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That brought nice memories of having my Casio Data Bank in the 80s and feeling like the coolest kid in school. It looked so futuristic and slick :) I remember spending quite a bit some time entering the phone numbers of my friends and relatives.


I had been using LaTeX for 25 years. I gave it a try recently to write a technical paper and I was blown away. I saved so much time. The immediate feedback and the advanced features were impressive. I had to include a budget proposal in one of the chapters and I was able to create a quick script that read a csv file with the different concepts and costs. I would modify the contents of the csv file and the document would update right away. I didn't have to recompile the document as I used to do with LaTeX... the results were there, right away, beautifully formatted. I am very impressed and will definitely consider doing more work with Typst.


As many here, I spent too much time with POVRay in my youth. About 8 years ago I decided to try an idea that I had in my mind and decided to install it and relearn it. I wanted to try this fractal idea made of toruses.

It's a 9000px image, so I uploaded it here https://www.easyzoom.com/imageaccess/beecf8383ac249978d943b8... where you can zoom in to see the detail.

I remember being excited every month to see what people would do in the raytracing competition. Good times :D http://www.povray.org/competition/


I used to live near a high-traffic road that was built with cobblestones. It probably had decades of having been built and it was horrible. I conjecture that due to soil expansion due to changes in moisture (no snow, but periods of dry and rain seasons), and therefore, the road was very bumpy (think of multiscale bumps) and it was extremely uncomfortable to drive on it. Everybody talked about how much they hated that road, but there were no good alternatives.

I think the author underestimates the amount of warping in the underlying soil in some places. I'm sure it isn't a one-size-fits-all solution, but I agree it should be considered for suitable places.


Of course you mean the "normal" meaning of a kernel pertaining to Linear Algebra, right?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kernel_(linear_algebra)

Of course I'm kidding. It's one of those terms that many fields adopt and give it completely different meaning. There's no "normal" meaning of `kernel`.


I'd love to buy more heirloom tomatoes. The flavor is great. The problem is that often they're like 3 USD for a single large tomato in my supermarket :(


See if there's a farmers market local to you. Even there they aren't (relatively) cheap, but IME way cheaper than the supermarket.


A dear friend of mine that works at a very large tech company has frequent (many times a week) meetings at ungodly hours (such as 7am AND 11pm) because of time zone differences with other teams in different parts of the world. My friend says that he's not surprised in today's global framework, especially with large enterprises and claims that looking for another, less-intense job would be futile because it is probably like that everywhere, especially with large tech companies. I claim that he's gotten used to this abuse that it is not as widespread as he thinks.

I think some of these meetings might be important enough to warrant having one occasionally, but not as an almost-daily phenomenon.

Any similar experiences? I'm not in the software dev/engineering world so I'm not as well informed in the matter; however I'd be very surprised if a majority of people would accept such working conditions that are very adverse to a healthy work-life balance.


I had the same. It was almost like an obligation to join and show face. But I think what needs to happen is for it to be ok to drop early, or only show up for you piece and leave if you think the rest of the meeting is not applicable to you. This is particularly true for meetings with many cross-functional groups.


There's an excellent docuseries adaptation of the book on PBS:

https://www.pbs.org/show/story-cancer-emperor-all-maladies/


When my son was about 5 months old, he was crawling in the bathroom floor while I was getting dressed in the adjacent walk-in closet. He was playing with the closet door and closed it. I didn't think much of it, but then I noticed that he had also opened a drawer which prevented me from opening the door from the closet (terrible apartment design!). I was stuck in the closet alone, without my phone, unable to get out. I panicked a little bit since it was early in the day and my spouse wouldn't return in about 10 hours. Long story short, I McGyver'ed my way out thanks to a wire hanger that I found in the closet: I straightened it and used it to push the drawer back in through the tiny slit that was left through the door and the frame. I used to hate wire hangers too, now I make sure I always have a few in every closet, just in case, you never know :)


That's a hilarious story. Thanks for posting!


Also, there is evidence that there might be some hidden meta-language on humans as well from studies on how bilingual people/polyglots speak, code-switch, translate, etc.


My native language don't have gender-neutral personal pronouns. If I want to use pronouns correctly in English, I have to make mental pause before writing he or she to figure it out. Woman/man distinction does not come automatically.

When I use or think in English, my brain has weird rules of its own. Some person can have his/her pronoun constantly wrong. For some it's random. Context and rhythm can also can create pattern.


Philipines?


This is a major plot point of the novel "Snow Crash" by Neal Stephenson, in case the idea strikes anyone's fancy


You talking about the namshub of enki?

Cryptonomicon is also great.


“Lexicon” by Max Barry is another good novel that plays with this premise.


This is fascinating, can you tell me more about it?


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