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GreyShuck

@GreyShuck@feddit.uk

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GreyShuck,
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We used to have a coal fire when I was growing up, so routinely in the winters.

GreyShuck,
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What exactly does ‘should’ mean here? Should in order to achieve what?

If you want to know what the word means at the expense of interrupting the flow, then yes.

If you want to stay with the flow, then no.

That said, it is so simple in almost all situations these days to look a definition up that I almost always do on the odd occasions that I find a word I don’t know. And the more you do, the less you will need to in future.

GreyShuck,
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When I was unemployed I used to walk waaaay more than I do now - both to get to places and just as a hobby - and I’d hope to do the same when retired, as long as I am fit enough. That’s walking though. Standing in one place is something that I find extremely wearing and have never done when not necessary. As I understand it this is fundamental to the nature of bipeds. To stand still, we constantly need to adjust balance. However, when walking, it is basically a continuous, controlled fall forwards, and takes less energy. For quadrupeds, it is the other way around: they are stable when standing, but require constant effort to walk or run.

I probably spend most of my reading time horizontal rather than sitting, but if I am reading when vertical then, again, it will be walking - or pacing around - rather than standing. I would seem really weird to simply stand there and read.

GreyShuck,
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Movie - Titanic. It has simply never appealed.

TV - any popular reality show. They are just not my thing.

GreyShuck,
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TV - Loot, Fall of the House of Usher, White Lotus

Movies - Triangle of Sadness, Glass Onion

GreyShuck,
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Validate your child’s feelings. Let them know that you understand that they are scared and that it is ok to be scared.

GreyShuck,
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Depends what you mean by body language. I think that most can recognise basic facial expressions like happiness and fear before they can talk, and understand things like pointing and reaching for things to express interest etc.

GreyShuck,
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Finnegans Wake. I read it across the year with an online group. It was always on the edge of incomprehensibility - often well over the edge - but it definitely had a impact.

This year’s ‘big read’ will be the Chinese classic Romance of the Three Kingdoms I’m just about to make a start.

GreyShuck,
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I would say that kindness is an expression (not the only one) of empathy. Some degree of empathy is present in the overwhelming majority of people - barring extreme sociopathic conditions and an absence of mirror neurones. So for most people I would say that it is innate to some extent.

Even in cases where empathy is not present, kindness can be simulated or faked and some people with strong sociopathic conditions have proven to be very good at this when it suits their purposes - so I certainly say something with the appearance of kindness can be learned in one form or another.

It can definitely be cultivated - and I would say that this is one of the major qualities in the whole “two wolves” metaphor or, in classical Greek terms, a virtue to be developed.

GreyShuck,
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I can recall being in the cot under the window in my parents room, but there is nothing else attached to that memory.

I can also very clearly recall being put onto the floor in the back of my dad’s dark blue side opening van, which had an orange tinted skylight, and crawling across the corrugated floor panel to pull myself up against the wheel arch - since this was evidently before i could walk - whilst my parents were talking just outside, and the van itself was parked across the road from the entrance to our garden.

However, apparently my dad never owned a van of that type, nor anything like it, and nor did anyone that either of my parents or my - significantly older - siblings are aware of. So despite the clarity and detail of that memory, I have doubts that it is at all real.

GreyShuck,
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Ostention, which I occasionally use in its folkloric sense, is one that I can hardly ever bring to mind at the critical moment.

GreyShuck,
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I don’t think that I ever did feel like a kid when I went back to my parents for Christmas. Instead, it felt cloying, cluttered and claustrophobic - and as far as I can tell, it is entirely coincidental that all three of those start with ‘cl’. I felt out of place and constrained and it seemed irrelevant to anything else in my world. Mum and my siblings were all doing their usual things, but I felt in the same stiff, un-natural position that ‘posh’ visitors were always put in back when I was living there as a child. There was a sense that it was all a performance for my benefit - but one that never really convinced.

GreyShuck,
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Perhaps Herzog’s Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010), if that counts.

GreyShuck, (edited )
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The closest to me AFAIK is Sealand, but I’d rather not, tbh. I do actually have a passport from Waveland, declared as part of a Greenpeace campaign some years back and based on Rockall, but also not too appealing as a long-term residence.

At one site that I lived and worked on for several years, we discussed declaring unilateral independence on several occasions. It was a shingle spit nature reserve and seemed a promising location, but we never did. Well, not so far.

Overall, the Free Borough of Llanrwst looks a good bet. I have been there and definitely enjoy the area.

GreyShuck,
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A very under-rated pass-time.

All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone.

-Blaise Pascal

GreyShuck,
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Yes - I do!

Oh yes, The Devils was excellent, as was Tommy - so much anger captured in that one.

GreyShuck, (edited )
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  • Typist Artist Pirate King (2023) - biopic of Audrey Amiss with a very effective portrayal of her paranoid schizophrenia.
  • The Creator (2023) - looked great but totally predictable and unoriginal.
  • A Field in England (2013) - surreal, low-key folk horror with some memorable BW cinematography.
  • Oppenheimer (2023) - powerful and great performances, but it could have been just as effective with 20 minutes cut IMHO.
  • The Miracle Club (2023) - nothing outstanding here, but a solidly told tale of forgiveness.
  • Lair of the White Worm (1988) - as messily uneven as ever. Amanda Donahue seemed to know what Loach Russell was aiming for. Not sure about anyone else.
GreyShuck,
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This is an idea that has been around for very long time. Plato used the Ring of Gyges to talk about it - which went on to inspire Wells’ The Invisible Man - and influenced Tolkien among others.

GreyShuck,
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I think that my criteria would be:

  • Is it distinctive at a casual glance at emoji size?
  • Is it distinctive on a misty horizon?
  • Is it realistic to daub 20 copies of it on to old sheets, cardboard banners and t-shirts in a hurry in a crowded basement somewhere?

If not, then it is not fulfilling the basic requirements of a flag. If it is, then it’s off to a good start and we can start arguing about aesthetics.

Favourite FOSS Torrenting Client for Linux that has a VPN killswitch?

I’m a long-time Transmission user but I just learned that VPN killswitches are a thing (how did it take me so long!?). I would like to try another client which has this feature in case I forget to launch my VPN client before opening Transmission. Does anybody have any recommendations? Deluge? QBittorrent? Or any others?...

GreyShuck,
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Been using QBittorrent for longer than I can remember now. It certainly does everything I have ever wanted from it.

GreyShuck,
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I do pretty much all the time. Why? Because I like to keep up with the latest posts - and so the news and stories they relate to. It seems a bit odd to ask ‘why’ really.

I always stick with ‘subscribed’, of course. I have no idea what ‘new’ and ‘all’ would look like.

GreyShuck,
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If Fred & Bob are talking and 'he told him x and he responded with y" then that is also unclear. This is not a problem that is unique to the word ‘they’.

Of course, in either case, the answer to use phrase it so that you remove any ambiguity and communicate clearly: “Sam told them x and the board responded with y.”, “Bob told him x and Fred responded with y”.

GreyShuck,
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Not exactly an original thought though. This had been a staple of SF writers for decades. E M Forster’s from 1909 being a fine example.

GreyShuck,
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One of:

  • I, Claudius (1976)
  • Connections (1978)
  • Band of Brothers (2003)
  • Breaking Bad (2008)
  • Better Call Saul (2015)
  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • localhost
  • All magazines
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