to visit some friends.
It's even worse than you think.
and also the person who was turning their car around using some grumpy guys driveway.
@Robusto I mean that's pretty bad.
Or the kid whose ball rolled into a neighbor's yard.
Dude shot her and her father.
1 min ago, by Robusto
It's even worse than you think.
@Robusto That's a new one.
14:43
This shit is OUT OF CONTROL.
People are actually acting out in real life some thoughts.
Because they can
How did they get those thoughts?
Movies?
@Mitch How did they get those guns?
Tucker Hannity?
@Robusto The store
Movies and TV are all about guns these days. Even in Australian TV shows, where handgun and most other kinds of firearms were long ago banned, plenty of handguns are readily available to jack up a sagging plot.
US movies and TV have been all about guns for a long while now.
14:52
I know. Hence "even in Australia" ... which copies American TV.
Crocodile Dundee (stylized as "Crocodile" Dundee in the U.S.) is a 1986 action comedy film set in the Australian Outback and in New York City. It stars Paul Hogan as the weathered Mick Dundee, and American actress Linda Kozlowski as reporter Sue Charlton. Inspired by the true-life exploits of Rod Ansell, the film was made on a budget of under $10 million as a deliberate attempt to make a commercial Australian film that would appeal to a mainstream American audience, but proved to be a worldwide phenomenon. Released on 30 April 1986 in Australia, and on 26 September in the United States, it was...
Daily Octordle #456
8️⃣4️⃣
7️⃣5️⃣
🕛🕚
6️⃣🔟
Score: 63
@CowperKettle That was made before the Australian firearms ban.
R.I.P. Harry Belafonte
2
"... when she wind up she bottom she go like a rocket"—my favorite line from that song.
Interesting grammar.
15:19
> Based solely on the fixational eye movements recorded during a one-minute period, a simple machine-learning model classified schizophrenia patients and controls with an accuracy of 85%.
15:29
Desi Lydic on The Daily Show re: Tucker Carlson being axed from Fox: "I can't believe that a network that is so opposed to gender-affirming surgery just cut off their own dick."
16:03
@Robusto as I understand it, lighter firearms can even be purchased at, say, Walmart?
@M.A.R. I think Walmart may have banned some or most of those. But there are gun stores in most towns. Plus there are "gun shows" where you don't even have to have a background check to buy a firearm.
16:27
@CowperKettle worth pointing out that 85% is useless
@Mitch Some, but some genres of American movies have been all about firearms for a very long time. It's only in the last couple of decades that this crap has been totally out of control. Many people are not even shocked, and think it's the price we pay for "freedom" (i.e., the 2nd Amendment).
And that's just your TP rate. What about FPs?
@Robusto yeah, I mean, buying guns a step removed from being bazookas isn't the craziest thing for me, it's that convenience stores would give you convenient options to blow someone's brains out.
That, is the craziest thing about this
@M.A.R. It's all of a piece.
2024 will be risky. Is there potential for people to grow up?
This side of the fence people are all mentally distressed. I wouldn't know what it would have been like if firearms access was less strict
@CowperKettle plus, even if this was 99% accurate, it wouldn't have necessarily been much of a diagnostic aid. Doctors don't have problems telling normal and psychotic people apart.
17:00
@M.A.R. Yeah but if you show up at your local convenience store to buy a coffee and some guns, the cashier doesn't need an MD to make the sale.
practices non-psychotic eye movements
like eye pushups
cripes... youtube is not giving me what I want
I want videos of gym dudes doing pushups, but instead of their arms, they're using their eyes.
To push themselves off the floor
their eyes push -out- of their sockets against the ground, raising that end of their body off the floor.
That's all I ask.
ChatGPT would probably give that to me.
17:33
And as @jlliagre might mention, it's common enough in French to say for 'today': "Au jour aujourd'hui"
Au jour aujourd'hui, c'est jeudi, par dieu.
Qu'est-ce que c'est que ça?
C'est de celui-ci où c'est de celui-là?
I'm still wiping away tears.
All along the poor dog thinks he's doing the right thing.
17:54
@M.A.R. Some grow up all the way, some grow up a little, some never grow up at all. That, I'm afraid, is life. And, in this case, death.
And vote out the conservative government that got them into this mess.
 
1 hour later…
19:08
@tchrist Liquid S?
@Mitch Yes, precisely au jour d'aujourd'hui.
En el día del día de hoy.
@jlliagre One standing next to only a consonant and not to a vowel. They can't make consonant clusters like that: stops is both kinds of wrong. :)
@tchrist Krk!
19:24
KHAAAAN!
Krk (pronounced [kr̩̂k]; Italian: Veglia; Istro Romanian: Krk; Vegliot Dalmatian: Vikla; archaic German: Vegl, Latin: Curicta; Greek: Κύρικον, translit. Kyrikon) is a Croatian island in the northern Adriatic Sea, located near Rijeka in the Bay of Kvarner and part of Primorje-Gorski Kotar county. Krk is tied with Cres as the largest Adriatic island, depending on the methodology used to measure the coastline. Krk is the most populous island in the Adriatic, with multiple towns and villages that contain a total of 19,383 (2011) inhabitants. == History == === Prehistory === Archeological f...
@MetaEd Not that Kirk :-)
 k	voiceless velar plosive            	U+006B  LATIN SMALL LETTER K
 r̩̂	voiced alveolar trill              	U+0072  LATIN SMALL LETTER R
	syllabic                           	U+0329  COMBINING VERTICAL LINE BELOW
	falling                            	U+0302  COMBINING CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
 k	voiceless velar plosive            	U+006B  LATIN SMALL LETTER K
19:48
📷 #WhereTaken🌎 #58 2/6
🟦🟦🟦⬜⬜⬇️
🟦🟦🟦🟦🟦🎉
⭐⭐

wheretaken.teuteuf.fr
@jlliagre The only other connection I have with Krk is the great tonguetwister: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Str%C4%8D_prst_skrz_krk
This is translated in Wikipedia as "stick a finger through the neck", but as a kid reading weird books growing up I remember it being "the skunk fell down and ruptured its larynx".
Krkassonne
@jlliagre close relative of Krkaspère, maybe. Depends on how Krkasfils.
20:04
:-)
Carcassonne (, also US: , French: [kaʁkasɔn] (listen), locally [kaχkaˈsɔnə]; Occitan: Carcassona [kaɾkaˈsunɔ]; Latin: Carcaso) is a French fortified city in the department of Aude, region of Occitania. It is the prefecture of the department. Inhabited since the Neolithic, Carcassonne is located in the plain of the Aude between historic trade routes, linking the Atlantic to the Mediterranean Sea and the Massif Central to the Pyrénées. Its strategic importance was quickly recognized by the Ancient Romans, who occupied its hilltop until the demise of the Western Roman Empire. In the fifth century...
@jlliagre Sorry, I get weak in the head when I don't eat a big breakfast, but my wife told me one egg is un oeuf.
3
We play that game sometimes.
20:23
@jlliagre Oops. Thanks. That's why we go over this stuff.
@Mitch More plagiarism. Haven't the NYT lawyers cured you of that yet?
@Robusto Plagiarism is the greatest form of flattery
No. Money is the sincerest form of flattery.
"Lobachevsky" is a humorous song by Tom Lehrer, referring to the mathematician Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky. According to Lehrer, the song is "not intended as a slur on [Lobachevsky's] character" and the name was chosen "solely for prosodic reasons".In the introduction, Lehrer describes the song as an adaptation of a routine that Danny Kaye did to honor the Russian actor Constantin Stanislavski. (The Danny Kaye routine is sung from the perspective of a famous Russian actor who learns and applies Stanislavski's secret to method acting: "Suffer.") Lehrer sings the song from the point of view of...
Tout flatteur vit aux dépens de celui qui l'écoute.
20:27
Best song ever about plagiarism.
@jlliagre Toute flatulence vit aux dépens de ceux qui l'entendent
Aussi.
20:46
@MetaEd Like 'Explain XKCD', that wiki page drains all possible humor from the song.
But I found the list of cities mentioned, with links, drily humorous.
dryly?
driyly?
@Mitch You just defined Wikipedia.
Once there was a king who had a pet. (multilingual pun)
A pet flea?
Nope.
It stinks.
20:59
@jlliagre OK now do the other one
@Mitch You inspired me that pet.
@jlliagre It took me a while but I got it.
21:14
Cul joke.
21:30
Joseph Pujol (June 1, 1857 – August 8, 1945), better known by his stage name Le Pétomane (, French pronunciation: ​[ləpetɔman]), was a French flatulist (professional farter) and entertainer. He was famous for his remarkable control of the abdominal muscles, which enabled him to seemingly fart at will. His stage name combines the French verb péter, "to fart" with the -mane, "-maniac" suffix, which translates to "fartomaniac". The profession is referred to as "flatulist", "farteur", or "fartiste".It was a common misconception that Pujol passed intestinal gas as part of his stage performance. Rather...
Speaking of pet ...
A professional farter. What people did before there was TikTok.
Would he be an "influencer" today? I would not be surprised.
22:06
@jlliagre That's terrible. Obviously he can't carry a tune.
@M.A.R. 30% of people have psychotic experiences at some point in their lives. I think that such tests may be great for research.
85% is extremely low for any clinical use.
22:25
@MetaEd No absolute pitch exhibited indeed.
22:36
Word of 03:35 am: saddle-stitching
Bampfylde Moore Carew (1690-1758) was an English rogue, vagabond and impostor, who claimed to be King of the Beggars. == Life == Baptized at Bickleigh, Devon, on 23 September 1690, Bampfylde Moore Carew was the son of Reverend Theodore Carew, rector of Bickleigh, and Alice (born Pearce). The Carews were a well-established Devonshire family. Although they had a reputation for adventurousness, Bampfylde Moore Carew took this to extremes, if his picaresque memoirs are to be believed. Little is known about his life beyond these, in which he is described on the title-page as "the Noted Devonshire...
23:03
Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, Mississippi, April 29, 1939

« first day (4548 days earlier)      last day (670 days later) »