A Guy Called Gerald - Voodoo Ray (it's actually one year prior)
https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=ChZYGtq8-hA
WordAll #638 completed in 44s (kind of a good intro one if recommending to anyone)
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wordall.xyz
Wordle 909 3/6*
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https://www.nytimes.com/games/wordle/index.html
#Worldle #693 2/6 (100%) (cheated a bit)
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La palabra del día #708 4/6 (ok)
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Le Mot (@WordleFR) #705 3/6 (phew, nearly a meaningless two)
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Framed #644 (nah. I read another chapter of The Perfect Golden Circle. Books that I'm enjoying I usually read quite slowly in chapter chunks. Partly, I suspect, that as a person gets older the demands on their attention increase, and enjoying a good book slowly is better than reading a book quickly. If it were nonfiction I'd have finished it by now and I'd be Googling notes and thinking about whether to get anything it referenced. If that interesting. The book references a weird point in British cultural history, in 1989, just prior to more than 4 television channels in the form of satellite TV and very much prior to mass adoption of anything resembling today's internet, and the idea in the air that there could, or should, be something different culturally. Decadal thinking, inasmuch as time is mentally divided into discrete chunks, is chopping continuous gradients into chunks because we are born, live and die, if there were an immortal observer they'd probably say stuff is slowly, and occasionally quickly, changing, always, and we cut it up into chunks because it's easier to examine a snowball rolling at the same speed. Everything that applies to 1989 in terms of the ratio of important changes probably applies going forwards and backwards in decades. I wonder if we regards years with 4 at the end as inevitable and 5 as the middle because we count in 10s. Maybe we should think of time hexadecimally or in binary to better align ourselves with GPGPU farms*.)
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