There's differences in Welsh accents across Wales, there's differences in the Yorkshire accent, usually I can tell what city someone in South Yorkshire someone is from cos of little accent quirks!
I was gonna make a joke based on that map that Welsh only had one dialect, "incomprehensible". Now you're saying that there's differing variations of "I'm sorry, I didn't understand anything you just said?"?
I kid. Mostly.
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Ninja Snarl PMy helmet is my burden.Ninja Snarl: Gone, but not forgotten.Registered Userregular
To separate the sleep discussion from the focus one, I'll make a separate post.
We think of people as multitaskers, but this is a complete lie. People are single taskers, and it takes a fair amount of time (about 20 minutes to half an hour) to really engage deeply with any given thing. If you switch away from that task, even for a few seconds, that deep focus is broken, and completely resets. You now need another 30 minutes to get back to it.
Smartphones. Notifications. Beeps. Vibration. Extra tabs on browsers. Watching one thing while doing another. Listening to podcasts. Easy access tablets. Endless distractions. Endless task switching. A really stupid cultural belief in the lie of the benefits of multitasking.
How much deep focus do you think you get in a day? We can all do it, if we give ourselves the time. How often do you give yourself the time?
Conversely, not much work these days actually requires much attention. I can "multitask" because when I'm at my desk, I'm switching between five different fucking boring and largely redundant activities that take virtually no thought to accomplish, just time.
But anything that needs real attention I can work at 8 hours straight. There just isn't much at a job these days that actually needs that kind of attention, and you generally get shit on for it because 8 hours on one task doesn't look as good as 8 non-tasks in 8 hours.
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MorninglordI'm tired of being Batman,so today I'll be Owl.Registered Userregular
To separate the sleep discussion from the focus one, I'll make a separate post.
We think of people as multitaskers, but this is a complete lie. People are single taskers, and it takes a fair amount of time (about 20 minutes to half an hour) to really engage deeply with any given thing. If you switch away from that task, even for a few seconds, that deep focus is broken, and completely resets. You now need another 30 minutes to get back to it.
Smartphones. Notifications. Beeps. Vibration. Extra tabs on browsers. Watching one thing while doing another. Listening to podcasts. Easy access tablets. Endless distractions. Endless task switching. A really stupid cultural belief in the lie of the benefits of multitasking.
How much deep focus do you think you get in a day? We can all do it, if we give ourselves the time. How often do you give yourself the time?
Conversely, not much work these days actually requires much attention. I can "multitask" because when I'm at my desk, I'm switching between five different fucking boring and largely redundant activities that take virtually no thought to accomplish, just time.
But anything that needs real attention I can work at 8 hours straight. There just isn't much at a job these days that actually needs that kind of attention, and you generally get shit on for it because 8 hours on one task doesn't look as good as 8 non-tasks in 8 hours.
That's true, but there are jobs that require attention, and things you probably want people to be paying attention to, and it's crippled for that too. It's not just about your work. You kind of would like people to be thinking about the world around them too, you know, and not just posting on twitter.
Deep focus isn't the same as "working for 8 hours straight". You can task switch several times an hour over that 8 hours, work for that entire time, and never have engaged deep focus.
It's the same as sleep. Just sleeping 8 hours isn't enough, it has to be under the right conditions.
I recommend the book stolen focus, as a good primer. It does a good job at trying to stick to the scientific evidence. There's a lot more factors influencing focus disruption than just distraction. I just picked one of them because it's a fairly easy one to fix when you know about it, if you need or want the ability to deeply focus on something.
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MorninglordI'm tired of being Batman,so today I'll be Owl.Registered Userregular
You should put a piece of duct tape over the led in the fire alarm.
Or just buy a new alarm. It's probably less than $10
It's a strata thing in an apartment building, we aren't allowed to touch it. Basically, beaurocratic red tape due to government regulations that say we must have a fire alarm, it has to be an approved one, and this is the approved one the organisations involved installed.
Also blocking the light doesn't work cos it seeps out the gaps left to allow smoke in for it to detect it. I'd basically have to cripple the alarm completely. I think it's meant to allow you to see if the power goes out, but they've decided to leave it on all the time. I can see clearly in the room when the light is off, its silly. And this is after I put a bunch of bluetac on the main light, so I can see clearly just with the seepage. Not enough to read a book, but it's basically a kids nightlight. I can walk straight across the room and not hit anything.
Morninglord on
(PSN: Morninglord) (Steam: Morninglord) (WiiU: Morninglord22) I like to record and toss up a lot of random gaming videos here.
Sorry should have elaborated, it split it up as one of the main guys behind it moved to the University of Nevada, I've not traced what he's done since but you never know...
I don't suppose you have the name? The two main guys were a father and his son, David and Ben Crystal, with the son Ben the one really into it. Was it Ben who moved?
Yup.
As for that map, that was picked from a bunch of others that usually were posted with a comment "look at this ludicrous map", but reckon that got the main groups for someone from outside the UK without getting into the weird multi-layered stuff and just hoped that people would understand that places like Portsmouth and Southampton have different accents (kind of either side of the pointy bit at the bottom opposite of that tiny island).
Assume that that bit between Northumbrian to Pitmantic is closer to the norm for people who live just outside those areas.
A lot has changed since the introduction of the bicycle and train in the 19th century, but prior to that most people lived, married and died within a mile of where they were born. Up around Manchester, there are steep hills that were enough to produce different accents in people living either side.
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NoneoftheaboveJust a conforming non-conformist.Twilight ZoneRegistered Userregular
it doesn't help that shakespeare is (imo at least) kinda desperately mis-taught in american schools
Yeah, Shakespeare has been done hideous disservice by modern presentation of classical material. The guy wrote shit to be entertaining. Funny. Dramatic. Compelling.
And then education for classical materials gets a hold of it and sucks out aaaaaaalllll of that. Every. Last. Drop. Cut out all the bawdry stuff. Cut out almost all the funny stuff. Talk up the iambic pentameter a ton, scatter in some extremely dry dissections of important outdated phrases. Slap some graded material on it. Done.
My intro to Shakespeare was Romeo and Juliet, and the modernized movie adaptation of it.
So it took me awhile to appreciate the author from my own interest. This goes for Dickens as well.
it doesn't help that shakespeare is (imo at least) kinda desperately mis-taught in american schools
Yeah, Shakespeare has been done hideous disservice by modern presentation of classical material. The guy wrote shit to be entertaining. Funny. Dramatic. Compelling.
And then education for classical materials gets a hold of it and sucks out aaaaaaalllll of that. Every. Last. Drop. Cut out all the bawdry stuff. Cut out almost all the funny stuff. Talk up the iambic pentameter a ton, scatter in some extremely dry dissections of important outdated phrases. Slap some graded material on it. Done.
My intro to Shakespeare was Romeo and Juliet, and the modernized movie adaptation of it.
So it took me awhile to appreciate the author from my own interest. This goes for Dickens as well.
Yeah, we watched Romeo + Juliet in class. It was rad.
Internal monologues is only one way that some people think right now.
Think of the words people say as an output. The internal processing done to get there can be wildly different, but because our language requires a linear sequence of sounds, we assume everyone does that internally too. There's no way to tell if someone is or isn't unless they tell you.
I dont have an internal monologue unless Im actively planning how to construct a sentence. I dont think in words, but images, abstracts, emotional impressions, and shapeforms.
I remember one lady who said she has an old italian married couple arguing in her head. Not like at her. She doesnt argue with them. Theyre literally her thoughts. Theyre in a kitchen, and everytime shes thinking of anything its these two going at it.
Italian couple lady is pretty great but I honestly think mr hopkins life is pretty peaceful. His internal idling is complete silence.
“Like a tiny island, surrounded by an infinite ocean,” is how Justin Hopkins describes his brain. “The tiny island is where all the conscious things seem to happen, but it’s surrounded by this infinite, inaccessible stuff.” Hopkins, who is 59 and works for a social enterprise in London, doesn’t have an inner voice. There is no one in his brain to blame, shame or criticise. In his head, there is emptiness: just the still warm air before a rustling breeze.
“There’s nothing there,” says Hopkins. “And I don’t think there ever has been.” Of course, Hopkins has thoughts: we all do. But the inner monologue that fills our brain while the engine stands idling isn’t there. It’s been clicked off, permanently. “When I am alone and relaxed, there are no words at all,” he says. “There’s great pleasure in that.” He can easily while away an hour without having a single thought. Unsurprisingly, Hopkins sleeps like a baby.
Hold up. People actually have an internal monologue going all the time? That can’t really be true. A person would go bugfuck insane from that.
Internal monologues is only one way that some people think right now.
Think of the words people say as an output. The internal processing done to get there can be wildly different, but because our language requires a linear sequence of sounds, we assume everyone does that internally too. There's no way to tell if someone is or isn't unless they tell you.
I dont have an internal monologue unless Im actively planning how to construct a sentence. I dont think in words, but images, abstracts, emotional impressions, and shapeforms.
I remember one lady who said she has an old italian married couple arguing in her head. Not like at her. She doesnt argue with them. Theyre literally her thoughts. Theyre in a kitchen, and everytime shes thinking of anything its these two going at it.
Italian couple lady is pretty great but I honestly think mr hopkins life is pretty peaceful. His internal idling is complete silence.
“Like a tiny island, surrounded by an infinite ocean,” is how Justin Hopkins describes his brain. “The tiny island is where all the conscious things seem to happen, but it’s surrounded by this infinite, inaccessible stuff.” Hopkins, who is 59 and works for a social enterprise in London, doesn’t have an inner voice. There is no one in his brain to blame, shame or criticise. In his head, there is emptiness: just the still warm air before a rustling breeze.
“There’s nothing there,” says Hopkins. “And I don’t think there ever has been.” Of course, Hopkins has thoughts: we all do. But the inner monologue that fills our brain while the engine stands idling isn’t there. It’s been clicked off, permanently. “When I am alone and relaxed, there are no words at all,” he says. “There’s great pleasure in that.” He can easily while away an hour without having a single thought. Unsurprisingly, Hopkins sleeps like a baby.
Hold up. People actually have an internal monologue going all the time? That can’t really be true. A person would go bugfuck insane from that.
People dont?
I mean sometimes I'm just singing the Super Mario World theme to myself on a loop but unless I'm engaging externally I've always got dialogue in my head. Lots of times rehearsing conversations or what I will say in front of other people / audiences but there is always some internal thoughts of what I'm thinking through or saying.
Edit - if I was diagnosed as bugfuck insane I'd shrug and say well thank god that answers so much.
It is true that there are changes in our ability to pay attention due to disruptive influences of various technologies and destruction of healthy sleep.
Changes in how we speak are a consequence though, and not a cause.
Funny little images of how people talked about it over a hundred years ago has little relevance to that. The reduction in focus is well studied and isnt just some dude saying it.
I know, which is why I didn't mention that part and specified changes in how we talk. Calling the way people talk these days a regression is nothing but cultural bias.
Internal monologues is only one way that some people think right now.
Think of the words people say as an output. The internal processing done to get there can be wildly different, but because our language requires a linear sequence of sounds, we assume everyone does that internally too. There's no way to tell if someone is or isn't unless they tell you.
I dont have an internal monologue unless Im actively planning how to construct a sentence. I dont think in words, but images, abstracts, emotional impressions, and shapeforms.
I remember one lady who said she has an old italian married couple arguing in her head. Not like at her. She doesnt argue with them. Theyre literally her thoughts. Theyre in a kitchen, and everytime shes thinking of anything its these two going at it.
Italian couple lady is pretty great but I honestly think mr hopkins life is pretty peaceful. His internal idling is complete silence.
“Like a tiny island, surrounded by an infinite ocean,” is how Justin Hopkins describes his brain. “The tiny island is where all the conscious things seem to happen, but it’s surrounded by this infinite, inaccessible stuff.” Hopkins, who is 59 and works for a social enterprise in London, doesn’t have an inner voice. There is no one in his brain to blame, shame or criticise. In his head, there is emptiness: just the still warm air before a rustling breeze.
“There’s nothing there,” says Hopkins. “And I don’t think there ever has been.” Of course, Hopkins has thoughts: we all do. But the inner monologue that fills our brain while the engine stands idling isn’t there. It’s been clicked off, permanently. “When I am alone and relaxed, there are no words at all,” he says. “There’s great pleasure in that.” He can easily while away an hour without having a single thought. Unsurprisingly, Hopkins sleeps like a baby.
Hold up. People actually have an internal monologue going all the time? That can’t really be true. A person would go bugfuck insane from that.
People dont?
I mean sometimes I'm just singing the Super Mario World theme to myself on a loop but unless I'm engaging externally I've always got dialogue in my head. Lots of times rehearsing conversations or what I will say in front of other people / audiences but there is always some internal thoughts of what I'm thinking through or saying.
Edit - if I was diagnosed as bugfuck insane I'd shrug and say well thank god that answers so much.
Yep. I'm pretty sure this is one of those common traits for folks who get worn out while socializing; you can burn a lot of mental energy trying to consider enough angles in a conversation.
Personally I play cartoons and music videos in my head a lot. It's like built-in YouTube.
This is all very interesting and I was about to reply but I glanced down and realized this isn't [Chat].
Which let me to the question: What the fuck is happening in this?
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MorninglordI'm tired of being Batman,so today I'll be Owl.Registered Userregular
edited June 2022
I would like to sheepishly point out that historical information and history related stuff has been brought up multiple times in this conversation.
And you can't get more historical than talking about Shakespeare dude lived like a million years ago!
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NoneoftheaboveJust a conforming non-conformist.Twilight ZoneRegistered Userregular
Yes folks, I agree. We need to keep this thread more on topic.
That said, Dan Carlin's Hardcore History podcast is great, especially his recent episodes on Supernova in the East.
I thought he did a pretty decent job of doing a show about Slavery without it turning into a total clusterfuck. Especially for someone with a significant conservative audience he didn’t seem to be afraid of saying “this is how shit was, deal with it.”
Internal monologues is only one way that some people think right now.
Think of the words people say as an output. The internal processing done to get there can be wildly different, but because our language requires a linear sequence of sounds, we assume everyone does that internally too. There's no way to tell if someone is or isn't unless they tell you.
I dont have an internal monologue unless Im actively planning how to construct a sentence. I dont think in words, but images, abstracts, emotional impressions, and shapeforms.
I remember one lady who said she has an old italian married couple arguing in her head. Not like at her. She doesnt argue with them. Theyre literally her thoughts. Theyre in a kitchen, and everytime shes thinking of anything its these two going at it.
Italian couple lady is pretty great but I honestly think mr hopkins life is pretty peaceful. His internal idling is complete silence.
“Like a tiny island, surrounded by an infinite ocean,” is how Justin Hopkins describes his brain. “The tiny island is where all the conscious things seem to happen, but it’s surrounded by this infinite, inaccessible stuff.” Hopkins, who is 59 and works for a social enterprise in London, doesn’t have an inner voice. There is no one in his brain to blame, shame or criticise. In his head, there is emptiness: just the still warm air before a rustling breeze.
“There’s nothing there,” says Hopkins. “And I don’t think there ever has been.” Of course, Hopkins has thoughts: we all do. But the inner monologue that fills our brain while the engine stands idling isn’t there. It’s been clicked off, permanently. “When I am alone and relaxed, there are no words at all,” he says. “There’s great pleasure in that.” He can easily while away an hour without having a single thought. Unsurprisingly, Hopkins sleeps like a baby.
Hold up. People actually have an internal monologue going all the time? That can’t really be true. A person would go bugfuck insane from that.
Doesn't everyone have a narrator? I'd get very bored without the narrator.
To separate the sleep discussion from the focus one, I'll make a separate post.
We think of people as multitaskers, but this is a complete lie. People are single taskers, and it takes a fair amount of time (about 20 minutes to half an hour) to really engage deeply with any given thing. If you switch away from that task, even for a few seconds, that deep focus is broken, and completely resets. You now need another 30 minutes to get back to it.
Smartphones. Notifications. Beeps. Vibration. Extra tabs on browsers. Watching one thing while doing another. Listening to podcasts. Easy access tablets. Endless distractions. Endless task switching. A really stupid cultural belief in the lie of the benefits of multitasking.
How much deep focus do you think you get in a day? We can all do it, if we give ourselves the time. How often do you give yourself the time? This impacts everything in society because everyone's ability to deeply focus is crippled.
Depending on how interesting it is, I will forget to eat, sleep, barely even remember to use the restroom. But also I have ADHD, so that's cheating.
"I will write your name in the ruin of them. I will paint you across history in the color of their blood."
To separate the sleep discussion from the focus one, I'll make a separate post.
We think of people as multitaskers, but this is a complete lie. People are single taskers, and it takes a fair amount of time (about 20 minutes to half an hour) to really engage deeply with any given thing. If you switch away from that task, even for a few seconds, that deep focus is broken, and completely resets. You now need another 30 minutes to get back to it.
Smartphones. Notifications. Beeps. Vibration. Extra tabs on browsers. Watching one thing while doing another. Listening to podcasts. Easy access tablets. Endless distractions. Endless task switching. A really stupid cultural belief in the lie of the benefits of multitasking.
How much deep focus do you think you get in a day? We can all do it, if we give ourselves the time. How often do you give yourself the time? This impacts everything in society because everyone's ability to deeply focus is crippled.
Depending on how interesting it is, I will forget to eat, sleep, barely even remember to use the restroom. But also I have ADHD, so that's cheating.
Since this is getting super tangenty Im gonna not reply to anymore of this stuff. Lets get back to the greeks and cool old stories and whatnot.
(PSN: Morninglord) (Steam: Morninglord) (WiiU: Morninglord22) I like to record and toss up a lot of random gaming videos here.
To separate the sleep discussion from the focus one, I'll make a separate post.
We think of people as multitaskers, but this is a complete lie. People are single taskers, and it takes a fair amount of time (about 20 minutes to half an hour) to really engage deeply with any given thing. If you switch away from that task, even for a few seconds, that deep focus is broken, and completely resets. You now need another 30 minutes to get back to it.
Smartphones. Notifications. Beeps. Vibration. Extra tabs on browsers. Watching one thing while doing another. Listening to podcasts. Easy access tablets. Endless distractions. Endless task switching. A really stupid cultural belief in the lie of the benefits of multitasking.
How much deep focus do you think you get in a day? We can all do it, if we give ourselves the time. How often do you give yourself the time? This impacts everything in society because everyone's ability to deeply focus is crippled.
Depending on how interesting it is, I will forget to eat, sleep, barely even remember to use the restroom. But also I have ADHD, so that's cheating.
Since this is getting super tangenty Im gonna not reply to anymore of this stuff. Lets get back to the greeks and cool old stories and whatnot.
How about that early Seventeenth-century story about a dude who was so into books he basically lived in a fantasy world and started hallucinating?
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BrodyThe WatchThe First ShoreRegistered Userregular
Is there much research out there into using crops/plants that migratory humans used/brought along with them that helps discern patterns in early human migration? I was thinking this morning about how onions and related species are so prevalent across large swathes of the northern hemisphere, and how much of that is concurrent evolution, and how much is the same plant being dragged everywhere because humans liked eating it?
"I will write your name in the ruin of them. I will paint you across history in the color of their blood."
One of my plant biology professors in college called Johnny Appleseed the world's first ecological terrorist, but that's probably an American-only lens to looking at ecological terrorists.
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BrodyThe WatchThe First ShoreRegistered Userregular
One of my plant biology professors in college called Johnny Appleseed the world's first ecological terrorist, but that's probably an American-only lens to looking at ecological terrorists.
I'm sure other cultures have done it (as always), but again we see how western culture does it's best to be the worst at everything.
"I will write your name in the ruin of them. I will paint you across history in the color of their blood."
Is there much research out there into using crops/plants that migratory humans used/brought along with them that helps discern patterns in early human migration? I was thinking this morning about how onions and related species are so prevalent across large swathes of the northern hemisphere, and how much of that is concurrent evolution, and how much is the same plant being dragged everywhere because humans liked eating it?
Agriculture is a relatively recent development in human history at about 12,000 or so years ago. Agriculture requires a stable human presence to tend to the crops, so once a particular group took up agriculture, they tended to stop migrating and settled in one place. It was also relatively hard to transport varieties of plants around into significantly different environments productively, so most early agricultural societies tended to use local plants that were already adapted to the local environment, rather than import foreign species in.
Internal monologues is only one way that some people think right now.
Think of the words people say as an output. The internal processing done to get there can be wildly different, but because our language requires a linear sequence of sounds, we assume everyone does that internally too. There's no way to tell if someone is or isn't unless they tell you.
I dont have an internal monologue unless Im actively planning how to construct a sentence. I dont think in words, but images, abstracts, emotional impressions, and shapeforms.
I remember one lady who said she has an old italian married couple arguing in her head. Not like at her. She doesnt argue with them. Theyre literally her thoughts. Theyre in a kitchen, and everytime shes thinking of anything its these two going at it.
Italian couple lady is pretty great but I honestly think mr hopkins life is pretty peaceful. His internal idling is complete silence.
“Like a tiny island, surrounded by an infinite ocean,” is how Justin Hopkins describes his brain. “The tiny island is where all the conscious things seem to happen, but it’s surrounded by this infinite, inaccessible stuff.” Hopkins, who is 59 and works for a social enterprise in London, doesn’t have an inner voice. There is no one in his brain to blame, shame or criticise. In his head, there is emptiness: just the still warm air before a rustling breeze.
“There’s nothing there,” says Hopkins. “And I don’t think there ever has been.” Of course, Hopkins has thoughts: we all do. But the inner monologue that fills our brain while the engine stands idling isn’t there. It’s been clicked off, permanently. “When I am alone and relaxed, there are no words at all,” he says. “There’s great pleasure in that.” He can easily while away an hour without having a single thought. Unsurprisingly, Hopkins sleeps like a baby.
Hold up. People actually have an internal monologue going all the time? That can’t really be true. A person would go bugfuck insane from that.
Doesn't everyone have a narrator? I'd get very bored without the narrator.
Narrator: "No CelstialBadger wouldn't. On the next arrested development..."
One of my plant biology professors in college called Johnny Appleseed the world's first ecological terrorist, but that's probably an American-only lens to looking at ecological terrorists.
I'm sure other cultures have done it (as always), but again we see how western culture does it's best to be the worst at everything.
I'll see your Nile Perch in Lake Victoria, and raise you a Silver Carp in the Mississippi River!
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BrodyThe WatchThe First ShoreRegistered Userregular
Is there much research out there into using crops/plants that migratory humans used/brought along with them that helps discern patterns in early human migration? I was thinking this morning about how onions and related species are so prevalent across large swathes of the northern hemisphere, and how much of that is concurrent evolution, and how much is the same plant being dragged everywhere because humans liked eating it?
Agriculture is a relatively recent development in human history at about 12,000 or so years ago. Agriculture requires a stable human presence to tend to the crops, so once a particular group took up agriculture, they tended to stop migrating and settled in one place. It was also relatively hard to transport varieties of plants around into significantly different environments productively, so most early agricultural societies tended to use local plants that were already adapted to the local environment, rather than import foreign species in.
That makes sense. I guess I assumed they still had access to some form of "agriculture", even if it was just something small, but I guess if you have that solid of an understanding of how plants work, why wouldn't you just change over to agriculture on the whole.
"I will write your name in the ruin of them. I will paint you across history in the color of their blood."
Dandelions are not native to North America (or the several other places they've ended up)
There would maybe have been some cross-pollination via animals, seeds in fur and such. Pre-agriculture you would harvest wild plants and maybe some dried plants transported viable seeds
Dandelions are not native to North America (or the several other places they've ended up)
There would maybe have been some cross-pollination via animals, seeds in fur and such. Pre-agriculture you would harvest wild plants and maybe some dried plants transported viable seeds
I feel like that could be one of those "we found spiders in space*" things, too?
*5km above the earth, not space
Edit: apparently their seed structure, is more efficient than a full parachute despite being 90% air, according to some scientific papers from 2018
Everyone knows that the seeds, under silky, filamentous parachutes, ride the breeze far and wide. A mile is nothing — 60 miles or more is possible. But no one — that is to say, no scientists — had figured out the details of that flight
...
What they recorded surprised them. Above the pappus, the air flow took the form of something called a separated vortex ring, a kind of swirling eddy that had been considered a theoretical possibility, but was thought to be too unstable to exist in reality.
Is there much research out there into using crops/plants that migratory humans used/brought along with them that helps discern patterns in early human migration? I was thinking this morning about how onions and related species are so prevalent across large swathes of the northern hemisphere, and how much of that is concurrent evolution, and how much is the same plant being dragged everywhere because humans liked eating it?
Agriculture is a relatively recent development in human history at about 12,000 or so years ago. Agriculture requires a stable human presence to tend to the crops, so once a particular group took up agriculture, they tended to stop migrating and settled in one place. It was also relatively hard to transport varieties of plants around into significantly different environments productively, so most early agricultural societies tended to use local plants that were already adapted to the local environment, rather than import foreign species in.
That makes sense. I guess I assumed they still had access to some form of "agriculture", even if it was just something small, but I guess if you have that solid of an understanding of how plants work, why wouldn't you just change over to agriculture on the whole.
The progress of Maize out of the tropics was basically this. It was a big thing that the New World is basically N/S and Old World is mostly E/W. Transporting plants along the same latitude is way easier than trying to move it north/south as a general rule.
I was thinking on what can go wrong in pissing off your military, and the Carnation Revolution https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnation_Revolution
came to mind. It's kind of a misnomer, and more of a bad news gone right; basically a military coup triggered by lower level officers of rhe army that pushed by a long running colonial war rebelled, overthrew a fascist dictatorship, and resulted in a modern democratic government in Portugal. Along with the independency of its former colonies. Unfortunately the cold war being at its peak proxy civil wars immediately started in most of them, and continued until somewhat recently.
The revolution did kind of have a soundtrack. If you've watched the second season of money heist you may recognize the following:https://youtu.be/gaLWqy4e7ls
Basically a song by Zeca Afonso,about a city in Portugal where the people yield the power where everyone is equal , which was censored (duh) at the time was used as a signal that the coup was to proceed. The Army initially occupied the national radion and broadcast the song, marking the go ahead for the plan.
In Portugal the revolution was relatively bloodless: 4 people were killed when the secret police opened fire over a crowd that had gathered outside its headquarters. The name came as the population took to the streets, and started placing carnations in the soldiers weapons and armored carriers guns.
The coup had widespred popular support. And while initially Ussr aligned interests seemed to be on the cusp of taking power, leading to the CIA trying to evacuate several moderate resistance personalities, several of them refused to leave, and after what was internally know as the hot summer of 75, Portugal started having regular elections, and power has largely alternated between
Center of left and center of right parties. The communist party is an active force, more on city races in the sourh, and there is unfortunately a far right party that reached nearly 10% of vote, but fortunately seem to have stabilized and don't seem poised to grow more. Supposedly, Franco's Spain briefly discussed invading, but fears of triggering an internal revolution aborted the plans.
On a Personal note, my birthday is almost exactly 9 months after the Revolution.my folks say it's a coincidence, but i'm not so sure
Has anyone here read either of Christopher Wickham's books on the Early Middle Ages? I am trying to decide between Framing the Early Middle Ages and The Inheritance of Rome and am having trouble finding a good comparison of the two.
Has anyone here read either of Christopher Wickham's books on the Early Middle Ages? I am trying to decide between Framing the Early Middle Ages and The Inheritance of Rome and am having trouble finding a good comparison of the two.
I'll wait for the audio books, and only if it's narrated by Christopher Walken.
Dandelions are not native to North America (or the several other places they've ended up)
There would maybe have been some cross-pollination via animals, seeds in fur and such. Pre-agriculture you would harvest wild plants and maybe some dried plants transported viable seeds
I understand dandelions to be imported to the New World, as they were once considered an important food crop. (The entire plant is edible, is not exactly delicious.)
Dandelions are not native to North America (or the several other places they've ended up)
There would maybe have been some cross-pollination via animals, seeds in fur and such. Pre-agriculture you would harvest wild plants and maybe some dried plants transported viable seeds
I understand dandelions to be imported to the New World, as they were once considered an important food crop. (The entire plant is edible, is not exactly delicious.)
I've made dandelion jam last summer. I spent 4 hours separating the flowers from the stems to have enough for a recipe. I'm not doing that ever again.
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Or just buy a new alarm. It's probably less than $10
I was gonna make a joke based on that map that Welsh only had one dialect, "incomprehensible". Now you're saying that there's differing variations of "I'm sorry, I didn't understand anything you just said?"?
I kid. Mostly.
Conversely, not much work these days actually requires much attention. I can "multitask" because when I'm at my desk, I'm switching between five different fucking boring and largely redundant activities that take virtually no thought to accomplish, just time.
But anything that needs real attention I can work at 8 hours straight. There just isn't much at a job these days that actually needs that kind of attention, and you generally get shit on for it because 8 hours on one task doesn't look as good as 8 non-tasks in 8 hours.
That's true, but there are jobs that require attention, and things you probably want people to be paying attention to, and it's crippled for that too. It's not just about your work. You kind of would like people to be thinking about the world around them too, you know, and not just posting on twitter.
Deep focus isn't the same as "working for 8 hours straight". You can task switch several times an hour over that 8 hours, work for that entire time, and never have engaged deep focus.
It's the same as sleep. Just sleeping 8 hours isn't enough, it has to be under the right conditions.
I recommend the book stolen focus, as a good primer. It does a good job at trying to stick to the scientific evidence. There's a lot more factors influencing focus disruption than just distraction. I just picked one of them because it's a fairly easy one to fix when you know about it, if you need or want the ability to deeply focus on something.
It's a strata thing in an apartment building, we aren't allowed to touch it. Basically, beaurocratic red tape due to government regulations that say we must have a fire alarm, it has to be an approved one, and this is the approved one the organisations involved installed.
Also blocking the light doesn't work cos it seeps out the gaps left to allow smoke in for it to detect it. I'd basically have to cripple the alarm completely. I think it's meant to allow you to see if the power goes out, but they've decided to leave it on all the time. I can see clearly in the room when the light is off, its silly. And this is after I put a bunch of bluetac on the main light, so I can see clearly just with the seepage. Not enough to read a book, but it's basically a kids nightlight. I can walk straight across the room and not hit anything.
Yup.
As for that map, that was picked from a bunch of others that usually were posted with a comment "look at this ludicrous map", but reckon that got the main groups for someone from outside the UK without getting into the weird multi-layered stuff and just hoped that people would understand that places like Portsmouth and Southampton have different accents (kind of either side of the pointy bit at the bottom opposite of that tiny island).
Assume that that bit between Northumbrian to Pitmantic is closer to the norm for people who live just outside those areas.
A lot has changed since the introduction of the bicycle and train in the 19th century, but prior to that most people lived, married and died within a mile of where they were born. Up around Manchester, there are steep hills that were enough to produce different accents in people living either side.
My intro to Shakespeare was Romeo and Juliet, and the modernized movie adaptation of it.
So it took me awhile to appreciate the author from my own interest. This goes for Dickens as well.
Yeah, we watched Romeo + Juliet in class. It was rad.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SEzskNtFnIY
Hold up. People actually have an internal monologue going all the time? That can’t really be true. A person would go bugfuck insane from that.
People dont?
I mean sometimes I'm just singing the Super Mario World theme to myself on a loop but unless I'm engaging externally I've always got dialogue in my head. Lots of times rehearsing conversations or what I will say in front of other people / audiences but there is always some internal thoughts of what I'm thinking through or saying.
Edit - if I was diagnosed as bugfuck insane I'd shrug and say well thank god that answers so much.
I know, which is why I didn't mention that part and specified changes in how we talk. Calling the way people talk these days a regression is nothing but cultural bias.
Huh.
Yep. I'm pretty sure this is one of those common traits for folks who get worn out while socializing; you can burn a lot of mental energy trying to consider enough angles in a conversation.
Personally I play cartoons and music videos in my head a lot. It's like built-in YouTube.
Only when it's my turn to talk in meetings
Which let me to the question: What the fuck is happening in this?
And you can't get more historical than talking about Shakespeare dude lived like a million years ago!
That said, Dan Carlin's Hardcore History podcast is great, especially his recent episodes on Supernova in the East.
Doesn't everyone have a narrator? I'd get very bored without the narrator.
Depending on how interesting it is, I will forget to eat, sleep, barely even remember to use the restroom. But also I have ADHD, so that's cheating.
The Monster Baru Cormorant - Seth Dickinson
Steam: Korvalain
Since this is getting super tangenty Im gonna not reply to anymore of this stuff. Lets get back to the greeks and cool old stories and whatnot.
How about that early Seventeenth-century story about a dude who was so into books he basically lived in a fantasy world and started hallucinating?
The Monster Baru Cormorant - Seth Dickinson
Steam: Korvalain
I'm sure other cultures have done it (as always), but again we see how western culture does it's best to be the worst at everything.
The Monster Baru Cormorant - Seth Dickinson
Steam: Korvalain
Agriculture is a relatively recent development in human history at about 12,000 or so years ago. Agriculture requires a stable human presence to tend to the crops, so once a particular group took up agriculture, they tended to stop migrating and settled in one place. It was also relatively hard to transport varieties of plants around into significantly different environments productively, so most early agricultural societies tended to use local plants that were already adapted to the local environment, rather than import foreign species in.
Narrator: "No CelstialBadger wouldn't. On the next arrested development..."
I'll see your Nile Perch in Lake Victoria, and raise you a Silver Carp in the Mississippi River!
That makes sense. I guess I assumed they still had access to some form of "agriculture", even if it was just something small, but I guess if you have that solid of an understanding of how plants work, why wouldn't you just change over to agriculture on the whole.
The Monster Baru Cormorant - Seth Dickinson
Steam: Korvalain
There would maybe have been some cross-pollination via animals, seeds in fur and such. Pre-agriculture you would harvest wild plants and maybe some dried plants transported viable seeds
I feel like that could be one of those "we found spiders in space*" things, too?
*5km above the earth, not space
Edit: apparently their seed structure, is more efficient than a full parachute despite being 90% air, according to some scientific papers from 2018
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/23/science/dandelion-flight-seeds.html
The progress of Maize out of the tropics was basically this. It was a big thing that the New World is basically N/S and Old World is mostly E/W. Transporting plants along the same latitude is way easier than trying to move it north/south as a general rule.
came to mind. It's kind of a misnomer, and more of a bad news gone right; basically a military coup triggered by lower level officers of rhe army that pushed by a long running colonial war rebelled, overthrew a fascist dictatorship, and resulted in a modern democratic government in Portugal. Along with the independency of its former colonies. Unfortunately the cold war being at its peak proxy civil wars immediately started in most of them, and continued until somewhat recently.
The revolution did kind of have a soundtrack. If you've watched the second season of money heist you may recognize the following:https://youtu.be/gaLWqy4e7ls
Basically a song by Zeca Afonso,about a city in Portugal where the people yield the power where everyone is equal , which was censored (duh) at the time was used as a signal that the coup was to proceed. The Army initially occupied the national radion and broadcast the song, marking the go ahead for the plan.
In Portugal the revolution was relatively bloodless: 4 people were killed when the secret police opened fire over a crowd that had gathered outside its headquarters. The name came as the population took to the streets, and started placing carnations in the soldiers weapons and armored carriers guns.
The coup had widespred popular support. And while initially Ussr aligned interests seemed to be on the cusp of taking power, leading to the CIA trying to evacuate several moderate resistance personalities, several of them refused to leave, and after what was internally know as the hot summer of 75, Portugal started having regular elections, and power has largely alternated between
Center of left and center of right parties. The communist party is an active force, more on city races in the sourh, and there is unfortunately a far right party that reached nearly 10% of vote, but fortunately seem to have stabilized and don't seem poised to grow more. Supposedly, Franco's Spain briefly discussed invading, but fears of triggering an internal revolution aborted the plans.
On a Personal note, my birthday is almost exactly 9 months after the Revolution.my folks say it's a coincidence, but i'm not so sure
Edit: several typos
https://www.wflx.com/2022/07/06/bradford-freeman-last-band-brothers-survivor-has-died/
(awesome for him and not his passing obviously)
I'll wait for the audio books, and only if it's narrated by Christopher Walken.
I understand dandelions to be imported to the New World, as they were once considered an important food crop. (The entire plant is edible, is not exactly delicious.)
I've made dandelion jam last summer. I spent 4 hours separating the flowers from the stems to have enough for a recipe. I'm not doing that ever again.
Good jam though.