« first day (5217 days earlier)   

00:09
@Cerberus "red alert" in Star Trek (and probably in military ships) means the captain has raised the ship-wide attention level to watch for intruders / enemies and to be ready to fight. "red flag" is before that, when something shows up (on a scan / survey / inspection) that can signal trouble. Maybe what you're thinking is a red stuff that is after, akin to a "red card" in soccer that disqualifies a person, or a "red x" in a video game signifying "game over".
@Laurel You got a good point there. I'll think of summarizing the main body to be short like the other question, and sections off the rest into more notes. The reason the details have to be there is because otherwise people got the wrong idea about "tradition" and start submitting "wrong answer"; I'm asking something that requires a paradigm shift.
In my line of work, incomplete requirement specification causes the wrong kind of program to be designed and coded, which is very expensive (lots of man/woman-hours being wasted). So I'm used to write detailed specifications on how someone (or myself) needs to do the work, like an architect's blueprint / civil engineer's design.
@Laurel @Mitch @alphabet Thank you all for your feedback. I appreciate them.
@Robusto Yes, exactly.
@GratefulDisciple A red alert or signal is generally very bad, the worst category.
@Cerberus It's especially perilous on SE, since literally casting a red flag means you're going to delete the post as spam. But like, you know, context. I did say "a bit of a red flag" in attempt to invoke the metaphor
@GratefulDisciple Glad I could help
00:25
@Laurel It is just that I find the term unclear as I see people use it.
So I wonder why.
@Cerberus It's not really different from a lot of other terms in that respect, I guess. You can use the word "bad" to describe anything from a mild inconvenience to a life threatening emergency
"Red flag" is basically synonymous with "bad sign"
@Laurel But "red flag" has the connotation of something especially noteworthy and unexpected that can scuttle an entire enterprise or direction.
@Laurel OK I see.
@Robusto This would also be my first reading.
01:29
Connections
Puzzle #621
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Connections
Puzzle #621
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@MetaEd Did you really get the purple category?
Connections
Puzzle #622
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@Cerberus darn right I did, and I had great help: my daughter is with me playing
@MetaEd Nice combination!
we got purple by process of elimination though
Ahh yes.
01:43
no
I figured.
I also got it by elimination. The others were easy.
actually I don't get the purple category about half the time, and still score with it first. I just solve the other three
on puzzle 622 though, we actually did solve purple
@MetaEd Yeah, that's how we usually do purple, it is whatever is left.
today that's actually two perfect games (purple, blue, green, brown order)
Congratulations.
I thought brown was yellow.
 
1 hour later…
03:20
@Mitch Why can't it be fixed? Not a priority?
 
1 hour later…
04:30
I"ve learned how to safely remove an SD card from my Samsung phone. This is so counterintuitive. I would never have guessed that I could swipe that particular screen to bring up the SD card's settings, because nothing on the screen indicates that it could be swiped aside.
Ah, wait, there are three dots, one darker than the two others, that indicates swipeability. I was not eagle-eyed enough.
Atrial fibrillation worsens the brain's self-cleaning function by impacting the glymphatic system and thus could provoke a slight cognitive decline.
This study is cool AF.
Dark humor.
The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid is a 2006 memoir by best-selling travel writer Bill Bryson. The book delves into Bryson's past, telling of his youth growing up in Des Moines, Iowa, during the 1950s and early 1960s. It also reveals the backstory between himself and Stephen Katz, who appeared in A Walk in the Woods and Neither Here Nor There: Travels in Europe. Bryson also describes and comments on American life in the 1950s. The title of the book comes from an imaginary alter-ego Bryson invented for himself in his childhood, who has the ability to vaporise people. The book was released...
I've downloaded an audioversion just now.
 
6 hours later…
11:03
@Cerberus I flunked this one; didn't grow up with the blue category, not really into yellow, barely got green right, and the purple category-word-complement didn't occur to me, so basically 4 handicaps:
Connections
Puzzle #622
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3 hours later…
14:00
#travle #801 +0 (Perfect)
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https://travle.earth

#WhenTaken #361 (22.02.2025)

I scored 882/1000🏆

1️⃣📍466 km - 🗓️5 yrs - 🥇181/200
2️⃣📍4.4K km - 🗓️6 yrs - 🥉119/200
3️⃣📍117 m - 🗓️2 yrs - 🥇198/200
4️⃣📍295 m - 🗓️3 yrs - 🥇197/200
5️⃣📍290 km - 🗓️3 yrs - 🥇187/200

https://whentaken.com
Wordle 1,344 4/6

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Connections
Puzzle #622
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Strands #356
“Here we (don't) go again”
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14:15
Yo, wazzup?
Mornin' is up.
Yuppers 👍
Daily Octordle #1125
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Score: 57

Daily Sequence Octordle #1125
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Score: 77

Daily Extreme Octordle #1125
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Score: 59
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4 hours later…
18:04
Next level comedy 🤣
18:35
@Vikas Comedy if your neck isn't under the axe.

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