Same low IQ stupid argument with nukes

World powers pretent nukes are real yet act like they don't ( uk doing long range strikes into Russia )

A prole can never know what the kings and wizards are doing.

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I wouldn't call this low IQ... There was some new ideas in here, at least for me.

But that's an interesting point, how states are acting like nukes aren't real. I've had similar thoughts during the attacks on middle eastern countries - if the threat of a nuke is enough, then why don't they just claim to have one? If I were them, I'd prefer the PE fallout (lol) from the claim than the real devastation from being attacked. If nukes are real, and so easy to build that the US could do it with computers a million times **_worse_** than a calculator, then why tf doesn't everyone have them? Either claim, or actually have them, but neither makes no sense to me.

it's because nukes aren't real.

i dare you to read this https://archive.org/details/8d-0de-2/mode/2up not that long, about 80 pages i think. it's a fraud, and they all know it, it's just for the idiots watching their TVs.

fissioning plutonium doesn't explode, it emits a huge amount of radiation, anyway, and the explosions it might cause would be caused by rapidly boiling carbon, which forms into a firestorm. but the actual tech they used in japan, firstly, they made sure almost nobody was around, and they were modified saturation bombs, which just produce a massive amount of heat and vaporise carbon. you know it's not legit because they don't destroy power poles and trees. the bombs they used create firestorms, the custom mod was adding a lot of magnesium to make it flash brightly, more than the nitrogen based explosives these firebombs use.

Well if it's a dare... Can I get a double dog dare?

I'll check it out

Hey.... 228 pages ain't 80... I want a refund

double dog dare.

shit, i read it in like 7 hours.

nah, was more like 5

I'm a very slow reader. I might actually be retarded. Seriously.

yeah, i read fast, same as i type fast. i recognise text without really reading it.

i wish it had given me some benefit in my life but it helps a lot when coding, and the reason why i love reading Go code so much and hate almost all other languages is because i can scroll screenfulls of a source code file and pick out some specific kind of code areas just by a glance and catching the shape of it.

if you were interested in learning to read faster, the key has to do with learning to recognise the shapes of the words. probably some kind of thing where it flashes the text for like 10ms and then you type what you saw.

i just intuitively learned how to do it.

i read about 3x or maybe 4x faster than normal speech, about 300wpm or so.

I've seen a software thingy that makes the first couple letters of words bold, which allows me to read at a normal speed. But it costs something I don't want to pay, and I'm skeptical it can apply to things I find all over the internet.

I actually think being a slow reader has benefitted me. I'm forced to be more meditative with texts, which I think yields more of the meaning the author intended. Several times, I've asked people what a book they're reading is about and they've actually said they don't know, or can't remember what they just read. So weird... Seems like a waste of time, then.

I checked out Go for a little while after some previous conversations with you, and I liked it. It was much easier to get into and quickly start doing things than C++, and especially Rust, which I officially hate. I ought to restart that little project... But its also hard not going into C++ for the simple fact that people doing things I like, such as electronics, overwhelmingly use C++. I don't really learn at all without direct and physical application - if I get into coding, I **_must_** focus on electronics - I would have no choice, because without the physical interaction, I simply don't learn.

the narrow focus of Go's users towards network servers is frustrating. many applications especially games and GUIs benefit from the kind of simplifications you can do with CSP concurrency.

it's one of the biggest bugbears i have, about the language. i kinda sorta almost solved it, to a reasonable degree, with a GUI toolkit i was building some time ago. i just updated its dependencies finally the day before yesterday.

gonna amuse myself with that. the hard task that had blocked me from resuming it is now done. took only a few hours, breaking api's are hell when you don't have an LLM to help.

regarding the text thing, that seems like such a simple thing to charge for it seems a bit disgusting considering.

when i am deep in a book, ask me about it and you will regret it, if you have something you need to do. i can read a dozen pages and then talk for an hour about it, if it's interesting.

Hey, nostr idea. Would be cool if we could highlight a section of a note and respond with emojis or zaps to each section independently

i read the novelized version of Mad Max 3 at the age of 12 in one day:

The novelization of Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome was written by celebrated science fiction author Joan D. Vinge and published by QB Books in 1985. This novelization expands on the events of the film, filling in background details about Auntie Entity (played by Tina Turner), Bartertown, and Max Rockatansky's past. It is considered the best of the three novelizations, offering insights into Max's thoughts through monologues and filling in gaps between scenes that were not included in the film. The book is based on various stages of George Miller's screenplays and is regarded as canonical within the franchise.

https://www.alibris.com/booksearch.detail?invid=18398348261&cart=1

lol i gotta get this book at some point.

yes, i borrowed it from the library, and sat on the couch and finished it in one day.

ah i see, it wasn't as big as i thought. 220 pages

yeah, Michael Ende's book The Neverending Story. that was 600 pages. it was the first book of this size i read. yeah, 448 pages. i think it took me a week or two. absolute page-turner of a book for little 9 year old me.

also, the neverending story was 448 pages. haha.

i'm pretty sure i remember it right that Human Action was about 900 pages. i read it while commuting.

oh yeah Crime and Punishment i read the whole thing on a train between sofia and belgrade. so i guess that's a "big novel" about 400 pages.

200 pages is an afternoon

yeah, really, even just reading a few score pages of it you will not want to stop until you finish.

the red flags on this thing stand out of the story like spines on a hedgehog.

Working on it

Pro tip in life: people lie

The obvious answer is Nukes are fake, same as quantum computing.

Engineers have their domain

Artists have theirs

Teachers have theirs

Managers have theirs

Managers can fuck out of the engineer domain with their low IQ slop rhetoric.

Managers can fuck off in all domains. Useless people...