Mildly interesting
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wrote on 19 Dec 2023, 13:00 last edited by
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wrote on 19 Dec 2023, 13:42 last edited by
That air would be rather, ah, sweet.
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wrote on 19 Dec 2023, 14:52 last edited by
That would be a really shitty day.
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wrote on 19 Dec 2023, 14:58 last edited by
Clever, nonetheless.
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wrote on 22 Dec 2023, 01:07 last edited by
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wrote on 22 Dec 2023, 02:01 last edited by
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wrote on 23 Dec 2023, 12:00 last edited by
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wrote on 23 Dec 2023, 12:25 last edited by
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wrote on 25 Dec 2023, 01:40 last edited by
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wrote on 25 Dec 2023, 12:42 last edited by
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wrote on 26 Dec 2023, 10:27 last edited by
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wrote on 26 Dec 2023, 16:43 last edited by
Wouldn't it have been easier to reboot?
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wrote on 27 Dec 2023, 20:03 last edited by
Are people still dying of AIDS? A gay sportscaster died at 33 of an auto immune disease that he's had for 20 years. That's an interesting narrative if it's AIDS.
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wrote on 27 Dec 2023, 20:28 last edited by
Was he a sportscaster that happened to be gay, or did he report on gay sports?
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Was he a sportscaster that happened to be gay, or did he report on gay sports?
wrote on 27 Dec 2023, 21:38 last edited by@LuFins-Dad said in Mildly interesting:
Was he a sportscaster that happened to be gay, or did he report on gay sports?
Not sure how much soccer reporting he did.
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wrote on 27 Dec 2023, 21:38 last edited by
Based purely on Bayesian priors, I suspect it’s more likely he died of one of the many rare autoimmune diseases out there
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wrote on 28 Dec 2023, 10:53 last edited by
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wrote on 29 Dec 2023, 12:13 last edited by
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wrote on 29 Dec 2023, 22:23 last edited by
Doggerland, 9,000 years ago, connected Britain to continental Europe through a mix of marshes, swamps, wooded valleys, and hills. It was likely inhabited by humans during the Mesolithic period and served as a hunting ground.
However, ice melted, sea levels rose, and Doggerland became submerged, cutting off the British peninsula from Europe around 7,000 BC. Today, Doggerland is a productive fishing bank, with fishermen dredging up hand-made bone artifacts, textile fragments, paddles, canoes, fish traps, a 13,000-year-old human remains, and a woolly mammoth skull
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Doggerland, 9,000 years ago, connected Britain to continental Europe through a mix of marshes, swamps, wooded valleys, and hills. It was likely inhabited by humans during the Mesolithic period and served as a hunting ground.
However, ice melted, sea levels rose, and Doggerland became submerged, cutting off the British peninsula from Europe around 7,000 BC. Today, Doggerland is a productive fishing bank, with fishermen dredging up hand-made bone artifacts, textile fragments, paddles, canoes, fish traps, a 13,000-year-old human remains, and a woolly mammoth skull
wrote on 29 Dec 2023, 22:43 last edited by@Mik said in Mildly interesting:
However, ice melted, sea levels rose, and Doggerland became submerged, cutting off the British peninsula from Europe around 7,000 BC.
Thank God for global warming and rising oceans!