Card_Zero
Card_Zero t1_jeehkfc wrote
Reply to TIL A newborn baby is 75% water at birth. A slightly higher water content than bananas, but slightly less than potatoes. by Imbiberr
Bags of mostly water
Card_Zero t1_jeedybd wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that the oldest film on IMDb is "Passage de Vénus", a six second series of photographs of the transit of the planet Venus across the Sun on December 9th, 1874. by PresLyndonBJohnson36
Fair enough! If we can include animations in any format, IMDB should maybe include that vase with the jumping goats from (if I remember rightly) about 3000 BC. Or if not that somewhat dubious example, there are definitely Chinese magic lantern type devices (走馬燈) from around 1000 AD that did a bit of animation.
Card_Zero t1_jee7jcf wrote
Reply to comment by Strange-Bee5626 in China calls US debt trap accusation 'irresponsible' by BubsyFanboy
Are you being sincere, or sarcastic? I'm aware that each argument should be taken on its merits, but you might consider that the quality of this theory about a vague wealthy elite who engaged in various evil manipulations over a vague span of time is comparable to other theories that the same person has about UFOs (or UAPs, as the cranks call them these days in order to avoid looking like cranks). This question remains unanswered.
Card_Zero t1_jedqvbc wrote
Reply to comment by Strange-Bee5626 in China calls US debt trap accusation 'irresponsible' by BubsyFanboy
This is a conspiracy theory.
Card_Zero t1_jedqd57 wrote
Reply to comment by OraclesPath00 in China calls US debt trap accusation 'irresponsible' by BubsyFanboy
Do you also claim that the wealthy elite are involved in covering up non-human intelligence visiting from another reality, or is that an unrelated group?
Card_Zero t1_jedmgkl wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that the oldest film on IMDb is "Passage de Vénus", a six second series of photographs of the transit of the planet Venus across the Sun on December 9th, 1874. by PresLyndonBJohnson36
That's a patent by John Barnes Linnett, it's not clear whether the idea was to animate photographs or just drawings. I did find Experimental photographic sequence viewers (1850s–1860s) mentioned on the Zoetrope page, though.
Card_Zero t1_jaq383d wrote
Reply to TIL "to pull oneself up by one's bootstraps" is an example of an impossible task. The idiom dates at least to 1834, from the Workingman's Advocate: "It is conjectured that Mr. Murphee will now be enabled to hand himself over the Cumberland river or a barn yard fence by the straps of his boots. by meat-juice
If you wondered why they were saying that about Mr. Murphee: he had designed a perpetual motion machine.
Card_Zero t1_ja37i7w wrote
Reply to comment by p-d-ball in TIL Tolkien assisted on the Oxford Dictionary's first edition, focused on 'W' words waggle to warlock. He "learned more in those two years than in any other"; and certain etymologies continued to puzzle him for years, with many pages of notes written later on 'walrus' for a lecture at Leeds by PianoCharged
Nuh-uh, -ology is (from lógos) words, reckoning, and narrative. No aspect of loving any of it.
Card_Zero t1_ja369xt wrote
Reply to comment by Wurm42 in TIL Tolkien assisted on the Oxford Dictionary's first edition, focused on 'W' words waggle to warlock. He "learned more in those two years than in any other"; and certain etymologies continued to puzzle him for years, with many pages of notes written later on 'walrus' for a lecture at Leeds by PianoCharged
For a certain value of sane.
Card_Zero t1_ja1gpzh wrote
Reply to comment by Geesemeece in Amazon faces a lawsuit over products that fuel the donkey skin trade. by tandemuis365
I guess it's hard to use a deleted object in a garbage collected language and they were probably talking about C++, but the term deconstructor seems to be to do with unpacking tuples anyway, I think "destructor" was intended. This whole interlude is a mess. In summary, donkey skins.
Card_Zero t1_ja0m0jw wrote
Reply to comment by _toodamnparanoid_ in Amazon faces a lawsuit over products that fuel the donkey skin trade. by tandemuis365
Ridiculous, reality isn't garbage-collected, it's written in C obviously.
Card_Zero t1_j9u2gju wrote
Reply to comment by knobber_jobbler in Boris Johnson calls on UK to 'break the ice' by sending fighter jets to Ukraine - and warns China against 'historic mistake' by R1ckCrypto
Could you be a little less absolute about it, at all?
Card_Zero t1_j9u0jyb wrote
Reply to comment by AMeasuredBerserker in Boris Johnson calls on UK to 'break the ice' by sending fighter jets to Ukraine - and warns China against 'historic mistake' by R1ckCrypto
I'm not the same person you were talking to previously, I don't have to be right to prove any point, and in fact I acknowledge I'm wrong about everything most of the time. I just happen to like Wiktionary, it's my go-to.
I don't know about Cambridge Dictionary, but Merriam-Webster have a page of notes about this particular "problem word". Dictionary.com acknowledge that the "devastate" usage has been criticized. My feeling is that the one-in-ten usage (probably popular in Victorian times when every user of long words knew Latin) has had an upsurge in popularity over the last decade or so due to people on the internet being anal about it.
Card_Zero t1_j9txy5o wrote
Reply to comment by knobber_jobbler in Boris Johnson calls on UK to 'break the ice' by sending fighter jets to Ukraine - and warns China against 'historic mistake' by R1ckCrypto
I don't think Brexit was awful, and I'm not certain history books will paint it as a disaster. Currently it's seen as awful because of economic impact and because of the desire to have a strong Europe to oppose Russia, along with the insinuation that Russia was trying to engineer the breakup of Europe. However, a United States of Europe would also have been a bad thing. Unions, federations, and so on are tricky because minimal collaboration between equals is ideal and maximal central government is what tends to emerge. I know it seems irrelevant in the current climate, post-covid and with Russia rampaging around, but Brexit had an overlooked role as a backlash against that.
(It's a valid role if you're troubled by giant octopus-like central governments, I mean. Not everybody is, and I know this is an unpopular opinion, as will now be redundantly demonstrated by downvotes. It is however an aspect of the picture.)
Card_Zero t1_j9tt5l8 wrote
Reply to comment by AMeasuredBerserker in Boris Johnson calls on UK to 'break the ice' by sending fighter jets to Ukraine - and warns China against 'historic mistake' by R1ckCrypto
This argument about words is distracting from the interesting point about whether or not Boris decreed military cutbacks (and if so, why). However, Wiktionary has both uses:
> (loosely) To devastate
> (proscribed) To reduce to one-tenth
and all the quotations in the latter case include some extra words like "to one-tenth" to make sure it's understood literally. In summary: whatever.
Card_Zero t1_iycfhu4 wrote
Reply to comment by chadenright in For The First Time, Less Than Half Of UK's Population Is Christian: Report by khushraho
I hope they will also preserve the talk pages and the long argument I had once about tablespoon sizes.
Card_Zero t1_iycf7y0 wrote
Reply to comment by russdb in For The First Time, Less Than Half Of UK's Population Is Christian: Report by khushraho
I don't know, that involves all the water boiling off. Surely there'd be a Carboniferous 2.0 before that could happen, with swamp forests everywhere.
Card_Zero t1_iy8hq8i wrote
Reply to A jug of shampoo by MamboNumber5Guy
I'm interested that this picture elicits a disgust reaction in me. I must have been conditioned.
Card_Zero t1_iy8hcwd wrote
Reply to comment by MonchichiSalt in A jug of shampoo by MamboNumber5Guy
Popular in Morocco, valuable to the leather industry there. They take good care of their pigeons.
Card_Zero t1_ixw3xi5 wrote
How's Harrods doing these days? Is it still all Al Fayed influenced? Isn't he dead yet?
Card_Zero t1_iwy9jks wrote
Reply to comment by GirthIgnorer in TIL John Batman was the founder of the town that became Melbourne, Australia. And originally he called it "Batmania". There's even a street named after him: Batman Ave. by idiocrites
Both that one and the village in Iran descend from the Batman unit.
Card_Zero t1_iuap48k wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that Transdermal Celebration by Ween has a guitar solo that was played with Carlos Santana's guitar without him knowing it. Ween sneaked into the storage where Santana's tools were, played the solo just once, recorded it, and left the place. That solo is the one used in the final song. by outfoxingthefoxes
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Card_Zero t1_iuaoxdz wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL We are currently amidst the longest gap between EF5 tornadoes in history by Danielnrg
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Original
Card_Zero t1_jeeoqev wrote
Reply to comment by Xoxrocks in China calls US debt trap accusation 'irresponsible' by BubsyFanboy
Regulatory capture is a thing. And the comment could have been about that. It could have been about anything. It should have been about a debt trap of some kind, but who knows really, read into it what you like. Lots of people seemed to enjoy the sound and feel of it.