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* [https://twitter.com/WaitItsKim/status/1343955426073829376 Post] @ Twitter | * [https://twitter.com/WaitItsKim/status/1343955426073829376 Post] @ Twitter | ||
Compare [[Conan the Barbarian (nonfiction)]]. | Compare [[Conan the Barbarian (nonfiction)]]: | ||
[[Conan the Barbarian (nonfiction)|Conan the Barbarian]] (also known as Conan the Cimmerian) is a fictional sword and sorcery hero who originated in pulp magazines and has since been adapted to books, comics, several films (including Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer), television programs (animated and live-action), video games, role-playing games, and other media. The character was created by the writer [[Robert E. Howard (nonfiction)|Robert E. Howard]] in 1932 for a series of fantasy stories published in ''[[Weird Tales (nonfiction)|Weird Tales]]'' magazine. Conan is "one of the towering figures in fantasy and literature", being a thief, a savage, a warrior and a king at different parts of his life. Since his debut in December of 1932, Conan of Cimmeria has been the pre-eminent hero of sword and sorcery and the image of the genre. Redefining the hero archetype through the high adventure tales written by his creator [[Robert E. Howard (nonfiction)|Robert E. Howard]], and altering the landscape of American literature in the process, the barbarian's mythos has attracted new readers with every successive generation. Bolstered through his early years by Howard's rip-roaring tales of glory on the battlefield, immortalized by the incomparable artwork of [[Frank Frazetta (nonfiction)|Frank Frazetta]] in the 1960s, and reinvented in a media explosion of the 1970s and 80s, the noble savage is a vivid and iconic fantasy character, the likes of which stirred the imaginations of audiences the world over for more than seventy years. | |||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conan_the_Barbarian Conan the Barbarian] @ Wikipedia | |||
=== Don't Run Aground Much Any More === | === Don't Run Aground Much Any More === |
Latest revision as of 07:07, 31 December 2020
Online diary of Karl Jones for Monday December 29, 2020.
Previous: Diary (December 28, 2020) - Next: Diary (December 30, 2020)
Diary
Gallery
Paramedic Blues
Friend of mine trained as a paramedic. Top of his class, extra certifications, total commitment.
But he's a gentle leftie at heart, and the paramedic industry is staffed by ex-police specifically and right-wingers generally.
No way could he advance in the profession — his own instructor, who acknowledged his my friend's skill, also made things difficult. So my friend dropped out of the profession at the cusp of beginning.
Damned shame — he would have saved lives, *and* shown some humanity.
Pemdas
PEMDAS is an acronym used primarily in the United States as a mechanism to pedagogically enforce the order rules of computational precedence. PEMDAS is explained as follows:
- P parenthesis
- E exponentiation
- M multiplication
- D division
- A addition
- S subtraction
There are several obvious deficiencies with this model. For example, the fact that instances of the factorial operator are executed immediately after operations in parentheses and immediately before instances of exponentiation isn't indicated by this model. In addition, the ordering M-D (respectively, A-S) may appear to indicate that multiplication (respectively, addition) happens before division (respectively, subtraction), though multiplication (respectively, addition) receives the same precedence as division (respectively, subtraction).
It is not uncommon for American students to remember PEMDAS by way of any of a number of mnemonics, among the most common of which is, "Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally." Note, too, that there are analogues of PEMDAS in other countries as well, e.g., BODMAS (where B denotes brackets and O denotes orders) in the UK and BEDMAS in Canada (Pierce 2013).
—PEMDAS @ Wolfram MathWorld
See also:
- Order of Operations @ Wikipedia
- Ambiguous PEMDAS
Pemdas the Barbarian
Inspiration:
- Post @ Twitter
Compare Conan the Barbarian (nonfiction):
Conan the Barbarian (also known as Conan the Cimmerian) is a fictional sword and sorcery hero who originated in pulp magazines and has since been adapted to books, comics, several films (including Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer), television programs (animated and live-action), video games, role-playing games, and other media. The character was created by the writer Robert E. Howard in 1932 for a series of fantasy stories published in Weird Tales magazine. Conan is "one of the towering figures in fantasy and literature", being a thief, a savage, a warrior and a king at different parts of his life. Since his debut in December of 1932, Conan of Cimmeria has been the pre-eminent hero of sword and sorcery and the image of the genre. Redefining the hero archetype through the high adventure tales written by his creator Robert E. Howard, and altering the landscape of American literature in the process, the barbarian's mythos has attracted new readers with every successive generation. Bolstered through his early years by Howard's rip-roaring tales of glory on the battlefield, immortalized by the incomparable artwork of Frank Frazetta in the 1960s, and reinvented in a media explosion of the 1970s and 80s, the noble savage is a vivid and iconic fantasy character, the likes of which stirred the imaginations of audiences the world over for more than seventy years.
- Conan the Barbarian @ Wikipedia
Don't Run Aground Much Any More
Don't Run Aground Much Any More.
Compare Don't Get Around Much Any More.
Songs and Other Abuses by Feral Butler
Songs and Other Abuses (often simply Abuses) - album by Feral Butler
Tracks
- Microwave Urinal - allegedly co-authored by Fell Swoop
- Prosthetic Bidet
- Sumptuous Plumbing
Cromagnolin
Several tracks on Abuses feature the Cromagnolin, a hand-cranked pre-pleistocene device of wood, antler, and sinew which issues a quavering wail or moan approximating the vocables of Cromagnon-era hominids. Paleontologist-musician Frondo Ediacar was responsible for designing and constructing the Cromagnolin.
For extreme authenticity, Feral Butler formed an unlicensed transdimensional corporation which reverted the band members to proto-hominids for the duration of the recording session (and, by some accounts, beyond [citation needed]).
Influences
Compare Don't Whiz on the Electric Fence (nonfiction):
- Don't Whiz on the Electric Fence @ YouTube
Beyond Fungible
Beyond Fungible - biography of Fell Swoop. TO_DO - identify author, related to Alice Beta biographies.
Bygone Zygote
Bygone Zygote is a song by Neon Diatom.
Compare Ocean Soup by Frondo Ediacar.
Chairman of the Definite Article
Frank Sinatra: Chairman of the Definite Article
My loathing for the film The Big Chill
My loathing for the film The Big Chill is prodigious and multifacted."
Debug in Hell
"Better debug in Hell than crash in Heaven."
Qualified inanimacy
"... and so the defendant pleads no-motion death-secondary inanimacy, your Honor."
Glass ocarina
Song mashup
"Owner of a Lonely Heart" + "Babylon Sisters"
Every thing you little do is magic
"Every thing you little do is magic."
Compare "Every Little Thing She Does is Magic" by The Police.
The Practical Solipsist
"A guide for the unperplexed."
May That as it Be
Preludinary
Preludinary mood management algorithms
Spoonerisms
- Home is where the heart is - Harm is Where the Hate Is
- The Gnomon Chronicles - The Chrome on Monocles
- Reduce my cost — Recost my deuce
- Table rapping — Rabble taping
- Going for the One — Woeing for the Gun
Footling Gesture to Boot
"... and a footling gesture, to boot."
Spineless Chicken Vertebrae
Half (1/2) off, U pick the 1/2
Compare -
Dirk-Drivin Man
Sejanus: There goes a dirk-drivin' man ...
Houston, We Have a Pilgrim
Shruggie Bear
Shruggie Bear = Sugar Bear + Huggie Bear
Feculent Nethers
Compare Feculent blather (nonfiction) - "Do you understand me Denny? I would sooner leap from the window than see your lips move, the sight of which is the visual cue that feculent blather is about to spew forth." (Boston Legal)
Strange Days
I liked "Strange Days" quite a lot. Conventional Hollywood tech-thriller fare, with violence and sex in abundance, but also with plenty of fresh tech ideas, a lavish visual style, and a downbeat remorse attitude which passes for conscience.
- Comment @ Facebook
Russell's teapot
Russell's teapot is an analogy, formulated by the philosopher Bertrand Russell (1872–1970), to illustrate that the philosophic burden of proof lies upon a person making unfalsifiable claims, rather than shifting the burden of disproof to others.
Russell specifically applied his analogy in the context of religion. He wrote that if he were to assert, without offering proof, that a teapot, too small to be seen by telescopes, orbits the Sun somewhere in space between the Earth and Mars, he could not expect anyone to believe him solely because his assertion could not be proven wrong.
Russell's teapot is still invoked in discussions concerning the existence of God, and has had influence in various fields and media.
- Russell's teapot @ Wikipedia
Believe what you must
"While you're busy being an ignorant idiot, believe what you must."
All I am saying is give Rand a chance
All I am saying is give Rand a chance