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Sneakers is from 1992.


We have already established that not double checking is kinda cool.


Thus the “late 80’ies”…


The 80s ended in September 1991. One week “Use Your Illusion” was released, which meant it was still the 80s then. The following week “Nevermind” was released, so obviously the 90s started sometime during that week.


This is terrific, I’m totally stealing this line to drop at my next dinner party.


early nineties ?


Extreeemely late eighties


Nineteen eighty twelve.


1992, the year that was late to the 80's


Sound on Sound


And if you want to get even more niche, Tape Op!


There are these books:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greek-Philosophical-Terms-Historica...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greek-Philosophical-Vocabulary-J-Ur...

I have the second one, which I found useful when studying ancient Greek philosophy in English translation.


I will have to make an analysis of regular expressions of heuristically most useful & heuristically highest quality academic source materials.


Did Casio make things a bit weird on purpose to circumvent the Stanford/Chowning/Yamaha patent(s) on FM synthesis?


yes


Can someone quote the whole thing here? Not everyone has a twitter / X account.


Paul Graham (@paulg):

I got tired of hearing that YC fired Sam, so here's what actually happened:

> People have been claiming YC fired Sam Altman.

> That's not true. Here's what actually happened.

> For several years he was running both YC and OpenAI,

> but when OpenAI announced that it was going to

> have a for-profit subsidiary and that Sam was going

> to be the CEO, we (specifically Jessica) told him

> that if he was going to work full-time on OpenAI,

> we should find someone else to run YC, and he

> agreed. If he'd said that he was going to find

> someone else to be CEO of OpenAI so that he could

> focus 100% on YC, we'd have been fine with that

> too. We didn't want him to leave, just to choose

> one or the other.

https://x.com/paulg/status/1796107666265108940


> People have been claiming YC fired Sam Altman. That's not true. Here's what actually happened. For several years he was running both YC and OpenAI, but when OpenAI announced that it was going to have a for-profit subsidiary and that Sam was going to be the CEO, we (specifically Jessica) told him that if he was going to work full-time on OpenAI, we should find someone else to run YC, and he agreed. If he'd said that he was going to find someone else to be CEO of OpenAI so that he could focus 100% on YC, we'd have been fine with that too. We didn't want him to leave, just to choose one or the other.


I use one of the few remaining nitter instance:

https://nitter.poast.org/paulg/status/1796107666265108940


Be careful to never drop the subdomain on that one, there are some real fun types of people there.


I was a curious cat - what a weird place. Lots of discussions about "jews", anime and how hard white people have it. Feels a bit like *chan displayed on a Twitter-like UI.



It's one tweet with an attached image; you can see it all without needing to be logged in.


> […] you can see it all without needing to be logged in.

No, you can't, Twitter is degenerating further:

  Something went wrong, but don’t fret — let’s give it another shot.

  [Try Again]

  /!\ Firefox’s Enhanced Tracking Protection (Strict Mode) is known to cause issues on x.com
(Weird how no other website has issues like this…)


This just means that there are exceptions for twitter.com that haven't been switched to x.com. I use uBlock Origin with all scripts and third party resources blocked by default and got this page when they switched to x.com, but it works once you unblock the same stuff on x.com that was unblocked on twitter.com.

The exception is that some accounts still require login to read. I'm not sure why but I'm guessing that it might be a per account setting that won't be set by accounts that haven't logged in for a long time (I don't have an acount to check). Actually, worble and ploum's comments below would explain what I see, I usually don't try to check the same content twice (or anything all that often) so I wouldn't notice if it sometimes works and sometimes doesn't.


> (Weird how no other website has issues like this…)

The Firefox 126 preferences UI for the "Strict" setting shows this warning:

"Stronger protection, but may cause some sites or content to break."

When the panel for that setting is expanded, it shows an additional warning:

"Heads up! This setting may cause some websites to not display content or work correctly. If a site seems broken, you may want to turn off tracking protection for that site to load all content."

Presumably such problems are not unexpected or unheard of if two warnings are deemed necessary for that setting.


Slight problem: you're assuming I use Firefox and have that setting on "Strict". Only half of that assumption is correct: I use Firefox. But the setting is on "Standard"…

(I'm not a web person, so I'll save my speculation on what is breaking there, but Twitter is the only webpage I experience as broken. It is absolutely possible I mucked around with some setting 5 years ago and completely forgot about it. Or Twitter is doing weird things. Probably a combination of both.)


There is also mention why those specific sites are broken:

> Firefox blocks the following:

> Social media trackers

> Cross-site cookies in all windows

> Tracking content in all windows

> Cryptominers

> Known and suspected fingerprinters


So that's why I couldn't access Twitter while using FF. Interesting. That notice wasn't there before.


Sometimes twitter just decides that it's had enough of you and won't show anything. I can't figure out what triggers this but one day you'll find you can't see anything, and then the next day you'll be able to view it just fine.

Twitter is quickly becoming as bad as discord for siloing information.


We can't know before clicking whether it's a single image, single statement, or 800-tweet essay that should have been a blog post. (Unless someone tells us, as you did here).

All too often it's the latter, meaning anyone without an account can't see the content, meaning it has zero value. No way in hell am I creating an account. So the conclusion is twitter links are now useless.


YMMV : sometimes, X seems to force being connected. Sometimes not. And when not, it sometimes bury the tweet in lot of popups to ask you to connect which makes it very painful to access the information.

So, yeah, if people could stop assuming everybody can read X/Linkedin/Facebook, that would be nice…


There are other music steaming platforms. I use Tidal, finding it to be the least annoying of the ones I've tried (Spotify, Amazon, Apple).



Don't forget the Murder, She Wrote episode "A Virtual Murder" (from 1993):

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0653453/


I'm typing this reply on this

https://junocomputers.com/product/nyx-17-v3/

which I use for DVD watching every day.


Thanks for the suggestion! I'll check it out. It's been a while since I've tried a 17 inch laptop but it sure does look nice.


ckd_add(), ckd_sub() are ckd_mul() are what I'm looking forward to using.


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