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00:59
@GratefulDisciple The only thing I didn't care for about my Roland FP-90X is the onboard speaker sound. So I play it through KRK Rokit 8 Gen 4 powered studio monitors. Now it sounds like a 9-foot grand.
@Robusto Nice pair! I'll have to do the same. For now I use a pair of studio headphones.
@GratefulDisciple Yeah, I don't use the headphones anymore unless we have guests staying over. The cans give a false sense of the room presence, which can be annoying when you play in a live room.
01:23
This just in: hominids are no longer; henceforth they shall be called hominins. And no, this is not a "woke" thing. They are from the tribe hominini (yeah, you just knew they'd turn out to be Italian, didn't ya?)
01:45
So they still say "bonkers" (Boris Johnson) in the UK. Hmm. I watched a whole series for that takeaway.
@Robusto Tribe of ayatollahs.
@tchrist Ayatolyaso.
> Historically, the term “hominid” was used similarly to how “hominin” is used today; it referred specifically to the lineage leading to modern humans. However, as scientific understanding evolved—particularly through advancements in genetic analysis—the definitions were revised. Now, “hominid” encompasses a wider array of species within the Great Apes category.
I think you need hominina not hominini so it excludes the panini.
But damned if I know.
I presume you know where the type specimen for Homo sapiens is housed, right?
> The type specimen of Homo sapiens now lies peacefully beneath Uppsala Cathedral.
> Although not the custom in Linnaeus's day, every described species now requires a type in order to tie the name to a physical object. For a variety of reasons, not all species have a type, and Linnaeus did not retain one for Homo sapiens.
> In 1959, as a passing remark in a paper on Linnaeus, the great taxonomist William Stern wrote: ‘Linnaeus himself, must stand as the type of his Homo Sapiens’. This counts as a nomenclatural act and under the rules is enough to make it so. Linnaeus did not designate himself, so he cannot be a holotype; however, he was one of the specimens that he examined, and as such was designated by Stearn as the lectotype.
Be careful of passing remarks lest they become nomenclatural acts. I'm looking at you, Adam.
All these are actually things: holotypes, isotypes, paratypes, syntypes, allotypes, lectotypes, paralectotypes, neotypes, epitypes, alloparalecdtotypes, countertypes, chirotypes, ambiguotypes, kleptotypes, neglectotypes, atypicotypes, cryptotypes, hoaxotype, heterotypes, artotypes, diplomatotypes, ephermotypes, neoepherotypes, copulotypes, abruptotypes, aedeotypes.
Most are nicely Greek throughout. Some include roots pinched from Latin. A few are true monsters that @Cerberus would never countenance.
> Professor David Hawksworth lists no fewer than 212 names for different types in his glossary of nomenclature.
02:35
China has made a breakthrough in the transplantation of organs from one species into another, with the country’s first gene-edited pig kidney surviving for over half a year in a monkey. scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3288814/…
03:06
@tchrist <shivers>
> Scientists have long known that different types of hominins coexisted on Earth. Homo sapiens, who emerged only around 300,000 years ago, shared the planet with Neanderthals and Denisovans for thousands of years. Traces of their DNA are still present in us today.
03:37
@Cerberus Whatever you think "copulotype" means, it's not that. Also: adding a few of those ("hoaxotype"??) to my list of least favorite words.
04:15
@alphabet All I thought was ugh!
04:28
Active questions are like stepping back in time…9 years. Good times.
 
3 hours later…
07:33
@Mitch I think all of us at one point or another have to pull a lever to get to food
 
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10:41
> Mallikarjun et al. report differences in homocysteine, vitamin B12 and folic acid levels between rural and urban Indian populations, linking vitamin deficiencies to mild cognitive impairment and homocysteine to cardiovascular risk. academic.oup.com/braincomms/article/6/5/fcae343/…
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in link text in body, pattern-matching website in body, potentially bad ns for domain in body, potentially bad keyword in body (171): Why Do People Prefer to Learn Driving Lessons from Best Driving School?‭ by Drive Manual lessons‭ on english.SE
11:30
1
A: Why don't words like "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday" etc. have the adverb denotation in their dictionary definitions?

Araucaria - HimThe main reason that this should be the case is that there's a difference between a word's category and its syntactic function. The word Monday is still a noun in: I'll see you Monday. just like it is in: I'll see you this Monday. or even in: I'll see you on Monday. In the first example, th...

12:26
I wanna detonate adverbs too
12:49
@Araucaria-Him I did try to explain this, at least commentarily. I don't think people liked my attempts to tell them about it.
> Some months this now and then happens on the 5th, but usually not.
@Araucaria-Him Would you imagine that the sentence I've just referenced immediately above would be acceptable at face value by most native speakers of SSBE?
Where some months is another of those NPs acting as a time adjunct here.
13:14
@tchrist Well, I'm sure most would accept Some months this happens, but usually not. I find the now and then a little odd, but might not if I was just hearing it.
13:50
@Araucaria-Him I may have unconsciously done that because my hindbrain was noticing that some months may not enjoy quite so much freedom of movement as facewise similar time adjuncts like sometimes, on occasion, every now and then, rarely do in "1 this 2 happens 3 but not usually". I can't quite embrace position 2 for some months there. I wonder why not.
14:10
#travle #722 +0 (Perfect)
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@Robusto Yes, even when using the built-in sound and built-in speakers I much prefer to play without headphones and to hear the sound reverberating in the room I'm in. With Pianoteq, it will be interesting because it has many settings and presets to simulate all kinds of mikings and rooms, not just modeling a particular piano's many elements that work together produce the key-press sound in the first place.
I'm still waiting for shipment of cable to let me route the computer audio-out back to keyboard's built-in speakers or to the stereo powered speakers that I have (which are not as nice as yours). I'm curious whether it will be annoying. BTW, Pianoteq has a Linux version.
14:46
#travle #722 +1
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#WhenTaken #282 (05.12.2024)

I scored 888/1000🏆

1️⃣📍6.9 m - 🗓️4 yrs - 🥇196/200
2️⃣📍967 km - 🗓️23 yrs - 🥉114/200
3️⃣📍321 m - 🗓️2 yrs - 🥇198/200
4️⃣📍5.6 km - 🗓️6 yrs - 🥇193/200
5️⃣📍297 km - 🗓️3 yrs - 🥇187/200

https://whentaken.com
Wordle 1,265 4/6

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Puzzle #543
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15:18
#WhenTaken #282 (05.12.2024)

I scored 923/1000👑

1️⃣📍2.5 km - 🗓️4 yrs - 🥇196/200
2️⃣📍2.7K km - 🗓️6 yrs - 🥈136/200
3️⃣📍2.1 km - 🗓️2 yrs - 🥇198/200
4️⃣📍5.8 km - 🗓️1 yrs - 🥇199/200
5️⃣📍53.8 km - 🗓️3 yrs - 🥇194/200

https://whentaken.com
Wordle 1,265 3/6

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Daily Octordle #1046
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Score: 54
Daily Sequence Octordle #1046
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Score: 73
Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Dec. 5, 2024

T I G H T R O P E
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My Score: 2200
Pretty good day.
 
1 hour later…
16:55
Ietsism (Dutch: ietsisme, pronounced [itsˈɪsmə] ) is an unspecified belief in an undetermined transcendent reality. It is a Dutch term for a range of beliefs held by people who, on the one hand, inwardly suspect – or indeed believe – that "there must be something undefined beyond the mundane which may or may not be possible to be known or proven", but on the other hand do not accept or subscribe to an established view of the nature of a deity offered by any particular religion. Some related terms in English are agnostic theism (though many ietsists do not accept – or have more subtle beliefs about...
The name derives from the Dutch equivalent of the question: "Do you believe in (the conventional 'Christian') God?" A typical ietsist answer being "No, but there must be something", "something" being iets in Dutch.
I am in complete agreement there must be something. And everywhere I look I see something, q.e.d.
17:35
But if there is something in the forest, and you can't see it, is it still there?
18:03
@CowperKettle I'd subscribe to that if it were pronounced 'Yeetsism' like you're throwing it out there.
I don't approve of the word 'yeet' (meaning to throw). It is an awful neologism, and is hard to figure out how to pronounce.
Why don't the Dutch pronounce it 'somethingism'?
Since English is the only language, it'd be more conformant.
18:29
@GratefulDisciple One other thing I don't like in my setup. The music desk is waaaay too small, both in width and height. I am buying another music stand, one like I used in the orchestra, and if that isn't wide enough I'll get another like it and put them side by side.
That will clear up the pile of music that currently resides on the floor next to the keyboard.
18:47
@Conrado You are there, apparently
@Mitch That's going to be confusing. Mind if we call it Bruce?
@MetaEd Wayne or Robert The?
So, rewatching Bloodline for some reason, and 1) Their primary problems are alcohol and cocaine. Who knew? And 2) Half of the country is now Kevin; that's its primary problem. OK then. Now we know.
@HippoSawrUs My wife and I ditched that series later on in the first season. It was getting too formulaic and predictable.
@CowperKettle There are those who must believe in something.
Things I once believed but no longer do:
A deity
His mom
Moral positivism
The nobility of Man
The perfection of same.
That everything happens for a reason.
That there is a way out of this mess.
That one can be happy without a journey to undertake.
19:21
@Robusto @Robusto Sounds like thermodynamics.
1. You can't win.
2. You can't even break even.
3. You can't get out of the game.
4. THE LAW OF ENTROPY:
The perversity of the universe tends towards a maximum.
@Conrado That's the one my eye went to first.
Nice.
19:41
@HippoSawrUs You should watch Fringe instead.
It's kinda the same area as X-Files, but none of this horseshit skepticism/ya gotta believe crap...in Fringe -all- the (sciency) conspiracy theories are true, but they're only revealed to be so little by little.
@HippoSawrUs Their three primary problems are alcohol, cocaine, smack, and an almost fanatical devotion to the church. I'll start again.
Except the moon landing. No one believes that seriously.
@Mitch Clearly there was no moon landing. I mean, if it landed, where did they put it?
Maybe in the show Moonlighting?
19:54
@Cerberus huh
What is it?
Greenland made the map! Woohoo!
Hmm or could it be so thin as to represent 0?
@Mitch No. Europeans made the map.
China and India seem underrepresented.
@Robusto haha snortle i see what you did there with 'made'
19:56
The U.N. made the map.
I don't see the UN on there anywhere!
It's tiny.
haha continuing the amphiboly
I wonder how much is still left of China's cultural cities.
polysemy
19:57
Probably not too many.
@Mitch It is informal, though.
@Cerberus They raze old slums but not monuments.
They have spared some of the most famous national monuments, perhaps.
But historic cities?
I think they have destroyed, and are still destroying, many of those.
Then there is the question of building materials. E.g. paper walls don't hold up.
@Cerberus Those are in Japan, not China.
Yeah but there are other materials.
Such as wood.
You know the Hong Kong apartment block, all dark and anarchic and dripping with moisture and self governing and a chaotic mess of entrepreneurialism that was used as inspiration for the future LA in Blade Runner?
20:00
Hong Kong was never an historical city, though.
@Cerberus They do 'urban renewal' just like the US. (or Europe after WWII)
And I believe the big cities of China have been ruined like in North America, e.g. Shanghai, Peking, Canton.
@Mitch Not so much in Europe.
ruined?
@Cerberus Europe needs more skyscrapers
@Mitch Yes, not much left worthy of UNESCO status.
the soil there is probably too weak to handle it.
a metaphor for European decadence.
20:02
@Cerberus England, France and other European countries had their hand in ruining China's cities. Also America. The West in general.
@Robusto The damage from that was very minor compared to what the Chinese did themselves.
In war and peace.
The Summer Palace was just one palace.
Tsunami warning here (California coast) has been cancelled. It resulted from a 7.0 earthquake offshore.
Kowloon Walled City (Chinese: 九龍寨城) was an extremely densely populated and largely lawless enclave of China within the boundaries of Kowloon City, British Hong Kong. Built as an Imperial Chinese military fort, the walled city became a de jure enclave after the New Territories were leased to the United Kingdom in 1898. Its population increased dramatically after the end of the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong during World War II, attracting mostly refugees fleeing the renewed Chinese Civil War. By the late 1980s, the walled city contained roughly 35,000 residents within its territory of 2.6 hectares...
The century of humiliation was a period in Chinese history beginning with the First Opium War (1839–1842), and ending in 1945 with China (then the Republic of China) emerging out of the Second World War as one of the Big Four and established as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, or alternately, ending in 1949 with the founding of the People's Republic of China. The century-long period is typified by the decline, defeat and political fragmentation of the Qing dynasty and the subsequent Republic of China, which led to demoralizing foreign intervention, annexation and subjugation...
Actions have consequences.
TLDR it was a disgusting mess that was removed back in 94
@Xanne cripes. do you have one of those alarm apps on your phone or was it a general government message?
@Robusto India has had a few centuries of that.
@DannyuNDos so how's the government doing lately?
4
20:09
@Mitch Hardly worthy of UNESCO status?
@Cerberus Oh haha it was the British that planned and executed the demolishing of Kowloon Walled City.
@Robusto Appropriate considering how Buddhist that remark is
@Cerberus It was definitely a cultural landmark.
It is nothing compared to what China once had.
20:11
@Mitch But not a European one.
@Cerberus Rome is -filled- with ruins. They should really either complete the process or fix them up. They're a total eyesore.
@Mitch my brain too. My plan is to complete the process, probably within the next thirty years.
@Cerberus The Chinese should get rid of hanzi and replace it all with pinyin. Then they could take over the world.
@MetaEd All the 24 year olds love to say how you really start dying starting at age 25.
Anyway, I wouldn't be surprised if many of those 'world heritage' sites in China were built by the English in Shanghai in the 1800's.
World Heritage Sites are landmarks and areas with legal protection under an international treaty administered by UNESCO for having cultural, historical, or scientific significance. The sites are judged to contain "cultural and natural heritage around the world considered to be of outstanding value to humanity". To be selected, a World Heritage Site is nominated by its host country and determined by the UNESCO's World Heritage Committee to be a unique landmark which is geographically and historically identifiable, having a special cultural or physical significance, and to be under a sufficient system...
I think they should renovate Versailles as public housing. I mean keep the hall of mirrors as a common room sure, and the gradens as public gardens, but that thing could fit 1000s of apartments.
@Mitch You start dying the moment you start living. It's like the front and back of a piece of paper. You can't have one without the other.
> An external audit requested by the World Heritage Committee for its Global Strategy of the World Heritage List concluded in 2011 that political considerations were indeed influencing decisions.[5] It observed that the composition of committee representatives had shifted from experts to diplomats in spite of World Heritage Convention Article 9 and found that opinions from advisory bodies often diverged from World Heritage Committee decisions.[5]
20:21
OK an even better idea... they should renovate Versailles as high income housing apartments. They could cut up the rooms into luxury apartments. The real estate brokers would make a killing.
Nov 19, 2015 at 12:59, by Mitch
The sun at noon is the sun declining. The creature born is the creature dying.
@Mitch no, no, you're thinking of that Midnight Oil hit
@Mitch I didn't see it happen. Q. E. D.
Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Dec. 5, 2024

T I G H T R O P E
✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ 🎉

My Score: 1860
Wordle 1,265 5/6

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20:39
@MetaEd no no no you're thinking of that hit by Creedence Clearwater Revival/Tina Turner.
@Mitch oh god every time I am reminded of that song I hear it in Leonard Nimoy's voice
Connections
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@Mitch I have an alarm that seems to have come with the iPhone. It made a terrible noise, and went off within minutes of the quake. But I’m inland, so wasn’t actually in danger.
Daily Octordle #1046
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@jlliagre Good job!
@Robusto Thanks.
Daily Sequence Octordle #1046
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#travle_fra #536 +1
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#travle_usa #536 +3
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21:39
@jlliagre I can't find travle_usa in their list of games. Do you have a link?
@Robusto The link is just above your posting.
Oh, Duh ...
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Ooops, forgot about the UP!
But the fact is, nobody would ever use that route unless they really wanted to go slowly.
21:53
#travle_benelux #428 +1
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@jlliagre I'm not familiar with most European districts.
@Mitch Likely, president Yoon will be impeached.
@Robusto Sure. I gave up with Spain, Italy and Switzerland. France is likely impossible to achieve if you aren't from there and old enough.
Heck, and if Yoon is impeached, election for the next president will follow. I'm voting for 이준석 Lee Junseok.
If you're curious, try judging the likely candidates: namu.wiki/w/…
Even if Yoon isn't gonna be impeached, he would be sentenced guilty for his coup, so whatever
22:18
@Robusto Nice Jazz playing. Piano is (9 foot?) Steinway and Sons miked stero from inside (close miking) (see 2:59).
@Robusto Still don't want to try a tablet :-) ? Yes, nothing beats orchestra style music stand, especially the extendable one. If you play a grand, you can do what that guy does: spread the sheets on top of the tuning pins (see 2:31).
You must be quite good to play with an orchestra; did you do a piano concerto? Which one?
On my Yamaha P250 stage piano I can spread 10 pages: 4 on the music stand, 6 on top of the keyboard. But I'm very happy with my current setup: tablet + Donner Bluetooth page turner.
22:33
@GratefulDisciple Way back when I was studying flute, and I played that with the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, among other places.
I didn't take up the piano until much later. Now it's all I play.
@Robusto Wonderful. Any thought of getting into flute again? In the Baroque concert I was talking about, the flutist performed on a Baroque flute when the group did the Minuet + Badinerie from Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 2.
22:48
@GratefulDisciple That ship has sailed. I abandoned that in my late 20s because: too poor. Marriage, kids, etc. I haven't played the flute in years because it's not the world's best instrument to play by yourself. Also the repertoire is rather limited. Piano offers a whole lot of music to play. You can't play it all in a lifetime.
Pingyao, officially Pingyao Ancient City, is a walled city in central Shanxi, China, famed for its importance in Chinese economic history and for its well-preserved Ming and Qing urban planning and architecture. Administratively, it comprises the town of Gutao in Pingyao County, Jinzhong. According to the seventh Chinese census data, the permanent resident population of the county is 450,697. Compared with the 502,712 people in the sixth national census in 2010, it has decreased by 52,015 people in ten years, a decrease of 10.35%, and the average annual growth rate is -1.09%. The town was founded...
Dayan (Chinese: 大研), commonly called the Old Town of Lijiang (simplified Chinese: 丽江古城; traditional Chinese: 麗江古城) is the historical center of Lijiang City, in Yunnan, China. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. == History == The town has a history going back more than 1,000 years and was once a confluence for trade along the "Old Tea Horse Caravan Trail". The Dayan Old town is famous for its orderly system of waterways and bridges, a system fast becoming but a memory as the underground water table drops, probably due to over-building in the suburban areas. Lijiang's culture combines traditional...
The Historic Centre of Macao (Portuguese: Centro Histórico de Macau, Chinese: 澳門歷史城區) is a collection of over twenty locations that witness the unique assimilation and co-existence of Chinese and Portuguese cultures in Macau, a former Portuguese colony. It represents the architectural legacies of the city's cultural heritage, including monuments such as urban squares, streetscapes, churches and temples. In 2005 the Historic Centre of Macau was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List, making it the 31st designated World Heritage Site in China. It was described by UNESCO as: "with its historic...
@DannyuNDos Curious. Google Translate hesitates between supporters of the Democratic Party of Korea and supporter of the French Democratic Party when asked to translate 친더불어민주당 지지자.
Yeah, 'cause 불어(佛語) means the French language.
Google Translate is a piece of junk; use Papago instead.
Quanzhou is a prefecture-level port city on the north bank of the Jin River, beside the Taiwan Strait in southern Fujian, People's Republic of China. It is Fujian's largest most populous metropolitan region, with an area of 11,245 square kilometers (4,342 sq mi) and a population of 8,782,285 as of the 2020 census. Its built-up area is home to 6,669,711 inhabitants, encompassing the Licheng, Fengze, and Luojiang urban districts; Jinjiang, Nan'an, and Shishi cities; Hui'an County; and the Quanzhou District for Taiwanese Investment. Quanzhou was China's 12th-largest extended metropolitan area in 2010...
This one seems iffy.
These seem to be the only actual historical cities in the Chinese UNESCO list.
E.g. Peking only has some buildings on the list, but not really an historical inner city.
It is probably not really there.
@jlliagre They're possible if you use the hint for outline and first initials. Not easy but sometimes possible.
@DannyuNDos I don't know anything about the individuals involved, but it looks like at least the system is working, the president tried to do something that was sort of an abuse of the rules, and other politicians are going to punish him for that. Does that sound right?
The Naki Sumo Crying Baby Festival (Japanese: 泣き相撲, Hepburn: Nakizumō) is an annual Japanese festival in which babies are held in the arms of sumo wrestlers in an open-air sumo ring. Two babies compete in a short match in which the first child to cry is proclaimed the winner. According to Japanese folklore, a crying baby has the power to ward off evil spirits, while a strong, loud cry indicates the child will grow up strong and healthy. == History == The Naki Sumo Festival has been held throughout Japan for over 400 years. The festival is considered to have origins in the folk belief that the loud...
The Japanese proverb naku ko wa sodatsu, meaning "crying babies grow fastest", is an additional source of inspiration for the festival.
@DannyuNDos Nice site. I wish we had that.
@Cerberus Just those 4? I'm sure if the UNESCO committee were given a trip around the country they could confirm more.
@Cerberus not the area surrounding Tian-An Men and the Forbidden city? I'm sure those are 'historical'. but if they're 'slummy' maybe not historical enough.
@Mitch I went through the list.
The others are more like buildings or villages or complexes.
@Xanne You got earthquakes, fires, bomb cyclones, but not really tornadoes or hurricanes. I guess I'll have to add tsunamis to the list of disaster scenarios to worry about there.
@Cerberus The Wikipedia Unesco China list?
23:55
@Mitch The Forbidden City and other Pekinese buildings are in the list, but not some historical inner city.
@Mitch Yes.
@Cerberus The Forbidden City and Tian-An Men are big areas... I wouldn't be surprised that their construction wiped out the pre-existing buildings (the plaza seems to be just a big flat area and the Forbidden City seems to be all buildings built in the same style at the same time).

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