

Thomas Dolby, “I love you, goodbye”.


Thomas Dolby, “I love you, goodbye”.




Some contestants phrase every question with “What is…?” Matt Amodio is well known for doing this. He won many times.


Burnout has lasting effects. The only effective antidote is rest until rest actually leads to recovery once again. I have struggled with actually resting, as opposed to merely pausing, but feeling anxious about the next batch of commitments to try to live up to.
The quality of your rest is likely to determine what happens next. Rest the best and deepest you can.
Peace.


This happens to me for All, but not for Subscribed nor Local. I’ve had it for a few days.
UPDATE: The problem is showing up for me now on Local and All, but not Subscribed.
This might be related to a missing index on a database table, which makes some queries very very slow. I’m only guessing based on some light web searching and reading.
Like @sturger, I only experience this problem when I’m logged in.
I hope it’s a relatively easy fix. Good luck!
This is the kind of paradox that leads us (I mean humans more generally) to look for some fundamental assumption we’re making about time that will turn out to be wrong. I assume that’s true although I wonder whether it’s literally impossible for us to even imagine how time “truly” works, let alone measure it.


I was a kak user for several years and am giving hx an honest try this year. So far, I’m quite happy.
(and yes, I’ve been both an emacs and vim user.)


I meditate. Very occasionally, I still am not ready to sleep, but it still helps me to do that.
I listen to a podcast, if nothing else works.
Mostly, I don’t worry about not sleeping. It took me years to feel OK with not sleeping, but here I am.
Peace.


Hilarious that they misspelled “failed” anyway.


Best way block kick: no be there.


Dumb question: do you have a key on your keyboard that disables the microphone? I don’t have my laptop in front of me, but I know there’s a key that disables the trackpad and another that disables the camera. I realized that I’d accidentally hit those by going through something similar to this.
Good luck.


Les Oulhamr fuyaient dans la nuit épouvantable. Fous de souffrance et de fatigue, tout leur semblait vain devant la calamité suprême: le Feu était mort.


Are there no prisons?
Are there no workhouses?


Plausible is more like conceivable.
It’s possible that when I slam my hand on the table, it will go through the table, but it’s not plausible. We can’t imagine it actually happening, even though we know it can.


I raise you “gb”.
When it’s a purely reference archive, keeping it longer can lead to pleasant trips down memory lane.
When it’s mostly a database of potential projects, burning it every two years is probably helpful, particularly for folks who are prone to feelings of guilt and shame.
You aren’t gonna do it and that’s probably just fine.


I try the latest episode, then if I like it, I start from the beginning, unless it’s a current events podcast.
I was going to lead with “Don’t assume that other people have it right and you don’t” combined with “Most people are sleepwalking through life, so be careful about asking random strangers for advice”; however, I like this list and hope more people will upvote it.