|
I just realized the other day that Nintendo has some sort of partnership with McDonald's, resulting in always picking up a handful of Speedpass Things every time I'm either going there, or stopping at a nearby gas station to fill up. I thought it was more than a little weird that a bunch of someone elses would be carrying around a 3DS at the times I do.
|
# ? Jul 23, 2017 05:31 |
|
|
# ? May 9, 2024 01:37 |
|
I regularly tuck my t-shirt into my pants. but only if I'm wearing a jersey so that the t-shirt doesn't hang out below the bottom of the overwear
|
# ? Jul 23, 2017 09:08 |
|
Bringing up an old topic, but I just found out that in countries that use the solstices to define the seasons they use them to mark the START of the season. Why? That doesn't make a lick of sense to me. Surely the winter solstice, when the night is longest, should be the exact MIDDLE of winter? At the winter solstice, that hemisphere is getting the least amount of light in 24 hours it's ever going to get in that year, so it follows it should be as cold as it's going to get and about to start getting warmer. That would be the middle of winter, surely? Isn't midwinter meant to be the coldest, and midsummer the hottest?
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 04:27 |
|
Yes Dec 22nd is the coldest part of the year, surely. Weather and temperature are 100% to do with the amount of sunlight, to the day, with no thermal carryover. Except when it's actually February.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 04:42 |
|
Hyperlynx posted:Bringing up an old topic, but I just found out that in countries that use the solstices to define the seasons they use them to mark the START of the season. Why? That doesn't make a lick of sense to me. Surely the winter solstice, when the night is longest, should be the exact MIDDLE of winter? At the winter solstice, that hemisphere is getting the least amount of light in 24 hours it's ever going to get in that year, so it follows it should be as cold as it's going to get and about to start getting warmer. That would be the middle of winter, surely? Isn't midwinter meant to be the coldest, and midsummer the hottest? are you a foreigner? how do they mark seasons in your country?
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 04:48 |
|
Hyperlynx posted:Bringing up an old topic, but I just found out that in countries that use the solstices to define the seasons they use them to mark the START of the season. Why? That doesn't make a lick of sense to me. Surely the winter solstice, when the night is longest, should be the exact MIDDLE of winter? At the winter solstice, that hemisphere is getting the least amount of light in 24 hours it's ever going to get in that year, so it follows it should be as cold as it's going to get and about to start getting warmer. That would be the middle of winter, surely? Isn't midwinter meant to be the coldest, and midsummer the hottest? It stays hot / cold for much longer after the solstice than before. I guess it might make more sense to have the seasons start with the months (because June to August is hottest and December to February coldest), but then the seasons would have different amounts of days and who would stand for that?
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 06:27 |
|
Ein cooler Typ posted:are you a foreigner? how do they mark seasons in your country? In Australia the seasons start on the first of the month. Dec-Feb is summer, Mar-May is autumn, Jun-Aug is winter and Sept-Nov is spring.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 07:53 |
|
Ein cooler Typ posted:are you a foreigner? how do they mark seasons in your country? I'm not a foreigner. You're a foreigner Metal Geir Skogul posted:Yes Dec 22nd is the coldest part of the year, surely. Weather and temperature are 100% to do with the amount of sunlight, to the day, with no thermal carryover. Okay, yes, there's a lot more to weather than just how much sun you're getting. But which end of the Earth is getting more sun is indeed the reason for seasons, and so it makes the most sense to me to use that.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 08:21 |
|
The movie "The China Syndrome" is not based on the book "The China Study."
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 11:05 |
|
Tiggum posted:In Australia the seasons start on the first of the month. Dec-Feb is summer, Mar-May is autumn, Jun-Aug is winter and Sept-Nov is spring. mind the walrus has a new favorite as of 12:15 on Jul 24, 2017 |
# ? Jul 24, 2017 12:08 |
|
mind the walrus posted:Starting the months on the first? What the gently caress is wrong with you? What.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 12:11 |
|
What I find crazy is that Finnish is apparently the only existing language that uses the proper name for the 12th month of the year: yule month.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 12:15 |
|
Jerry Cotton posted:What.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 12:15 |
|
Jerry Cotton posted:What I find crazy is that Finnish is apparently the only existing language that uses the proper name for the 12th month of the year: yule month. 'December' is absolutely the wrong name for the 12th month of the year, it translates to "10th month". Julius frickin' Caesar decided to gently caress around with the Roman calendar which originally only had 10 months but instead of inventing a new 11th and 12th month he added two extra months at the start of the year which meant that pretty much all of the other month names were wrong. Quintilis (5th month) and Sextilis (6th month) would have become the new 7th and 8th months except Caesar decided to rename them after himself and his buddy Augustus. And that's why the calendar that most of the world uses today is dumb and wrong and all mixed up.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 12:46 |
|
Suspenders are for fat people who can't make belts work properly. If you're in good shape you don't need either with properly-fitting clothes.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 13:21 |
|
sassassin posted:Suspenders are for fat people who can't make belts work properly.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 18:02 |
|
Cage posted:This feels like the opposite cuz fat people can use the tension of their fat to keep pants up. If your belly button is the widest part of you no amount of tension is going to hold your jeans up. But if you've got abs and a juicy rear end they're going nowhere.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 18:19 |
|
sassassin posted:Suspenders are for fat people who can't make belts work properly. Wrong http://freakonomics.com/podcast/how-did-the-belt-win-a-new-freakonomics-radio-episode/
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 18:25 |
|
sassassin posted:If your belly button is the widest part of you no amount of tension is going to hold your jeans up.
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 19:02 |
|
Snowglobe of Doom posted:'December' is absolutely the wrong name for the 12th month of the year, it translates to "10th month". Julius frickin' Caesar decided to gently caress around with the Roman calendar which originally only had 10 months but instead of inventing a new 11th and 12th month he added two extra months at the start of the year which meant that pretty much all of the other month names were wrong. Quintilis (5th month) and Sextilis (6th month) would have become the new 7th and 8th months except Caesar decided to rename them after himself and his buddy Augustus. Today you get to learn about Roman calendars! The calendar already had 12 months when our boy Julius got to it. The ten-month calendar was the traditional Roman calendar dating back at least to the founding of Rome; it started with March (Mensis Martius) and ended with December (Mensis December); each month alternated 30 and 31 days, with about 50 days of intercalary days at the end of the year (between Saturnalia and the beginning of March). "Intercalary" means what you think it does; they didn't have a month associated with them and were just sort of there. Moreover, the old Roman calendar called for a year of 360 days. This was not particularly clever of them. When the last of the Tarquins was overthrown and the Roman Republic began, the Romans decided that the Greeks had a pretty good idea with their lunar calendar, so they borrowed it. The Greek calendar had 29.5-day lunar months and so alternated between 29 and 30 days per month; the year was 368 days long and required intercalary days every four years to get things back to where they were supposed to be. The Romans didn't want to get rid of their old calendar entirely, though, so they sort of haphazardly slapped 31-day months into the calendar, added two new months in at the new beginning of the year called Mensis Ianuarius and Mensis Februarius, and had a 23-day intercalary month right after them to keep things nice and adjusted. This was MORE clever of them than the previous calendar had been, but still not particularly clever. Intercalary days are a pain in the rear end. Also, those two new months? Added around 500 BCE, more than 400 years before our boy Julius was born. 46 BCE rolled around and Julius noticed that the calendar, although it was more accurate than the old calendar, had still drifted about eighty days off course, with the end of the calendar year happening at the beginning of autumn. So he said, "look, gently caress the Tarquins, gently caress the Greeks, this is stupid, let's fix it." His proposal added the missing 80-odd days to 46 BCE (making it 445 days long), and then standardized the lengths of the months to what we know today: alternating 30 and 31 days, with pairs of 31s at the middle and end of the year, and a 28-day February with an extra leap day every fourth year to keep things on track. Incidentally, he had nothing to do with renaming the months. That was all the Senate, and in fact happened after he died; Quintilis was renamed Iulius in that month 44 BCE, in honor of our boy's birthday, and Sextilis was renamed Augustus in 8 BCE because according to the Senate, many of the important events of Augustus's reign had occurred in that month. (Then, 1600 years later, Pope Gregory XIII decided to account for the year being just a sliver shorter than 365.25 days, and we got the modern Gregorian calendar.)
|
# ? Jul 24, 2017 19:11 |
|
When I was a child I spent most of my summers with my Italian grandparents. Every Saturday morning, my Nonno (grandpa) would take me to a snooker hall in little Italy. I always looked forward to these trips, because it meant a ride in his Cadillac and free reign of the snooker hall. As always there were 4 or 5 other Caddies in the parking lot, belonging to the other old men who would have their cappuccino and talk while I played endless hours of Mrs Pac Man and Street Fighter 2. You see, I could play as much as I wanted because the man who ran the snooker hall - which was always oddly empty - would just reach into the till and grab out handfuls of quarters for me. That's the thing I remember the most, especially being small, are his hands. Despite the fact that he was missing several fingers, or just the tips of fingers, he could hold a lot more change than I could, so I had to be careful when he poured them into my hands. Then he would give me a hot chocolate and a cannoli, and off I went. The other thing I remember the most is that if you slapped all 6 attack buttons on player 1 of street fighter 2, you would change characters at random during combat. This went on from the time I was very young, chin high to the snooker tables, until I could play on them properly. I didn't realize that I was hanging out with the mafia until about 5 years ago when I first told this story to a stranger...
|
# ? Jul 25, 2017 23:55 |
|
treiz01 posted:When I was a child I spent most of my summers with my Italian grandparents. Every Saturday morning, my Nonno (grandpa) would take me to a snooker hall in little Italy. I always looked forward to these trips, because it meant a ride in his Cadillac and free reign of the snooker hall. As always there were 4 or 5 other Caddies in the parking lot, belonging to the other old men who would have their cappuccino and talk while I played endless hours of Mrs Pac Man and Street Fighter 2. You see, I could play as much as I wanted because the man who ran the snooker hall - which was always oddly empty - would just reach into the till and grab out handfuls of quarters for me. its like the hallmark channel version of a bronx tale
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 00:12 |
|
EX250 Type R posted:its like the hallmark channel version of a bronx tale Yeah, the mildest brush with crime ever. Still a bizarre realization to have as an adult about something you perceived as being totally normal as a child. Also explains how my family owned an entire block of houses in a large metropolitan city...
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 00:20 |
|
Every Italian ever posted:I know the mafia
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 00:58 |
|
I don't think the mob is quite that big
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 01:42 |
|
I remember an older classmate in a college class that explained how if an Italian claimed to be in the Mafia, he's bullshitting. But be very afraid of an Italian who claims that the Mafia doesn't exist.
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 02:18 |
|
treiz01 posted:When I was a child I spent most of my summers with my Italian grandparents. Every Saturday morning, my Nonno (grandpa) would take me to a snooker hall in little Italy. I always looked forward to these trips, because it meant a ride in his Cadillac and free reign of the snooker hall. As always there were 4 or 5 other Caddies in the parking lot, belonging to the other old men who would have their cappuccino and talk while I played endless hours of Mrs Pac Man and Street Fighter 2. You see, I could play as much as I wanted because the man who ran the snooker hall - which was always oddly empty - would just reach into the till and grab out handfuls of quarters for me. Actually he gave you a cannolo.
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 13:41 |
|
Jerry Cotton posted:Actually he gave you a cannolo. did you just assume its pronouns
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 15:16 |
|
Back when I lived in Madrid I was friends with some folks who worked at a nightclub and one of them got me in on a Wednesday night. There was a long line outside that I got to skip and once I was in, the place was nearly empty all night. I asked my friend what was up and she said that the club was kept mostly empty like that about once a month and she was pretty sure it was in order to launder money for the Bulgarian Mafia. That's my organized crime story, thanks for listening.
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 15:22 |
|
Xibanya posted:Back when I lived in Madrid I was friends with some folks who worked at a nightclub and one of them got me in on a Wednesday night. There was a long line outside that I got to skip and once I was in, the place was nearly empty all night. I asked my friend what was up and she said that the club was kept mostly empty like that about once a month and she was pretty sure it was in order to launder money for the Bulgarian Mafia. That seems like a silly way to launder money. Why not just add whatever onto the daily take instead of creating a fake day?
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 15:31 |
|
Powaqoatse posted:That seems like a silly way to launder money. Why not just add whatever onto the daily take instead of creating a fake day? Maybe they figured they could just fake an entire nights business and also take a breather?
|
# ? Jul 26, 2017 18:37 |
|
There was a Chinese restaurant like that in Melbourne about ten years ago - they just never opened, but banked several thousand dollars a night in "takings" (drug money). They got rumbled because a tax office employee walked his dog past there and noticed it had a sign saying "closed for function" every single night, and the lights were never on.
|
# ? Jul 27, 2017 10:08 |
|
Powaqoatse posted:That seems like a silly way to launder money. Why not just add whatever onto the daily take instead of creating a fake day? Our guess was, this was one of those clubs that would turn you away at the door if they felt you weren't dressed nicely enough (I had been turned away once for wearing flats) that this also helped maintain their air of exclusivity. All I know is, laundering or not, every now and then they would have a night where they kept the place mostly deserted even with a line outside - and nightclubs operate on tight margins. Also most clubs in Madrid have ties to Bulgarian mafia. Related? Who knows. But it's more exciting to think that it is.
|
# ? Jul 27, 2017 21:54 |
|
Why the Bulgarian mafia though? Italy is a lot closer than Bulgaria and has several large and influential organised crime groups that are literally the originators of the concept of a Mafia. Heck Corsica is right next door to Spain and they have their own low rent mafia. Though I fully understand the Bulgarian mafia not wanting to do business at home what with Bulgaria being Bulgaria. It's just that Spain seems to be taking it a bit too far.
|
# ? Jul 29, 2017 06:22 |
|
FreudianSlippers posted:Why the Bulgarian mafia though? I'm not making it up, the Bulgarian mafia is a huge deal in Madrid for whatever reason When I lived there I'd see it in the news fairly frequently. If I had to guess I'd say it had something to do with Spain being a huge entry point for cocaine to the rest of Europe but that's all I know.
|
# ? Jul 29, 2017 07:10 |
|
can't unsee the finger
|
# ? Jul 30, 2017 13:37 |
|
Apparently her and hBomb have the same sense of humour. Maybe now he's finished playing through Eternal Sonata with InstantGrat he could fly to the states and do a thing with her - become truly an international person. :P
|
# ? Jul 30, 2017 14:05 |
|
Stuff I just figured out: Social Justice Youtube is best Youtube.
|
# ? Jul 30, 2017 14:21 |
|
Tasteful Dickpic posted:Stuff I just figured out: Social Justice Youtube is best Youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cvwr1TpKznk check out the white guy comments below if you wanna be annoyed
|
# ? Jul 30, 2017 14:35 |
|
|
# ? May 9, 2024 01:37 |
|
I just learned about the Joker rule in Yahtzee.
|
# ? Jul 31, 2017 02:23 |