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So this is basically a study on success as related to self confidence? Why is this news?

Also one of these conditions is basically curable. Two once men become more fashion accepting.


“For those of you who just can’t be trusted to not blow your allowance. It's not condescending, we swear.”

“Do you keep track of your finances? That’s great because we’ll be withdrawing random amounts into your 'piggy bank' at random times … and maybe even our 'piggy bank' once or twice ;)”

“Do you work for Yelp! and still find yourself blowing all your money on luxury whiskeys and restaurant food? Let us help you with your backup plan before getting yourself fired for calling your boss a spoiled brat, you spoiled brat.”

“Does being an adult with a bank account make you angry? Would you prefer it if mommy took care of your money for you? We’re here to help!”

“Do you accidentally blast 300$ on open bar tabs every Friday night and need that to stop? Give us access to your bank account so we can save you from yourself.”

“Isn’t having so much money that you don’t care if 50$ just disappears for no reason every week just great? Let us help you pretend to be productive with that money by placing it in a negative interest rate savings account!”

"Are you incapable of stopping until it's all gone? We're alcoholics, ahem, compulsive spenders as well. Give the bottle back, Father Jack."

"Do things like 'stocks' and 'bonds' sound scary? Do you think 'gold' and 'silver' are pointless fads? Wish money would stop getting highbrow ideas? We do to, why make your money work for you when you can send it to work for us? Errr... I mean, why make your money work, when you can send it on a tropical vacation?!"



God, that graph with the disappearing data is annoying.

"Hey guys, what's a great way to show time-series, numerical data in a concise and easy to understand way?"

"How about a movie, Bob?"


How do you not like food? That's outrageous.


"The thirty-eight-year-old Yasui radiates a quiet pride. With his round face and COMMANDING MUSTACHE, he conveys a stoicism..."

I just can't stop laughing at that description of that picture.


It kind of detracts from the credibility of the rest of the article, doesn't it?


"The San Bernardino litigation isn’t about trying to set a precedent or send any kind of message. It is about the victims and justice."

When the government revokes the Gulf of Tonkin resolution I will again put faith in its ability to act responsibly with emergency powers and provisions that might, just might set a precedence. Until then, fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, fuck you.


What ad blocker leaves that message? "This ad has been removed." ? Mine just give connection errors in cute little boxes.


This is absurd.

First he complains about the fact that we use an alphabet. Does he even have experience with heiroglyphic languages like Chinese? Basically the Chinese dictionary is split into 200-something "families", so when you don't know what a word means, you get a dictionary, and you flip to a family, then you basically brute force your way through the family to find your word.

Now he complains about the pronunciation. Sorry, but that fucked up pronunciation is one of the main _strengths_ of English. English readily absorbs needed words from other languages. Some languages like French actively remove words from their language.

And the phonetics? Go try out fucking Czech. I've heard it's legitimately impossible to become fluent in Czech. Or Austrian dialect, which has something like 4 different "r"s.

"Hawaiian no consonant is ever followed by another consonant" ... yeah you also frequently run into the german nightmare of neverending words like "humahumanukanukaapuaa". You think that's a better way to deal with things? An easy to pronounce marathon?

The large vocabulary is undesirable? The large vocabulary, with extreme possible specificity, is what makes English so attractive for scientific application.

And complaining about grammar? English has one of the easiest grammars to learn and get started with, sure it will take a few decades to not make any mistakes, but for just getting going, it is remarkably easy. No genders (some languages have 5 or more genders for things, see czech), no conjugation.

Sorry for the rant, but if you're just gonna post some BS one sided oped I'm gonna do the same. I personally don't think English is the best choice either. But one sidedness is ultra-obnoxious.


> Now he complains about the pronunciation. Sorry, but that fucked up pronunciation is one of the main _strengths_ of English. English readily absorbs needed words from other languages. Some languages like French actively remove words from their language.

That pronunciation makes it hard to learn. Seriously, people always complain about gender of words being complex – english pronunciation and spelling is several times worse.

> The large vocabulary is undesirable? The large vocabulary, with extreme possible specificity, is what makes English so attractive for scientific application.

Wrong. Having a word for every topic is what makes english useful – but that doesn’t mean a large vocabulary.

If you build words piece by piece – say, "backyard-filled-with-children" (kindergarten) or "spirit-of-the-time" (Zeitgeist) or "joy-of-someone-else’s-pain" (Schadenfreude) they are easily understandable, people need a tiny vocabulary to understand even the most complex words or legal terms, and it’s easily writable, too.

> And complaining about grammar? English has one of the easiest grammars to learn and get started with, sure it will take a few decades to not make any mistakes, but for just getting going, it is remarkably easy. No genders (some languages have 5 or more genders for things, see czech), no conjugation.

LOL. Ever tried understanding all the different versions of time in English? Simple past, past progressive, present progressive, simple present, etc and your brain starts melting.


> That pronunciation makes it hard to learn. Seriously, people always complain about gender of words being complex – english pronunciation and spelling is several times worse.

Are they, though? Take a fixed set of rules for english pronunciation. Add a list of exceptions. Is this list as big as the list of nouns of portuguese, spanish, or french? (we can define as big in number of words, or try some information theoretical construct, or even go to some psicological measure, should one exist. I am still betting that the english pronunciation, evil as it is, is not as bad as a gender to every noun)

(I am a native portuguese speaker, and only got mad about gender in nouns when leaning french)


That’s the thing, there are no real fixed rules.

Home vs. some, Foot vs. boot, versus vs. verses, they’re, their, there, etc.

Pronunciation vs. pronounce.

The only solution is to learn every word twice.


> "backyard-filled-with-children" (kindergarten)

A kindergarten is most definitely a backyard filled with children. You would call that a "playground", most likely. Or just a backyard filled with children. A kindergarten is a daycare center for children aged 2-6.


Yes – that’s why the AWO decided to name their Kindergartens Kinderhäuser instead.


> First he complains about the fact that we use an alphabet.

No, he doesn't. What he says is: "it has probably the worst alphabetical writing system in the world", and "What an alphabet does is spell out the sounds of words at the level of consonants and vowels. And I don’t think you can find a language that does it worse or more perversely than English does."

I think you've misunderstood the structure of the paragraph in which he says those things. He mentions Chinese and Cambodian not to say "these would be better" but to say "you might want to respond to my complaint about English orthography by saying these languages are worse, but that would miss the point because they're the way they are because they're non-alphabetic, and what I'm claiming is that among alphabetic systems English has a particularly bad one".

> The large vocabulary [...] is what makes English so attractive for scientific application.

What Pullum says is: "You may think of this as a rich lexical treasure-house that we should prize; some might call it a needless and memory-burdening overstock of alternatives, reminiscent of the cereal aisle of a modern supermarket. The English lexicon could have been far less profligate, given a little forethought." In other words: yeah, it's good to have a wide variety of ideas represented in your vocabulary, but the English lexicon is redundant and could have been markedly smaller without substantial loss of expressivity and flexibility.

(I am not sure whether I agree with him, but I'm pretty sure I disagree with you if you're suggesting that science benefits particularly from the rich vocabulary of English. Technical terms can be, and are, imported into any language; that's not where English is unusual; and science doesn't make particular use of e.g. the ability to distinguish between {cow,beef,veal} or {sheep,lamb,mutton} or {sleepy,tired,fatigued,knackered,exhausted,weary,...}.)


Sure, this probably helps you focus better than a standard studio album.

I would argue that 90% of the benefit of this music is just from the extended intervals of contiguous playing, so there's no "break" disruption. I think any DJ (esp. deep house) worth half their salt can get someone "in the zone" for half an hour at a time. And artists devoted to minimalist ambient or trambient can get you going for hours straight.

Honestly the "Focus: Intense" or whatever I find super annoying. It's got this constant anxious buildup feel to it and never fucking breaks into what I would consider that peak when I start playin my keyboard like a goddamn piano.

Basically, no fucking way would I even consider shelling out an additional Spotify subscription for some "high tech" whale song machine.


The feeling you described reminds me of the genre "jersey club" -- you can spend hours in a buildup that never breaks into a drop. Absolutely horrific, I don't understand the genre at all.


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