mildlyinteresting

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Zozano, in This bridge goes through the water and not over it, The Netherlands

What the fuck is this place. The hills look like a PS1 game

odbol,

Looks like the hill has fur

monsterpiece42,

🎵 a cut-out bridge beneath, hills with the furrrr… 🎶

sebsch,

Not a hill, its a levee

TheBat,
@TheBat@lemmy.world avatar

What happens if it breaks?

superfly_samurai,
@superfly_samurai@lemmy.one avatar

Amazing music!

soulifix,

The Netherlands is the PS1

awake01, in An "airport neighbourhood" where people can store their planes in their yard and taxi directly to the runway

www.casadeaero.net/text/about.php

Many pilots do this as a means of reducing the costs associated with operating out of areas with high hangar and service costs. This is Northwest of Chicago near Rockford. The about page explains a lot of the obvious questions.

FredericChopin_,

Fascinating. Thanks for sharing.

Ado,

lmao wow, how fascinating. when you think you saw it all…

Eczpurt, in If you look up the definition of 'bully', Duckduckgo gives you results from a 19th century dictionary

Duck Duck Go is trying to bring back pirate talk and I’m here for it

SubArcticTundra,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

I’m looking forward to the pirate duck

yads,

And a bullycod to you too

girl, in I made a 20x queen size sheet

why lol

ubermeisters,
@ubermeisters@lemmy.world avatar

Insert joke about OPs mom

(Here)

Edit: shit someone already did that

Tandybaum,

If you can find me a better way to acquire a 20x Queen sheet I’m all ears.

I call it a queens harem sheet.

Ghostalmedia,
@Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world avatar

Tandy’s got a point.

Tandybaum,

Boom, still got it

Ghostalmedia,
@Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world avatar

Classic Tandy.

JickleMithers,

But why do you need such a large sheet?

tacosplease,

For cat and mouse and other such parachute games

JickleMithers,

Fair enough. I was thinking you stitched 20 queen size mattresses together too lol.

CmdrShepard,

OP’s mom is coming for a visit.

WetBeardHairs, in Man reviews Whiskey while his wife is packing her stuff and leaving him in the background

That video has a rich, complex undertone of depression. Mmmm that depression is smooth. You know, I find this video to be a real go-to for when I want that bouquet of isolation and denial. I just keep coming back to watch it again and again.

jordanlund, in Cookie experiments
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar
FullOfBallooons, in Pudding used to come in cans
@FullOfBallooons@leminal.space avatar
wellee,

No joke I just watched this episode which is what made me google pudding cans lol

Prestron,

Use my pen knife my good man!

qbus,

Monorail monorail

Orbituary,
@Orbituary@lemmy.world avatar

I hated that. And can openers just made things worse.

danielton, in I made a website that tells you, based on the year you graduated high school, what your school (probably) got wrong!

I learned that the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell. And that busywork and adhering to the rubric is far more important than learning or producing anything useful.

Blamemeta,

For most people, yeah. A lot of work is tedious.

captainlezbian,

I mean learning to follow a rubric actually was useful for me. Projects have scopes and expectations. Rubrics are those.

danielton,

Sure, because a margin being off by a quarter inch should be worth more points than the actual content of the paper.

captainlezbian,

It can cost you a government contract as an adult. Also, it’s learning to format in accordance with instructions. It’s stuff like margins early on, but later it’s stuff like section headings and citations in APA or MLA. The margins are free points that you’re leaving on the table

badlotus, in Guinea Pig for sale at the local market

Guinea pigs were bred as livestock by the Inca in South America. They used to be a dish reserved for nobility but now us plebs have access to Cuy in the supermarket. 😃

topinambour_rex,
@topinambour_rex@lemmy.world avatar

Plebs live like past nobility everywhere.

clay_pidgin,

I’ve had cuy in Perú. It’s pretty good and unsurprisingly not unlike rabbit. It’s not much meat considering the amount of work.

PetDinosaurs,

That they would be reserved for nobility seems like it must be wrong. These are tiny animals that wouldn’t take much effort to raise. A small family could easily eat one. Just grab a pair and start raising them.

It’s not like a cow where you need large amounts of grazing land and then when you kill it, you have huge amounts of meat to deal with.

This is why animals in English have three names. One for the animal, raised by the commoners with Germanic origin (cow). One for the meat, eaten by the wealthy with French origin due to the Norman conquest (beef). And one used in scientific contexts coming from Greek or Latin (bovine)

soupspoon,

Why doesn’t chicken have a different name for the meat

PetDinosaurs,

Because the poor peasants could afford to eat it and the French version (would be poulet or something like that) never caught on.

Sorry. That was supposed to be in the original comment, but I guess I forgot.

janus2,
@janus2@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

My guess would be the meat to prep work ratio. Smaller game seems like it would be more effort to skin and clean vs. larger ones like turkeys and deer. Just a guess however, anyone know for sure?

PetDinosaurs,

It’s surely not any different than a squirrel, ground hog, or wild rabbit. People eat those all the time. Even meat rabbits seem comparable in size to a guinea pig. You can also just put them in a stew.

Also, as I mentioned, larger animals are also more difficult because you can’t just kill one for dinner. If you kill a deer, you have to process it to preserve it or share it with a larger community. Ain’t no freezers.

Side anecdote: My grandfather, as a 9 year old, used to go squirrel hunting and bring them home for his mom to cook. Before you go thinking this is some redneck thing, it was long island, less than 50 miles from Manhattan. It would have been during the war though.

janus2,
@janus2@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

In hindsight my hypothesis seems pretty silly now yeah. Squirrel and rabbit aren’t really considered rich people food here in Pennsylvania, that’s for sure :P Rabbit is delicious. Still have yet to try squirrel as I don’t know any hunters (I’d gotten the rabbit from a farmer’s market)

Your gramps was a champ. The most useful thing I ever brought home around 9 years old was wild garlic.

PetDinosaurs,

He was a really cool guy.

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

What’s amusing to me is that lobster is now (sort of) considered rich people food, but it used to be the food fed to slaves and the extremely poor.

justlookingfordragon,
@justlookingfordragon@lemmy.world avatar

Maybe not “reserved” but eaten less frequent? Let’s say a poor peasant during that time owned 10 guinea pigs and had the choice to either slaughter one of the little guys for one single meal, or sell some to the higher-ups and buy less expensive food that will last for a week or two, then it would make sense if the peasants ate less of them than nobility even if it wasn’t explicitly forbidden.

Thorned_Rose,
@Thorned_Rose@kbin.social avatar

Some people still do raise them for food 🙂

When you've got not fridge and the environment isn't always condusive to curing and preserving meat, it's very handy to raise an animal that's a smaller amount of meat (say one meal) than something like a goat, pig, chicken or cow.

They breed easily and rapidly, eat scraps and vegetation that humans normally don't. So folks keep a herd of Guinea pigs and just slaughter whatever they need for a meal.

It's very clever and much more environmentally friendly than clearing forest for larger animals.

c0mbatbag3l,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, eat small mammals.

Got it, updated for 2023.

Etterra, in in Australia, when we pay taxes, we get a receipt. The receipt shows what our taxes were spent on

It must be so nice to see such a small bar for your defense spending.

stappern,

small? its just as much as education!

w2qw,

This is just federal spending. Most educational spending is at the state level.

delta,

I don’t know much but I don’t think Australia works that way? Do they have “states” or some equivalent? Curiously asking.

w2qw,

Yeah we have 6 states. Australia is a federation like the US. There’s no equivalent to this form because we don’t have any state income taxes.

delta,

Ahh I see. Interesting! Thank you for clarifying.

Agent641,

Just wait til we buy the govt some nuc subs in the coming years, then that bar gonna be a long boi

Snipe_AT,
@Snipe_AT@lemmy.atay.dev avatar

what’s your guess as to the percentage of US military spending compared to its tax revenue?

Kecessa,

It’s still 8.6%, that’s quite a lot actually…

Ilovethebomb,

Except we kinda do need our military, especially with how cunty some point Australia’s neighbours can be.

odium,

Yeah, don’t trust them kiwis.

kboy101222,

Should just nuke them now and get it over with honestly

CurlyWurlies4All,
@CurlyWurlies4All@prxs.site avatar

We all know NZ is planning something

MaungaHikoi,

The West Island is welcome to join Aotearoa any time they like 😂

dtxer,

Thats why they lost the Emu war…

jscummy,

See those emus try the same shit in the states and see how that goes

EatMyDick,

Yeah because that shit is totally not needed. AU and EU need to step up their shit. Iran and China sure are.

Quatity_Control,

Except we don’t want to be the USA of the Asia pacific region.

EatMyDick,

You people live in a fantasy world where physical threats do not exist. The US is leading the way protecting Asia and Europe. The entire balkins would be under RU is it wasn’t for that spending.

The spending it’s needed and it’s EU/Asia doesn’t step up it’s game they’ll ultimately be a second tier power to the United States perpetually. Their call I guess 🤷‍♂️.

bigdog_00,

I mean sadly you’re right - people like to hate on our defense spending in the US, but who does the world look towards when Russia invades Ukraine? It sucks that it needs to be this way, but if we don’t have a strong deterrent to other countries then we’re just asking for problems. Look at how aggressive China and Russia have gotten recently, with China inching closer to an invasion of Taiwan. Who’s going to be laughing when the US is there to help Taiwan?

Skellybones,
@Skellybones@lemmy.world avatar

Also isn’t usa paying for other countrys military not sure if this is true

Quatity_Control,

We know more about geo politics in the region than you do. And your drastic oversimplification does not actually result in a reasonable and coherent plan for peace in the Asia pacific region. Again I’ll say, your presence and commentary in this case is misinformed and incorrect.

EatMyDick,

👌

KuroJ,

I’m not sure why your being downvoted, but it’s true. Allied countries of the U.S. do not have to put much towards their military budget do to being able to rely on the U.S.

The U.S. has a strong military presence in the Indo-pacific region and if they didn’t, surely some adversaries would have already been having their way.

It’s unfortunate it comes to this but that’s just the facts.

Version,

People think big military = war, while in fact it‘s the opposite.

DirkMcCallahan, in "Do you live in the Midwest?" by self-report

Disappointed they didn’t survey the whole nation. It’d be funny to see figures like “0.1%” for Florida or Hawaii.

Ultraviolet,

It would probably be 3%, as per the Lizardman Constant.

joel_feila,
@joel_feila@lemmy.world avatar

It would be one of the few time texas does not look crazy

StThicket, in this plug doesn't have the little holes

I’m not American, but I’ve lived a few years in the US. I find it very interesting that the US invented the electric infrastructure that we use today, but they really screwed up a few things. Firstly, the connectors are far too unsafe. They are flimsy and have no protection from electrocution. Secondly, by using 120V as the main voltage, you need more current to do the same amount of work as a 240V system. Thay means thicker wires, more stress on the plugs, and greater fire hazards.

Shuko plugs FTW

whyNotSquirrel,
@whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works avatar

yeah but it looks like a funny face!

I didn’t know that schuko plugs are the norm for most Europe countries, I thought it was a German thing

https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/209fede2-323b-47ae-ad55-20fdfb03f10b.png

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schuko

TimeNaan, (edited )

Also the french system is compatible with Schuko, so that makes it even more universal.

whyNotSquirrel,
@whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yeah I don’t know why we don’t make the switch in France as it wouldn’t be that much of a change

TimeNaan,

It would be from a financial standpoint. Changing a standard this widely implemented is very costly.

Why change it if they’re compatible anyways? Most devices in the eu are designed to accomodate both, its just a question of the earth pin being different.

I’ve travelled all across europe, coming from a country with the french style outlets. I never had any problems connecting anything except for Switzerland and Italy, because they stuck to their own (inferior) standard thats not compatible with anything else.

sarmale, (edited )

The smaller devices like chargers and small lamps have a euro plug that can plug in schucko, danish, italian, swiss, french (but not british)

TimeNaan,

You’re right, I forgot about that. But good luck plugging your laptop or hair dryer in without some janky adapter.

sarmale,

A laptop you can plug in all of Europe. But a hairdryer you cant because (at least mine) uses a schucko plug (but without ground so wtf)

moitoi,
@moitoi@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Type J > Shuko

Type J is safe and a better implementation. I don’t know why the EU didn’t choose type J as a standard.

sarmale,

It cant plug both ways

Kethal, (edited )

Many people from other countries fret about the unsafe plugs in the US. They of course do not have the same level of safety, but it also doesn’t appear to matter. I have never been shocked inserting or removing a US plug. I don’t know and haven’t heard of anyone who has. People do get shocked, but for other reasons.

Ookami38,

I have, but I was a child and very much not plugging it in the right way. It was in a very cramped space I couldn’t see, and dumbass me thought holding the metal would give me better control. It did, I made it into the plug.

Kethal,

Ok, so there are people out there doing it.

AA5B, (edited )

Did you die? I wonder about the truth behind the idea that getting shocked with 120v is less likely/hazardous than double that

brakenium,

As a kid I used a metal tool to cut a live wire 220v-240v wire and besides getting scared by the jolt I was fine. Probably because the protection circuits kicked in

AA5B,

As an idiot, I’ve gotten shocked by 120v multiple times and 240v once. That hurt a lot more. Hopefully I have survived long enough so far to be less of an idiot

Ookami38,

I did, in fact die. God is real, but it’s complicated. Eat your vegetables. Your mom was always proud.

MufinMcFlufin,

The one time I’ve had an issue with our plugs (that would have been solved by something like the British plug design) was when I wasn’t paying attention to a remote antenna resting on top of a loose plug. Accidentally caused a short that melted that little bit of wire but nothing else happened. Just had a black spot on that outlet from then onward.

I have shocked myself on one once but just like with the other person replying that was as a child and felt more like a learning experience to not mess with outlets.

XeroxCool,

This is exactly why I like having “upside down” US plugs where the ground pin is on top. If there’s a ground pin in the plug, it prevents pennies and paperclips from falling onto the hot and neutral pins. Unfortunately, this isn’t as common because 1. Some contractors beleive it’s illegal, 2. Many wall wart adapters and lay flat plugs assume the receptacle goes ground pin down, and 3. It doesn’t look like a shocked face.

Thisfox,

If your plug is not plugged in completely flush with the wall power point so a penny (or etc) can fit between the plug and powerpoint and yet the power can get through, then there is something very wrong.

XeroxCool,

It happens all the time across the country. Crusty metal debris and Light-pressure low-surface area contact can cause a hot burning short before tripping the breaker. The contact is also inconsistent as it melts and breaks contact, further delaying the breaker trip before it falls back down. There’s literally a tiktok challenge with plenty of burnt outlets, plugs, and pennies available for your viewing pleasure

Thisfox,

Yet more proof that the US is foreign as hell.

ThePowerOfGeek,
@ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world avatar

On your first point, the plugs have improved quite a lot in the last 10 or so years. Still not enough compared to most other Western standards, and it’s taken to long. But they have improved.

…Just in time for USB plugs and sockets to start taking off. Though I’m not sure how big a deal those are when it comes to safety.

BastingChemina,

I feel like the US has a very strong resistance to change regarding standards.

The 110v for example used to be the norme in France, but they changed it to 220v in the 50’ and then 230v in the 90’.

Same thing for the plugs, the paper size, the measurement system …

Ranvier,

I think “US doesn’t use the metric system” is really overblown. Sure some common things like miles and weights and cooking that people use every day are still done with standard units. But you could say that about many other countries that are “officially” on the metric system. You can’t really force people to stop using units they’re familiar with. Any product I can think of in America is required to have both metric and standard units labeling it. Technical fields like science and medicine don’t touch standard units, would be ridiculous. All metric. If you tell your doctor your weight in lbs it’s instantly converted to kg and that’s what’s used in the system (dosing is done in mg per kg bodyweight often). Every kid in America learns how to use the metric system in school. Construction is probably the big place where it still gets iffy, but even then you can easily get metric or standard bits and things like that. Like what do people want to say we’ve “converted?” Slap all the current cooking/measuring cups out of people’s hands that say both mls and cups, saying no how dare you use cups to measure out the water for your recipe, here have a measuring cup with only mL labeled instead, you’re welcome.

Also ripping out and replacing the entire electrical system of every building in the United States, and scrapping every 120v electrical appliance in the entire country, seems like it would be horrifically expensive and wasteful for some very minor benefits. Maybe a switch could have been made early on in the development of the electrical system, but that ship has sailed. And you can wire up outlets in America for 240v plugs too, the breakers let you do both. So if you need more current for your clothes drier or another large appliance for instance it can be done.

Wahots,
@Wahots@pawb.social avatar

I’ve heard that a lot of countries still have a bunch of legacy infrastructure that was on the older standards too, worldwide. Studd like the widths of plumbing pipes and such. I think the digital era is probably the easiest time to convert. When I drive across the border, the change to metric is effortless on a digital car. Same for basically everything else, 24h time, temperature, etc.

XeroxCool,

Standard is alive and well in engineering and architecture. We have slugs as a unit. g is ~32ft/s^2 and buildings have feet.

ChewTiger,

I fucking hate the slug unit. Evil little bit of science.

xigoi,
@xigoi@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Converting to metric would mean using it in normal speech. You know, like in most civilized countries.

“What’s your height?”

“187 centimeters.”

mxcory,

While the US system gets called 110/220, my house actually puts out ~242v. Right now I have a smart plug saying 121.5v.

And since you mentioned the word “plugs”, here are our 220 15a and 20a outlets.

https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/pictrs/image/5106cd63-f60f-4ad0-9132-5b45dcb34606.jpeg

https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/pictrs/image/68d8c571-da16-4538-bad8-d613b7c097da.jpeg

p1mrx,

120/240 is the nominal voltage in North America. 110/220 is archaic/colloquial/wrong.

AA5B,

And the standard includes a plus or minus that I don’t remember: it’s unreasonable to expect an exact voltage and everything is built with that in mind

sock,

u fool if the plugs functioned consistently and were made intelligently that might cost extra money and would DEMOLISH the rich peoples pockets we cant have that. who’s gonna profit off my taxes?

AA5B, (edited )

I think the distinction is we don’t use general purpose 240v receptacles. We only use them as dedicated circuits for built in major appliances. Historically that was sufficient.

We also don’t really use 20a outlets. I don’t know why, especially now that we require 20a circuits in a few places, but you rarely see 20a outlets or appliances with 20a plugs, even though a lot of small appliances could benefit from a little extra power

So is there really a need? Electric kettles are a perfect scenario but what else? Most other use cases for 240v are “built in” appliances not likely to move (welder, air conditioner, laundry, range, etc). Space heaters and hot plates are already dangerous enough that allowing double the current seems like a hazard

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Space heaters and hot plates are already dangerous enough that allowing double the current seems like a hazard

You’d require half the current for the same wattage at 240v. At most, it’s the same 15a max, with double the voltage.

Tbh I think I’d rather achieve the same heat output by running them at 240v using less current instead of 110v and pulling as much current as possible/permitted (15a).

Insulation is cheaper than actual conductors too. Higher voltage and lower current means thinner conductors with more insulation to protect them. You’d also remove complexity and thus cost by only needing one voltage. No need for a split phase supply.

I think 240v would be a better option. 🇨🇦

fidodo,

It’s not surprising. If you’re first to adopt something by the time you realize how it could be improved you’re locked into what you did. It happens with all kinds of early adoption. I noticed it a lot in Japan which picks up tech really quickly but as a result has been left with a bunch of crufty old systems. Like they were way ahead on contactless payment, but now they have a bunch of complex and confusion payment systems and lots of them don’t support credit cards while the rest of the world just has contactless credit cards.

Ranvier, (edited )

Common misconception about the voltage though, the US does have a 240v system (well in houses, some places have three phase power which gets weird). The breakers can be wired to give 120v or 240v. The large appliances like driers or electric car chargers and things that do need a large ampunt of current get wired up for that. It’s really only a slightly slower electric kettle to deal with as a minor inconvenience. Or maybe if you wanted an absolutely enormous electric space heater or something, but those are dangerous as it is. Not a lot of things used need more than the 1800 watt maximum. As far as I can tell it’s just a relic of history, Edison ran his generators at about 110v originally and that’s the voltage original light bulb filaments wanted and higher voltage filaments weren’t used until after the US had already been electrifying to a good extent. Theoretically 120v might be a little safer from a getting shocked standpoint, but electrocutions are pretty rare as it is, just a historical artifact and not a conscious design choice as far as I can tell (and yes, volts do matter too, not just amps. Especially if what’s being shocked has very high resistance, like human skin).

Technology connections has a fun video on this too in addition to the plug hole video someone linked elsewhere: youtu.be/jMmUoZh3Hq4?si=4a1SCYOZUy-1z2h_

fidodo,

I’ve used electric kettles in the US and Europe and they’re barely slower. I think the difference is overstated. It’s often used as the reason that fewer Americans have kettles but I think the real reason is just that Americans drink fewer hot beverages other than coffee, and most people have a machine for that.

While 120v is safer for shocks I think the greater safety reason for 240 is lower fire risk which is more common and dangerous that shocks in either system.

mojofrododojo,

just get a hot water tap. boiling water on demand for serious tea consumption.

Great for french press too.

hglman,

The induction range will make the electric kettle moot anyways.

Froggy, in The Xoloitzcuintli is an ancient Aztec breed native to Mexico, once considered as guides for the dead on their journey to the underworld
@Froggy@reddthat.com avatar

I think it’s worth pointing out that this is a reconstructed breed and not the lineage used by the Mexica. Those dogs died out with European contact. youtu.be/osMu6i2txFA

spacedancer, (edited )

Did the original breed look anything like the current one? I was just about to say it’s uncanny how the ancient Aztecs and Egyptians had a similar looking death-related mythological thing (this dog and Anubis).

Froggy,
@Froggy@reddthat.com avatar

It’s surprisingly hard to Google, but I found this: collection.imamuseum.org/artwork/34509/

Anubis has the head of a jackyl, which looks significantly different IRL: www.britannica.com/animal/African-golden-wolf

SkyezOpen, in How geologists collect lava

I like that it has its own aluminum foil seal to keep it fresh.

mustardman,

Forbidden pudding.

problematicPanther,
@problematicPanther@lemmy.world avatar

I want to chew on it like it’s day old banana pudding skin

fische_stix, in Gay Water, a vodka soda that's a response to the Bud Light transphobia

I like the idea. As a straight guy who drinks vodka and soda/tonic I get told my drink is gay from time to time. Now nobody will feel the need to inform me since it’s printed right on the can.

sirboozebum,

This comment made me laugh out aloud at home.

EssentialCoffee,

They’ll still point it out to you.

My husband gets told there are pronouns on his badge all the time, as if he didn’t know they were there.

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