

LU cookies (e.g., Leibnitz in Germany) | Mondelez
I’m pretty sure Leibniz Kekse are made by Bahlsen, which is a German company. Or am I missing something?


LU cookies (e.g., Leibnitz in Germany) | Mondelez
I’m pretty sure Leibniz Kekse are made by Bahlsen, which is a German company. Or am I missing something?


There’s Ghost Commander, if you want a foss alternative to Total Commander. I remember the switch as Ghost Commander feeling basically the same but slightly better.


Nice, I will immediately test if my microwave is modern enough. Brb


That’s exclusively through the matrilineal line though. The most recent ancestor is much more recent.
But your article linked to what I was referring to: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identical_ancestors_point (and the mitochondrial Eve is a cool concept either way)


To bring it back to Shakespeare:
Adam’s sons are my brethren, and truly I hold it a sin to match in my kindred.


Für Leute, die gerne englischsprachige Medien konsumieren: Ich hatte mal recherchiert, ob man sich bei Bibliotheken in den USA auch als Nicht-Einwohner registrieren kann. Tatsächlich geht das bei manchen.
Zum Beispiel: https://queenslibrary.org/get-a-card/eUser
Kostet 50$ im Jahr, aber für viel Leser lohnt sich das vermutlich trotzdem. Ich hab es selbst bisher allerdings noch nicht probiert. Ist also kein Erfahrungsbericht, sondern nur mein Rechercheergebnis.


As a teenager I never wore dresses, skirts or nail polish because I didn’t want to be seen as a girly girl. I was into science and books and that didn’t seem to fit the vibes.
I’m glad that I figured out in my twenties that being in a male-dominated tech field doesn’t require you to dress masculine or wear nerd shirts. If you’re into that, that’s great, but it’s also okay to wear dresses or put on make up if you work as an engineer or a software developer.


I remember a professor at uni telling us that at some time in the future each of us will either be the ancestor of every living human or of none.
Equally, if you go back far enough, you will find a common ancestor with every other living person, thus making us all related.
While that seems unintuitive – what about the members of some remote tribe without contact to civilisation? –, keep in mind that even the most remote tribe has to have contact with some neighbouring people . Otherwise they wouldn’t have enough genetic diversity. And those neighbours are in contact with their neighbours and so on.
Edit: Changed “intuitive” to “unintuitive”… Oops
I think what they meant to say is that only a small fraction flees to Europe.
Take Syria for example. Of all the people displaced by the war, about half left the country (according to my quick Google research). By far the biggest portion of the ones leaving went to Turkey, a neighbouring country (about 4 million). Germany, the European country that took in by far the most Syrian refugees, took in something between half a million and a million, about the same amount as Lebanon, which is about 16 times smaller populationwise. Going down the list, before you get to other European countries, there are several other countries in Syria’s neighbourhood — Jordan, Egypt, Iraq.
So I think it’s fair to say that the majority of people try to stay in the vicinity of their country and only flee farther if they have to.


hätten auch vor 70 Jahren gepasst
1955?


That was my first thought as well. I’m giving you five MeowMeowBeenz 🐱🐱🐱🐱🐱


I know this is a lot more difficult than it sounds because attention is a finite resource, but giving each of them the attention they need. This does not have to be the same amount for each child but none of them should feel like the other one is getting attention when they need it.
Most adults I know that don’t get along with their siblings felt like they were neglected compared to the other sibling(s). Whether that’s objectively true is hard to tell but it’s worth checking in with your children from time to time.


Like how “algorithm” is just the westernized spelling of of al-Khwarizmi or “guy” comes from Guy Fawkes.
And Kaiser and Tsar both come from Julius Caesar.


Counterpoint: If success is what we base this on, then E. L. James (50 shades of grey) is a very good author.


She’s also incredibly funny (and sometimes savage) which also gets lost in many adaptations, since it’s in her commentary and not necessarily in the dialog.
She was not a woman of many words; for, unlike people in general, she proportioned them to the number of her ideas.


How does that rhyme with increasingly many men also being obsessed by their looks and more and more having surgery done?
I don’t see how that contradicts what I said? I talked about the pressure many people feel, not just women.
But most of the hatred I see online comes up when it’s a woman. Do you have any examples of men receiving the kind of attention and hatred that Kate Beckinsale or Ariana Grande recently received for their changed looks? Maybe I’m just in my bubble and missed them.


I know this is not what people want to hear, but at least one aspect of it is misogyny.
There was this recent clip of Kate Beckinsale going around and people went batshit over how she had ruined her beautiful looks. The thing is, she definitely had things done before, just go look up pictures of her when she started her career. She was beautiful even then but in a more “normal” way. And no one was outraged or concerned for her then. But now she dares to not be as beautiful as she was before. People have a right to see her be hot!
Don’t get me wrong, I wish there wasn’t such a pressure for people to look perfect and have work done. But I think a huge part of the outrage is actually men feeling that they have a right to decide how a woman should look.


0118999881999119725… 3


So… The name Doppelbock comes from Bockbier which is derived from the town Einbeck where it originated. The town’s name likely comes from a dialect version of “ein Bach” (a brook).
The best feminine name would therefore be Doppel-<feminine noun meaning something like brook>. But alas there are very few feminine German words relating to bodies of water. Best I can come up with is Doppelquelle (Quelle means spring), but that sounds like sparkling water.
It’s an easy mistake to make since the Leibniz Kekse were originally copied from LU biscuits, so they look very similar