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00:42
@alphabet I wouldn't be surprised to see this, but I would consider it informal and not quite correct.
A kind of unintentional anacoluthon or garden path.
00:54
@alphabet Do H&P pay much attention to register? Do they give sources for their sample sentences? A woman in Brooklyn is defending herself against a charge that a man was in her room. “Did he come in and I was still asleep? How would I know? So what can I tell you, officer?”
@Mitch Dictations are our closest equivalent to the US spelling bee contests. English focus on how to spell words while French focus on how to write sentences. One reason is it's harder to guess how a word is written from spoken English than French while it can be hard to guess how a verb is conjugated in a French sentence (several identically pronounced still distinct verbal forms) and how adjectives and past-participles have to agree in gender and in number, something unknown to English.
@Xanne Here they do say that this construction is informal. To me it sounds wrong in any register, but apparently H&P disagree.
@Cerberus I've taken a break from going through very old questions and closing some of them, so that the numbers look better.
@alphabet Prescriptivist!
@alphabet Yeah, just leave those questions up!
They harm nobody.
01:22
@Cerberus But I like seeing the number of unanswered questions go down. It makes me feel better about the world.
@alphabet It makes me feel worse if you do so by closing them...
Unless they are really bad.
@Cerberus I also answer them sometimes.
That is better!
@alphabet Find duplicates!
Also if you retag new questions you can help yourself find duplicates later
01:29
@alphabet It sounds like something someone would say, no more, no less.
02:13
Indeed. I do think the problem of water supply in California will eventually be solved by falling costs of seawater desalination (this article covers it), but Kansas is going to be in trouble
(I think Robusto knows my position about the long-term effects of decreasing food supplies. We will not all starve to death.)
02:29
The last famine in Russia was in 1946-47, just a second ago, in historical terms
The Soviet famine of 1946–1947 was a major famine in the Soviet Union that lasted from mid-1946 to the winter of 1947 to 1948. The estimates of victim numbers vary, ranging from several hundred thousand to 2 million.: xv  Recent estimates from historian Cormac Ó Gráda, show that 900,000 perished during the famine. Regions that were especially affected included the Ukrainian SSR with 300,000 dead, and the Moldavian SSR with 100,000 dead. Other parts of the Soviet Union such as the Russian SFSR and the Byelorussian SSR were also affected with 500,000 deaths. Elsewhere, malnutrition was widespread...
In Ukraine alone, in the spring of 1947 some 800 000 people had the diagnosis of "distrophia" (malnutrition)
This is wild, considering that Ukraine was always the breadbasket
^ Some good news
Yes, this is great, and I'm waiting on how the new "iron-air" batteries will turn out.
Renewable energy will likely overtake fossil fuels on purely economic grounds
I hope there will be enough energy to avoid some catastrophe.
@jlliagre makes sense
@alphabet but that crossover point may take longer than we expect. So we still need nuclear power in the meantime. (Supposedly. That's what I heard someone say)
@Mitch Agreed. I think that new, safer forms of nuclear power may encourage more widespread adoption.
The problem with nuclear power is that nobody wants to live right near a power plant.
Ok then...federally paid for solar cells lining -all- the interstates
@alphabet What about in cars and stuff?
So much empty sunny land and once the panels are in place, you don't have to mow any more
Most of the power consumption is not from individual consumers, it's from industrial use. Nake those big companies feel guilty about leaving the lights on too
Verb: nake (third-person singular simple present nakes, present participle naking, simple past and past participle naked)
  1. (now chiefly Scotland) To make naked; to bare.
  2. naké (passive nakiimé)
  3. (transitive) to drink (milk)
  4. nake
  5. (dated or formal) singular present subjunctive of naken
  6. ��3...
Noun: nake (plural nakvke)
  1. thing
  2. what? (interrogative pronoun)
  3. ...that which... (relative pronoun)
02:51
@Laurel Projections of EV adoption vary widely, unfortunately
Nobody can afford them
It depends quite a lot on how battery technology evolves
They've also made stupid design choices with some of them, like not having a way to be towed
But I would get an EV if I could. Not that I'd have anywhere to charge it rn at home
It just feels like a problem that only other people can fix
02:57
The problem, of course, is that domestic policy can't solve this problem, since the US only makes up 15% of global emissions.
But surely we're paying for some of the factories that are spewing out the crap elsewhere
Not really; most of the increase in other countries is due to economic development
Dang
^ This is my evidence for the claim that climate change will mostly result in rich countries screwing over poor ones, rather than causing widespread destruction within rich countries themselves
Pretty sure poor countries always get screwed over
03:04
Yes, but this is "death and devastation" level. In theory, of course, wealthier, more developed countries could send economic aid to poorer ones to prevent catastrophe. In theory. That will not happen.
:(
Stuff like this makes me unable to tolerate being on not-even-that-social-media such as Imgur
Annoyingly, some of the charts that show more alarming results are based on the "worst-case" RCP8.5 scenario, which we know won't happen
To be clear I can spend some time on Imgur but I just get sick of it after a while
sigh, I wonder if I can even make change happen locally for anything
> “We found that, here in Georgia, white English speakers’ accents have been shifting away from the traditional Southern pronunciation for the last few generations,” said Margaret Renwick, associate professor in UGA’s Franklin College of Arts and Sciences department of linguistics and lead on the study. “Today’s college students don’t sound like their parents, who didn’t sound like their own parents.” news.uga.edu/classic-georgia-accent-fading-fast
Note that, on the most likely scenarios, the decrease is less than 2% in the US
03:57
^ Some interesting charts from this study: iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/10/1/014010/meta
Under the "worst case" scenario (SSP3), world hunger (in absolute levels) is roughly stable despite climate change
(That study was cited by the IPCC so I'd trust it)
Another interesting study: doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.06.004
A way of quantifying the level of screwing-over-poor-countries we can expect
Large explosion in Yevpatoria, Crimea en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yevpatoria
"Walls were shaking" in some buildings t.me/Crimeanwind/42248
But that study I cited above is interesting. It turns out I was actually overestimating the effects of climate change on food security; even under the worst case provided by the IPCC, the number of people at risk of hunger stays the same
I'm afraid that the Peak Oil (gas, etc) will have an impact on food prices.
(SSP3 being that worst case. There is an increase of ~25% on crop prices, but, as I predicted, this doesn't actually lead to a massive global famine.)
Because fertilizers are made using natural gas, and food transportation requries a lot of fuel.
04:11
I think it's quite unlikely that we'll reach peak oil before we stop using oil for things other than petrochemicals
Anyway, @Robusto , a study cited by the IPCC says that the worst-case climate change scenario will not increase the total number of people at risk of hunger, despite the increase in food prices. Of course, it would be much worse than the best-case scenario, but this is not going to be a mass-starvation event.
Perhaps in the longer term?
@Cerberus I'd be hesitant to make predictions beyond 2100, but hunger levels would be on the decline at that point, and one would need good reason to posit a sudden increase afterwards.
Presumably there are some large error bars on those numbers. But it seems extremely unlikely that this would cause a catastrophic famine, particularly in the developed world.
Of course rich countries were never expected to suffer too much.
Except indirectly.
I'd be most concerned about crops in poor countries?
@Cerberus That isn't the picture you get from more alarmist sources.
What sources?
I've never seen any (scientific) source say rich countries would suffer catastrophe?
04:22
Activist types who insist that we'll have constant wars, global chaos, general descent into catastrophe.
The indirect effects are unknown.
This view is completely inconsistent with the science, of course. But some people repeat it anyway.
But the dikes won't break, unless sea levels rise to extreme heights.
We can always build desalination plants if we should truly lack enough water for agriculture.
It's expensive, but it can be done.
Combined with far more efficient sprinklers.
As in Israel.
Indeed. Wealthier Western countries can tolerate this. The rest of the world will find it more difficult (though the chart I cited above says inequality between countries will, in the worst case, be stable).
04:41
And so to bed. Pleasant dreams.
 
1 hour later…
05:47
@alphabet Yeah I think one issue is that none of these forecasts are reliable in the longer term, we just don't know what will happen.
At least it will happen gradually, so we'll have some time to adapt as much as possible.
 
1 hour later…
07:09
Wordle 817 5/6

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A couple of poor guesses there.
 
5 hours later…
11:58
Daily Octordle #598
6️⃣3️⃣
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🕚7️⃣
5️⃣🔟
Score: 55
12:17
@Mitch no I meant the good and the bad. Good leaders are just as obscure to me. Bernie might be a hippie Vermont unionist Santa but I don't really know him.
12:43
> "Save me from curious Conscience, that still lords
Its strength for darkness, burrowing like a mole;
Turn the key deftly in the oiled wards,
And seal the hushed Casket of my Soul."
13:24
"Upon ascending to the throne, Mehmed III ordered that all of his nineteen brothers be executed".
13:41
Try to guess this "bordering country" ...
I thought it was dust motes on my screen at first.
@Robusto Dead pixels.
OK, but then what is the capital of Dead Pixels?
Micronesia?
#Worldle #601 1/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐🪙
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
...
🌎 Sep 14, 2023 🌍
🔥 30 | Avg. Guesses: 4.32
⬜⬜🟥🟥🟩 = 5

globle-game.com
#globle
I've been lazy lately. Score keeps going up.
Wordle 817 4/6

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Daily Quordle 598
4️⃣9️⃣
5️⃣6️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle/
 
1 hour later…
14:59
@CowperKettle Isn't it Micromnesia...? Hmm, I forgot.
15:51
Wordle 817 5/6

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Daily Quordle 598
5️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle/
16:16
#waffle601 1/5

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🔥 streak: 5
wafflegame.net
@jlliagre is there much interest in the world cup of rugby in France?
17:17
@Robusto Atlantis
18:11
Wordle 817 4/6

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18:34
The mind is the second thing to go.
19:31
@M.A.R. Good guess.
@CowperKettle Umm, if so they need to show another ~2097 islands.
@CowperKettle he thought they were applications
@M.A.R. In this case execution and termination are the same thing.
@Robusto the severance pay was decent
@M.A.R. A "final" payment.
20:05
That's Hamlet on steroids :-/
@user726941 More than I thought even if still depending on the region and lagging behind football/soccer. A lot of people watched the opening match with NZ and their haka.
@jlliagre yup, the all blacks put on a great show of intimidation.
Jonah Tali Lomu (12 May 1975 – 18 November 2015) was a New Zealand professional rugby union player. Lomu is considered to have been the first true global superstar of rugby, and consequently had a huge impact on the game. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest and most influential players in the history of the sport, and as one of the most talented sportsmen ever.Standing 6 foot 5 inches and weighing 119 kilograms, Lomu was famed for his unprecedented speed, strength and agility. Exceptionally large for a wing player, he is also known as the first winger to be a physical heavyweight. For...
His^ self titled movie is on my to watch list.
20:32
Rootl game #105

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21:04
Rootl game #105

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21:32
Latin Wordle 621 5/6

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https://wordle.latindictionary.io/
> In April 1943, Enrico Fermi suggested to Robert Oppenheimer the possibility of using the radioactive byproducts from enrichment to contaminate the German food supply. Oppenheimer wanted to proceed with the plan only if enough food could be contaminated with the weapon to kill half a million people. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strontium-90#Radiological_warfare
@CowperKettle Translation: "This stuff is so precious we shouldn't waste it if it's only going to kill in agony less than half a million men, women, and children."
Thank God that Fermi and Oppenheimer were not advisors to Mehmed III.
I listened to a biography of Oppenheimer, and he was very dissappointed with the use of the atomic bomb on civilian cities.
A phase 3 study is good, it provides results that can be trusted more
22:04
@CowperKettle Thankfully, times have changed.
Even Putin isn't trying to kill half a million civilians.
@user726941 I don't understand the point of biographies. I understand biographies about atheletes even less.
If they're to be idolized, let them at least do some of the work
@M.A.R. I agree!!
22:49
> After returning from abroad, Lomu died unexpectedly on 18 November 2015 at home in Auckland. The cause was a heart attack associated with his kidney condition.
Died at the age of just 40.
And his parents lived on Lufuka. I never heard of this island before en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lifuka
23:11
> Jesse Bogdonoff (born April 1, 1955) is a former Bank of America financial advisor to the government of Tonga and court jester of Taufa'ahau Tupou IV, the king of Tonga.
Interesting career.
> He now offers classes in hypnosis and is a clinical therapist using hypnosis to aid in recovery from post traumatic stress.
23:50
@Cerberus Not at the moment. But if he's put to it, I don't think he'd flinch.
@CowperKettle Indeed. To kill half a million German civilians, you have to wait until after the war: theconversation.com/…

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