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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

00:01
@Criggie my interpretation is more fun
@Criggie When I was in the university, a senior classmate of mine worked for Tandem computer. IIRC he said that even one RAM module can be taken out online and the system is still humming along. Not to mention video card, network card, etc. I wonder whether they are still in business.
How times have changed. Now you have the entire server to take over a VM workload when one fails.
00:14
@Criggie Pearl Harbor was well into the age of electricity, but if it caused any power outages I don't think it was a major news story.
@GratefulDisciple I've heard people describe those data centers as "warehouse-scale computers," i.e. single computing devices with parts (i.e. the individual machines) that can be removed or replaced while the system is running.
@alphabet New term for me, but seems the term to use in the literature (such as here) though not an everyday term (or I might be out of touch).
00:35
@alphabet excellent thought - probably the exception that proves the rule.
01:14
@alphabet Kudos to the 13 workers who "stay at their posts to safely shut down the plant just after the surprise attack[" (see [here).
Fun fact of the day: when the USS West Virginia sank during Pearl Harbor, three sailors got trapped in an airtight compartment inside the ship. Instead of rescuing them, the military let them starve to death.
@alphabet yep - they survived for 7-10 days from memory.
@Criggie They found a calendar with 16 days crossed off.
Also: as I recall, the military didn't tell their families what had happened until decades later.
mmm wonder how they were getting oxygen ? You breathe roughtly three bedroom's full of oxygen in a night, so three guys would use air quite fast
(not doubting, just curious)
01:30
@Criggie Dunno. Another fun fact: the soldiers guarding the area could hear them banging on the hull of the ship from the inside for several days and were instructed to ignore it.
Facts are fun!
War is hell
That fact seems to elude people pushing one or the other side for Israel/gaza/ukraine/russia.
01:51
I just want the Russians to return that raccoon.
2
@M.A.R. Ah. So then, I guess, it was a placebo effect.
I took that DEX tablet because of a sore throat. I read somewhere recently that taking a corticoid might help, and tried it out.
I don't recall the page where I read that, but googling found this
@CowperKettle Can you just buy dexamethasone without a prescription there?
@alphabet Yes
You can get in jail for a t-shirt with a peace sign, but you can buy dexamethasone easily at any pharmacy
02:08
That government conspiracy to eliminate male aggression with endocrine disruptors can't come soon enough.
02:22
@alphabet sounds like the motivating science for the movie 'Serenity' (the movie sequel to the series 'Firefly')
Some Ukrainian drones have reached a fuel depo in Kirov Oblast, flying an approximated route of 1500 km gazeta.ru/army/2024/08/28/19647859.shtml
I would not be suprised if by year-end some will reach my region too.
That's only 300 km more.
Strategically that would seem unhelpful for Ukraine to go towards you.
Russian experts say that the drones must have flown at low level above rivers and streams to remain undetected
@Mitch There's lots of military factories in the Urals
I'm having a hard time imagining how life is in Donetsk and Luhansk where there's no fighting but just occupied
Daily life.
Like how do businesses run.
A journey of a thousand miles ....

... doesn't quite end at that sesquimegameter, but it's certainly getting close.
02:26
@CowperKettle oh. Hm. Well it would be hard to maintain any territory occupied that far away.
Fuel depos are not territory to hold, but resources to deny the foe.
Look man, I'm trying to make you feel better. If you keep coming up with realistic alternatives, I can do my job
And large population centers are sources of potential combatants.
Not really.
They're war crimes.
It's all terrible beyond words.
Let's talk about cake.
torte crimes
02:29
A torte tort
This is not my year for cake, I'm afraid.
I did have a nibble of something naughty a couple weeks ago but I can't even remember what it was now.
Oh, a four inch by one inch strip of hot cinnamon twist at the hotel breakfast, that was it.
Tarte tatin a toute autant ta tante
That's surely a plaid tatin.
@tchrist sugar is the devil's... uh... sugar
Exactly the evil.
Also weevils in the grain.
02:32
Those cinnamon strips aren't as good as they look.
They are if you haven't had anything like that since last fall.
Well, early winter.
Eggo waffles are actually pretty good.
A great aftertaste.
Ultraprocessed nonfood.
I mean of course real waffles with maple syrup are much better.
Apparently we're already in Pumpkin Spice Latte season. Can't they wait until the temperature is below 80?
02:35
But between two industrialized breakfast 'foods', I recommend eggo waffles over cinnamon toast strips.
I eat maybe 1/2 teaspoon of maple syrup a week, in indulgent weeks.
> The University of Louisville Green Heart Louisville Project collected blood, urine, hair and nails from 745 people before and after more than 8,000 trees were planted in south Louisville. spectrumnews1.com/ky/louisville/news/2024/08/27/…
and?
You have to not live in cities. You have to live in green spaces. Everybody knows that.
@tchrist no doubt some leftover byproduc t of a sequence of chemical process that produce ceiling tile and air conditioning filters.
@Mitch spun asbestos
02:37
:66199604 Louisville: the only city where so little happens that, if there's a shift in residents' health, you can safely assume that the trees caused it.
The sludge scraped from the bottoms of oil tanker harbors
Also a poor choice for a residence.
@alphabet the one thing I remember about Louisville is how everyone smoked.
So if you like smoke, it's a great place
I absolutely cannot recall ever being around anyone smoking cigarettes. For years.
mmmmmm cake
02:40
I clearly don't hang out in the wrong smoking parlours.
@Criggie Thank you!
about the age of 6 I made my mum quit smoking.
You get it!
I said "when I grow up I'm gonna smoke like you "
and she went cold turkey
6 year old kid - motivational without even trying
@tchrist to get back that memory you should totally go to Louisville.
02:43
More products engineered to be unquittable.
@Mitch Another note: some of those participants were enrolled and initially tested right around the time Louisville police killed Breonna Taylor, causing massive protests. I think most peoples' C-reactive-peptide levels were a bit higher around then.
To be clear this was twenty years ago
@alphabet probably under medicated.
Fluoride, prozac, and maybe a little acetaminophen in the water
@tchrist the whole food industry has us addicted to carbs fats and proteins!
saltpeter in the coffee again, eh
@tchrist a real pick me up
@Mitch Proteins?
salt and sugar, sometimes fat
02:47
Hm that's another one to add to the water to combat early cognitive decline.
@tchrist then fry that shit up
I'm not that kind of guy.
@Mitch Bring back lead-based paint. Why do you think all the teens are becoming furries? Insufficient lead consumption.
@alphabet teach your kids not to eat things off the walls
put that in a pipe and smoke it
@Mitch Where else are you supposed to store your half-finished bubble gum?
02:50
@alphabet the top of your bedside table, where all civilized people do it.
I intend to raise my kids right, having them lick the walls clean at least once a week.
But yes if you collect all the pieces stuck underneath tables at a Waffle House, you can get enough that you can melt together in a pot and then let cool into a bubblegum log and cut off pieces that you can review.
Did you know that most pink wall paint is strawberry flavored? If you don't believe me, just try tasting every pink-colored wall you see until you find one.
@alphabet one way to stop that is to have cayenne infused paint instead of lead.
@alphabet now -I'm- taking notes
To be fair I thought Barbie's house would have tasted like Pepto-Bismol.
@Mitch And, if you're making chili, you just crush up a bit of the drywall to give it that extra kick.
02:54
@alphabet for sure that will treat diarrhea much better.
I think we've gotten off track from cake.
Not that we should get back on track.
I'm just noting the change.
Landlord keeps getting on my case about all the holes in my walls with bite marks around them. I blame anti-raccoon prejudice.
takes notes
Holy crap it's September in ... counts on fingers ... a few days.
I'm still working on late June.
@alphabet I've certainly mentioned this before but I can't be bothered to search for it so I'll repeat it ad nauseam...
Is there a word for "a hole made through a flat surface by biting it"? Do I need to ask ELU?
@alphabet mouse hole ?
Both our trash and recycling bins have huge gouges all around the lid from raccoons trying to get in (and all around the inside after getting in from trying to get out ).
02:59
@Criggie If a man makes it, would it be a "manhole"?
a manhole would have a round metal plate on top in a frame and likely be horizontal, so no.
A manmade mouse hole?
bears are everywhere now
mousehole has the implication of being gnawed
@tchrist goddammit
They're ruining the neighborhood.
03:00
@tchrist There's no accounting for taste - some people like bears, you know ?
Who are we to judge
They're no longer shitting in the woods
Oh those kinds of bears
@Criggie in leathers?
@Criggie there are others?
As long as you can see the hairiness - he's a bear
03:02
Jincks!
freaks me out when i find i've gone to bed and forgotten to lock, or even latch, the front door
@Criggie Dammit you beat me to that joke.
for the apple tree is having a mast year, and it draws all manner of creature by night
@tchrist putting a lock on it is just challenging them to learn how to get past it
every few weeks i seem to forget to close the damn door all the way
and i leave it that way for hours
there was wind the other night. i thought it was a home invasion as the pommes pummelled my house like artillery fire.
03:05
When one door closes, you can just open the door back up again. That's how doors work.
the cricketing choristers are so loud
can't sleep with the window open with that racket
well not without earplugs
Even worse here. App tells me there's 5 bears in a 1-mile radius, one of whom claims to be "seeking a husbear."
@tchrist Sure but, how do you get the earplugs in all their little tiny ears?
@alphabet holy crap you have an app that tells you th... Oh ok I get it now
Word of the day: husbear. Haven't heard that one before.
@M.A.R. Would a mineralocorticoid somehow affect the psyche?
03:09
Like how did zoologists get trackers out on al...oh ok I get it now.
our lions are all collared unless they're younglings
some of the bears are, but not the cubs
but it's not like the dnr ever reverse-911s you when they're prowling around in your neighborhood
@tchrist how do they know they got them all?
Hindi-derived word of the day: dungarees, from Hindi डूंगरी (ḍūṅgrī, “coarse calico”), from the name of a village.
@Mitch well they probably haven't but they try
@CowperKettle Now do jodpurs.
Or juggernaut
03:11
i just mean here in boulder, not the whole state
Or mulligatawny
Or corduroy...oh that's French.
You did cummerbund the other day, right?
@tchrist if I were a cougar...
there are like 4 lions per six miles square
And to be sure, I'm not...
adults not cubs
here
I would be pretty resentful of a collar.
Very surveillance state.
03:13
state though has like 4 to 7 kilocats
@tchrist I really thought you were talking about your own cats there for a moment.
@Mitch pumas con color
Here they've replaced the collars with these weird leather harness things.
@Mitch people never own cats
But back to surveiling, I'd be scratching and rubbing and
03:15
i would i'm sure delight to have a lion as a companion but the work would be beyond me
Wait is it an actual collar or like a...
a puma, maybe 80 to 120 pounds, not Panthera leo.
RFID chip placed under the skin?
Those are just too big for people to keep. Cheetahs and pumas are ok-sized though. A puma is the same weight class as a leopard.
@Mitch yes that too
@tchrist and don't some have ... glands that are particularly... pungent?
03:17
this is the problem
they all spray
i think even little red lynxes spray
"little"
twenty or thirty or forty pounds = little
A leopard isn't nearly as big as a lion, but I still think it has more heft than a cougar.
I'm not about to sort that out directly.
they are built differently
both can carry prey up into trees for stashing
but leopards more often
Cougars don't look like they could do that with something bigger than 100 lbs.
> Leopards are the smallest of the large cats, which includes lions, tigers, and jaguars. Female leopards weigh 46 to 132 pounds and males weigh 80 to 165 pounds. They average 28 inches at the shoulder with a general range of 17.5 to 30.5 inches high at the shoulder.
Again, will not test.
So they'll have to cut me into a few pieces before thinking of dragging me into a tree
03:22
> Pumas typically weigh between 80-220 lbs with males being larger than females in most cases. Adult males can grow to an excess of 8 feet in length, including the tail, and weigh an average of 140-150 pounds. Adult females can grow up to 7 feet long and weigh an average of 80-90 pounds. Mountain lions have very long tails which can be more than a third of the total length of the animal.
I'm pretty lucky that cougars can't read, do they won't get any ideas from this
are you like canadian today?
I dunno. Can Canadians read better than cougars?
oh you're transriparian that's right
they call the poor things that silly name.
up in vancouver
but not this side of the great river in america
i have a ladybug crawling on my arm
a ladybird beetle
not a johnson
Oh. No. I've always known them as cougars or mountain lions and cougar is shorter to write. Puma would have been better that way but it's a foreign word to me.
03:26
i'm deliriously tired
puma is pretty common in the american southwest, the desert areas settled by the spanish
@tchrist same
mountain lion in higher ground
My high school's mascot was a cougar...that's probably the best explanation...sheer repetition.
there ain't nothing you can actually run away from, it's so frustrating being a human and trying to escape
bears, mountain lions, wolves, pronghorn, elk, fricking moose even, trivially outsprint you
If you know parkour, it helps to distract the animal so the others can get away while you're being eaten.
03:29
even your housekitties can outsprint you
bunnies
@tchrist what is mooses problem? Do they attack everything that is just standing there minding its own business?
not coons though, they slow ponderous oaves
Cripes, bunnies can outrun you for at least a few moments.
@Mitch sometimes
@tchrist they just state at you like you just interrupted a private dinner.
Ohhhhhh. I get it now.
Ok time to pass out .. later!
03:32
> In Alaska, moose outnumber bears 3 to 1, and they injure around 5-10 people annually. That's more than grizzly bear and black bear attacks combined.
Don't let the moose bite!
> A Møøse once bit my sister ... No realli! She was Karving her initials on the møøse with the sharpened end of an interspace tøøthbrush given her by Svenge ...
03:45
@tchrist Svenge the movie star dentist ??
Star of famous movies like "The Høt Hands of an Oslo Dentist", "Fillings of Passion", and "The Huge Mølars of Horst Nordfink"
 
1 hour later…
04:59
Apr 29 at 23:27, by alphabet
I'm going to repeatedly commit petty acts of theft and vandalism on your property UwU
05:45
I wake up and feel anxiety and stupor, so I just sit for several hrs and read something. That's how I know that psychotherapy does not exist, because I've had 6 sessions of it, and the results are zero.
06:12
Ever applied Albothyl?
 
3 hours later…
08:47
Hi, guys. Can I check with you these sentences? Do they sound natural enough to say?

1. This money that I'm saying up is an outlay on my future business project.
2. Penguins can't fly. They walk erect on land.
3. I like staying up until dawn.
4. She often worked after hours.
09:43
@Mitch King's body?? King's cord? Nope.
Corduroy is a textile with a distinctively raised "cord" or wale texture. Modern corduroy is most commonly composed of tufted cords, sometimes exhibiting a channel (bare to the base fabric) between them. Both velvet and corduroy derive from fustian fabric. Corduroy looks as if it is made from multiple cords laid parallel to each other. == Etymology == A common false etymology holds that the word "corduroy" derives from the French phrase corde du roi or the cord of the king. The word corduroy is from cord (i.e., rope) and duroy, which was a coarse woollen cloth made in England in the 18th century...
10:06
Yes, they are all sound natural enough. Just a spelling error on #1 ("saving") and I think "for" is better than "on". You can also drop the "that".
1. This money I'm saving up is an outlay for my future business project.
@CowperKettle I hope you feel better. I answered the question linked in your profile and listened to Joan Baez performing Copper Kettle. Beautiful singing!
10:40
@GratefulDisciple Thank you very much for your help.
 
2 hours later…
12:34
@CowperKettle A few days ago when registering for a web account I had to provide a 15 (!) character password, longest I've seen. I may just use Riker's password style ;-) , a quote from LOTR or a phrase inspired by Jane Austen: "TruthUniversallyAcknowledged5DaughtersAllUnmarried!" should be long enough to serve me for the rest of my life.
Wow, seems like Austen mania has not yet abated, came across this book (adaptation):
12:54
Lots of other passwords from Lady Catherine's condescending remarks here, complete with punctuations to serve as special characters.
13:28
@Vikas Your post made me realize that I was mispronouncing syncing as "synsing". In romance languages, the strict rule is that C followed by I has a soft S sound. English generally follows but it looks to have a few exceptions.
@jlliagre Note that it's derived from "synchronize," where "ch" has a /k/ sound as with many Greek-derived words like "echo."
@jlliagre People spell things wrong.
It must be syncking or synching never syncing.
There's a rule about this. It's strict. People are now too undereducated to know the rule.
To be more precise, in most modern Romance languages, C has never the K sound before an I. It can be /s/ /t͡ʃ/ and other. Sardinian kept the Latin /k/ I guess.
24
A: Why is "k" added to "panic" when suffixes added (as in "panicky")?

tchristBecause that is the standard rule in English. The OED says: Hence, in modern English, C has (1) the ‘hard’ sound [k] before a, o, u, before a consonant (except h), and when final, as in cab, cot, cut, claw, crow, acme, cycle, sac, tic, epic; (2) before e, i, y, it has the ‘soft’ sound [s]. In...

Read the OED rule cited there.
@alphabet Sure, I was aware of that.
13:38
Again, this is the fault of a general lack of education.
Nothing more.
Engendering widespread ignorance or carelessness, or both.
True. On the other hand, languages often evolve because of lack of education. That's a creative zone.
And this has led to untenable fuckades.
You either have to respell, or you have to keep the original. You must not just do whatever you please contrary to established orthographic rules in the target language. See façade for the fuckade I mentioned.
If you strike the cedille, you must respell. You MUST. It is impossible in English for -ca- to represent /s/ not /k/.
@tchrist What a fuçade!
fusillade
fassade
facile
facsimile
@jlliagre Oh. Yeah I was expecting what I now get is a false or unattested etymology.
What is corduroy called in French?
13:48
facy
fakey
@Mitch Velours côtelé or often just velours.
façonné
@tchrist Soupcon would sound bad :-)
coño
bollocky
Not *bollocy.
@tchrist ¡Sí, Sopa coño!
13:52
so pena de coño
in fragrant disregard
¿Dónde coño está la peña?
@jlliagre "Millions of barrels of chicken broth were hijacked by the notorious soupcon."
somewhere dolorificky
@jlliagre Speaking of soup, is that related to 'velouté'?
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Link at end of answer, potentially bad asn for hostname in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (65): Is 'Nail(s) Spa' correct?‭ by awes‭ on english.SE
13:58
@Mitch A velouté is a kind of soup, yes.
I mean... etymologically velours and velouté.
Oh, sure, yes. A velouté is soft like velours.
Cognates with velu (lat. villutus), hairy.
Corduroy, on the other hand, is not. It was on the same order as blue jeans when I was a kid, namely they were pants that were not expected to last long because of heavy use. The knees (on corduroy) would rub flat of the ribbing within a few months.
@jlliagre 🤨 checks sync pronunciation on google
Not to be confused with vellum. Or veal.
14:03
I remember jeans getting iron on patches as a kid but not corduroy.
pants did not last long then.
Velvet is cognate to velours.
Also, don't we use velour in English?
@Mitch Jeans are from Gênes (Genova) while Denim is from Nîmes.
Yes, we lost the -s.
yes I don't know what the difference between velour and velvet is though.
thickerer
plusherer
14:07
Limousine is from Limoges and Coach is from... some small town in Hungary?
@Mitch Velour is less underground.
@jlliagre Velour El Train
Young antlers on your nearest moose have velvet not velour.
not Velour El Treno
> coach (n.) 1550s, "large kind of four-wheeled, covered carriage," from French coche (16c.), from German kotsche, from Hungarian kocsi (szekér) "(carriage) of Kocs," village where it was first made. In Hungary, the thing and the name for it date from 15c., and forms are found since 16c.
Noun: Katschke f
  1. (Low Prussian) duck (bird)
14:14
A sedan is from Sédan, a Cadillac is from D'Étroit, and Mercedes is Emil Jellinek's daughter's name.
Noun: tchotchke (plural tchotchkes) (originally and chiefly Canada, US, informal)
  1. A small ornament of minor value; a knick-knack, a trinket. [from 1950s]
  2. Synonyms: see Thesaurus:trinket
  3. (figurative, dated) Chiefly in Jewish contexts: an attractive girl or woman. [from 1960s]
  4. Synonyms: bimbo; see also Thesaurus:beautiful woman
14:35
#WhenTaken #184 (29.08.2024)

I scored 786/1000 🎉

1️⃣ 📍 2 km - 🗓️ 26 yrs - ⚡ 131 / 200
2️⃣ 📍 1 km - 🗓️ 15 yrs - ⚡ 170 / 200
3️⃣ 📍 227 km - 🗓️ 9 yrs - ⚡ 179 / 200
4️⃣ 📍 329.9 metres - 🗓️ 2 yrs - ⚡ 198 / 200
5️⃣ 📍 6130 km - 🗓️ 6 yrs - ⚡ 108 / 200

https://whentaken.com
14:48
@jlliagre Of course, if the standard spelling disobeys the rule, then the fault is with the rule, which aims to explain standard spelling but fails to do so.
15:02
Actually, as CGEL notes, there's another word that works this way: the verb to arc. In the forms arcing, arced, the "c" is pronounced /k/.
So one could just say that sync works like arc.
You can find the forms arcked, arcking in some dictionaries, but they're vanishingly rare according to Ngrams, and I think most would consider them questionable.
15:23
@alphabet We use arquer as verb from the same arc. I wonder how "arce hole" should be pronounced :-)
@GratefulDisciple I checked that with Bitwarden and nobody seems to have hacked it yet, so good luck to ya. Although anybody here now could hack you easily.
16:28
arce is Spanish for maple tree or a place in Spain.
@Robusto I'm not using that particular password, of course. And you probably underestimate my permutation ability to combine words out of that Jane Austen page. :-)
17:05
@alphabet That is quite ugly, though?
@jlliagre I couldn't be arced.
17:27
@Cerberus You might have an aesthetic distaste for it, but it's the standard spelling, and writers are generally advised to follow established spellings rather than inventing prettier ones.
Anglophones are just too uneducated to use the Latin alphabet.
Sad.
They should go to skool.
And guess which form tchrist himself uses?
Jul 13, 2013 at 20:07, by tchrist
And syncing them.
Probably good he ignored me.
"You can make it illegal, but you can't make it unpopular."
picnicked
colicked
picnicking
picnicker
demosaïcked
bivouacked
havocker
demosaïcking
colicky
panicking
frolicked
garlicky
magicked
panicked
picnicky
colicking
bivouacking
havocked
havocking
frolicking
plasticky
demosaïcker
mimicked
mimicker
panicky
mimicking

If you don’t like those rules then please use ᚠᚦᚨᚬᚱᚲ so you stop breaking the Latin script. :)
17:42
@alphabet False dichotomy.
@tchrist I agree with this.
Odd though the rule is.
It's like the "you're not the boss of me" children who insist that when that have more than one bunny they have bunnys and nobodys are going to make them behave properly.
Of course, there are always differences between the rules determining the inflection of established words and the productive processes governing the creation of new words; the question is whether the insertion of 'k' is a productive process, and the answer seems to be "sometimes not."
Good luck trying to get anything but a janitorial job.
18:09
@tchrist I should start looking for one.
18:44
Wordle 1,167 4/6

⬛🟨⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟨🟨⬛⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
18:59
@tchrist Are you suggesting futharcing English?
Orkish maneuver.
snort
Wait... teachers kinda are the boss of those snot nosed kids bragging about how many rabbits they have.
Yes.
Just retort with "Why?" As they always do.
@Mitch Do you mean futharking?
19:10
Their answer should be enlightening.
2 hours ago, by Mitch
@jlliagre I couldn't be arced.
@Mitch I'll take that as a yes.
TROLLING ELICITATION ACHIEVED
ᚠᚢᚦᚩᚱᚳᛝ
19:13
ᛝ because the -ing morpheme is too important not to have its own rune.
@user20458579510081670432 Stop starring Mitch's silliness.
5
:(
There, happy now?
No frivving in this shad.
Shiver me timbers, arh!
Daily Octordle #948
7️⃣🟥
9️⃣8️⃣
🕚6️⃣
5️⃣🟥
Score: 74
Yuk.
@user20458579510081670432 See what you did? You put me off my puzzle!
19:20
Sorry, pal.
19:33
Gaslighting is a colloquialism, defined as manipulating someone into questioning their own perception of reality. The expression, which derives from the title of the 1944 film Gaslight, became popular in the mid-2010s. Merriam-Webster cites deception of one's memory, perception of reality, or mental stability. According to a 2022 Washington Post report, it had become a "trendy buzzword" frequently improperly used to describe ordinary disagreements, rather than those situations that align with the word's historical definition. == Etymology == The origin of the term is the 1938 British thriller...
20:20
#WhenTaken #184 (29.08.2024)

I scored 808/1000 🎉

1️⃣ 📍 2 km - 🗓️ 7 yrs - ⚡ 191 / 200
2️⃣ 📍 363.8 metres - 🗓️ 11 yrs - ⚡ 182 / 200
3️⃣ 📍 252 km - 🗓️ 22 yrs - ⚡ 138 / 200
4️⃣ 📍 1 km - 🗓️ 2 yrs - ⚡ 198 / 200
5️⃣ 📍 12764 km - 🗓️ 1 yrs - ⚡ 99 / 200

https://whentaken.com
20:33
I should play again.
It's up to you.
I've been sick.
Somehow I didn't have the energy...
@Cerberus The wish to do puzzles is itself a step toward health.
Daily Sequence Octordle #948
5️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🔟
🕚🕛
Score: 68
Wordle 1,167 4/6

⬛⬛⬛🟩⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟨🟨⬛🟨⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
20:52
@Cerberus Mystery bug, or of known aetiology?
It is something like flu or Corona.
Last night my fever was lower than the five nights before, at last.
Now it's been just a bit elevated.
Daily Octordle #948
7️⃣🕛
3️⃣8️⃣
🕚🔟
9️⃣5️⃣
Score: 65
Daily Sequence Octordle #948
5️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🔟
🕚🕛
Score: 68
00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

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