TIL: Today I Learned

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When I was running PbP forum games, it was entirely possible to "dopplegang" any post to make it look like it was posted by someone else. That's how I handled writing as NPCs - I simply wrote the post and manually changed the apparent post author, such that the NPC accounts had multiple posts to their names without my ever needing to log in as them.
Presumably that wasn't here, given the rigamarole involved in name changes. The gaming forum I used to belong to had some sort of Mafia-type PbP going on, and it took some negotiation with the admins to allow special "character accounts" that would be controlled by people who already had a regular account. The participants had to vow, on penalty of banning for having a dual account, that they would only use their secondary account for this specific gaming activity and never use it anywhere else on the forum.

This may be one reason why the person who originated Iron Pen there decided that the stories would be posted by the host and the participants would use Pen names that would only be revealed at the conclusion of the competition. Otherwise, it would have been a nightmare of special permissions for temporary accounts.
 
There's a lull in volcanic action right now. Residents are taking the opportunity to ignore government restrictions and rescue possessions and livestock.

The alert level of the Taal Valcano was dropped to 3 during the lull. Now, it's back up to 4. :scared: Police have been ordered to make one final sweep of the exclusion to evacuate stragglers and then pull out themselves. Time to panic? :run:
 
The alert level of the Taal Valcano was dropped to 3 during the lull. Now, it's back up to 4. :scared: Police have been ordered to make one final sweep of the exclusion to evacuate stragglers and then pull out themselves. Time to panic? :run:

My friend in the Philippines just left to the airport for a plane to Japan. I hope her flight goes ahead without a hitch.

And that she can come back next week. :think:
 
TIL that Mariano Rajoy, former Spanish Prime Minister, will stand for elections for president of the Spanish Football Federation.

Is that good or bad news for Spanish football ?
 
Is that good or bad news for Spanish football ?


LOL
Who knows!!
When he was prime minister he used to be accused of being more aware of sports than rulling the country.
He used to have a deep knowledge of sports news, mainly football and cycling.

Basically there is a clash between Javier Tebas, Chairman of LFP, and Luis Rubiales, current president of the federation. Rajoy would be Tebas' candidate
 
TIL:

If there were a civlization of our own technological level at the nearest star (Alpha/Proxima Centauri), we could not detect it's day to day transmissions. The aliens would have to send a special signal directly at us for us to pick it up. I had no idea our detection methods were so incapable. This also means that they wouldn't be able to detect us either, if they were at the same tech level.

I saw it on PBS Space Time last night but I don't remember which episode so I can't link to it.
 
What if they watched USian TV and Iranian state TV and decided to intervene in order to bring peace and civilisation upon us? We've set such a precedent ourselves, in fact.
 
TIL:

If there were a civlization of our own technological level at the nearest star (Alpha/Proxima Centauri), we could not detect it's day to day transmissions. The aliens would have to send a special signal directly at us for us to pick it up. I had no idea our detection methods were so incapable. This also means that they wouldn't be able to detect us either, if they were at the same tech level.

I saw it on PBS Space Time last night but I don't remember which episode so I can't link to it.

This might be a good thing according to Hawking. He was of the belief that we should keep ourselves hidden from other advanced civilizations for as long as possible to avoid being colonized and dominated by them. This being especially true if the other civilization is significantly more advanced than ours.
 
This might be a good thing according to Hawking. He was of the belief that we should keep ourselves hidden from other advanced civilizations for as long as possible to avoid being colonized and dominated by them. This being especially true if the other civilization is significantly more advanced than ours.
The galaxy as a dark forest of hunters and survivors. Cue the book thread and the Three Body Problem.
 
I have always had mixed feelings about us purposefully trying to contact aliens. I thought at best it was wishful thinking and at worst a waste of resources. Those books certainly helped change my mind on that; we should stop doing it.
 
TIL:
MIND & MATTER SUSAN PINKER

Humans and Other Dancing Animals

MOST OF US have heard of dancing bears or dogs that can do the samba. But those animals are trained to perform; none of our animal friends can spontaneously cut a rug. Or so I thought.

Now a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences shows that chimpanzees exposed to electronic music will sway along with the beat. Like us, they are better at matching their moves to the music when they are standing, as opposed to sitting or crouching on all fours. But make no mistake, these chimps move in a way that looks an awful lot like dancing: “The chimpanzees mostly swayed their whole body, but rhythmic movements of body parts such as hand clapping or foot tapping were also observed,” the study reports.

Pan troglodytes, to use the scientific name for chimps, is one of our closest evolutionary ancestors. They have previously been known to bang rhythmically on tree trunks and to hoot and call to each other in a way that sounds like call-and-response singing. But the observation that chimps can move their bodies in time to music is new. It suggests that dancing has existed in higher-level primates—a group that would include us humans—for at least six million years. That’s roughly how long ago humans split off from other higher apes, like chimps.

The authors of the new study—Yuko Hattori, a researcher at the Kyoto University Primate Research Institute, and Masaki Tomonaga, a professor of language and intelligence there—discovered this rhythmic ability by playing two-minute audio clips to seven chimps in their lab. The music sounds like a series of thrumming bass chords played on an electronic piano. The cadence and tempo of the recordings changed at regular intervals so that the researchers could assess whether the chimpanzees could sync their movements to what they were hearing.

Though the chimps in this study seemed like they were grooving to the beat, not all primatologists would call that dancing. “It depends on what is meant by dancing,” according to Richard Wrangham, a Harvard University anthropologist who is an authority on chimpanzees. “Jane Goodall called the male group displays given at the onset of rain or heavy wind ‘rain dances,’ but that seems an exaggerated


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use of the term,” he told me in an email. “I have seen horses and hartebeest respond to heavy rain by galloping about. The more conservative view that I prefer is that the capacity for dancing is more than six million years old.”

That capacity has been observed in other species too, like sea lions, bonobos and parrots. In fact, members of the parrot family, like budgies and cockatoos, are even better at syncing their movements to a beat than chimpanzees are, wrote Dr. Hattori.

Take Snowball the cockatoo, whose fancy footwork, timed to Queen’s “Another One Bites the Dust,” has become clickbait. After Harvard psychologist Aniruddh Patel saw videos of Snowball on YouTube, he decided to investigate. Given that parrots are superb mimics, could Snowball have been imitating someone outside the frame? Or was he trained to dance?

The answer to both questions was no: Snowball was independently bobbing his head and high-stepping to the song. Like Akira, the best dancer in the chimpanzee study, his brain seems wired for music. Clearly, our human brains also have evolved to sway, shimmy and shake our bodies along to music. But so far, anyway, we’re the only ones who know the words and can sing along.
 
I imagine he'll stick misfortunes in Spanish football on the ETA.

haha
well yeah
We have in NL always the discussion whether the big boss is of the bloodgroup of Ajax, Feijenoord or PSV

What was also in the back of my mind with that question was the rising influence of gambling companies on the ownership of footballclubs.
Football addicted people have as it turns out also a lower treshold to be lured into gambling.
It is now all big money.

more special matches are "invented" for the top clubs:
Why are Real Madrid and Atlético in the Spanish Super Cup final?
We explain why Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid are meeting in the Spanish Super Cup final, despite neither side having won LaLiga or the Copa del Rey last season.

and in this case those matches are not in Spain but some far away Big Money country
Real Madrid and Atlético de Madrid clash this Sunday, January 12 (kick-off, 19:00 CET) in the grand final of the new-look Spanish Super Cup.
This season sees the competition expanded from two to four teams for the first time, with two semi-finals and a one-leg final being played at the King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Saudi Arabia was chosen to host the first three editions of the new tournament, from 2020 to 2022).
https://en.as.com/en/2020/01/12/football/1578834581_272769.html

Here an article on how the UK premier league football becomes a betting device:
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...ry-has-become-inextricably-linked-to-football
Sponsorship
Half of the Premier League’s 20 clubs have a gambling sponsor on their shirt and the proportion rises to 17 out of 24 among clubs in the Championship, which is itself sponsored by Sky Bet. Labour has said it would ban gambling shirt sponsorship if elected.

As well as shirts, companies frequently sponsor entire stands or stadiums. Stoke City are owned by the Coates family, who also own Bet365, hence the Bet365 stadium. Combined with pitchside hoardings, this means gambling logos are visible throughout televised football matches, even when there are no adverts. In a study of three episodes of the BBC’s flagship football highlights programme Match of the Day, researchers at Goldsmiths, University of London found that gambling logos or branding appeared on screen for between 71% and 89% of the show’s running time.

considering all that.... is Mariano Rajoy, former Spanish Prime Minister, the guy who is going to embrace that... or someone to counter that ?
 
Would be surprising that any FA would pick someone who's going to upset the applecart.

me too

But in that case... if Rajoy is not defending the traditional way... he is because of his former PM position, legitimising this Money Theatre.

I think that former PMs should be submitted to a code.
For the sitting government to take influence there.
 
I think that former PMs should be submitted to a code.
The Penal Code and the Civil Code, in Rajoy's case. Gaol, fines, restitution and a lifelong ban on public office.
 
TIL the "sprinkle a little crack on him and let's get out of here" meme is more than just real, it's the overwhelming reality.

Police are really out here either planting drugs or lying about the drugs according to this study

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10 year mandatory = modern slavery in America
 
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