Mildly interesting
-
@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Not to brag, but I already knew that multiplication was commutative.
That's not even mildly interesting.
-
@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Not to brag, but I already knew that multiplication was commutative.
That's not even mildly interesting.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Mildly interesting:
@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Not to brag, but I already knew that multiplication was commutative.
That's not even mildly interesting.
Well it was a response to the previous post. And if responses are required to be at least mildly interesting then I’m afraid we are both self defeating.
-
https://www.flyingmag.com/victory-verticals-a-forgotten-and-restored-piece-of-world-war-ii-history/
You may be familiar with the concept of pianos used as weapons—it happened frequently in cartoons—but did you know that Steinway & Sons, the makers of pianos since 1853, had a military contract to build pianos during World War II? And that these pianos, packed tightly in specially designed crates, were often parachuted into war zones?
-
@Mik said in Mildly interesting:
And regardless which state you’re going the wrong direction.
As long as you are leaving Arkansas, it is definitely the right direction…
-
Ha. Around 1980 I remember a professor having me sit down with her secretary to learn to use a word processor. I’d never used anything like this before. No backspacing with correction tape. Words were justified. But it seemed slow in contrast to typing on an IBM Selectric and even the little electric typewriter I used at home. Faster than a manual though .. oh my!
I wonder how many kids today know what “cc” stands for, or have seen carbon paper? -
In 1863, Union soldier Jacob Miller of the 9th Indiana Infantry was shot in the forehead during the Battle of Chickamauga and mistakenly declared dead.
Despite the severe injury, his left eye dislodged and skull fractured, he regained consciousness, treated his wounds with a bandana, and crawled 15 miles to a field hospital.
Only part of the musket ball was removed, and the rest emerged years later. Miller had fought in multiple battles before Chickamauga and shared his story with a newspaper in 1911.
He lived with an unhealed wound until his death in 1917 at age 88, leaving behind a striking photo and an extraordinary tale of survival.