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Bill Gates said, "I will always choose a lazy person to do a difficult job because a lazy person will find an easy way to do it." What's a real-life example of this?
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Bill Gates said, "I will always choose a lazy person to do a difficult job because a lazy person will find an easy way to do it." What's a real-life example of this?
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What are you reading this week? [6/18/23]
Alexander Munro: The Paper Trail
Francis Beeding: The Three Fishers
Lindsey Fitzharris: The Facemaker
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What piece of kit or setup represents the pinnacle of your hobby/profession?
What, no bread-makers yet?
I haven't ventured into sourdough but I'm teetering on the edge. Looking at the King Arthur crocks.
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[Weekly] What are you reading this week? [8/13/23]
@McBinary Just finished When the Air Hits Your Brain by Frank Vertosick. Fascinating although tough to read in places. Content Warning: death, including child death
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What are your best moving tips?
When you are wrapping items in paper, don't wrap it tightly and smoothly! You want to crumple the paper up around the item. The crumpling is what protects it; a piece of newspaper wrapped flat and tight around a glass doesn't protect it from bumps and shocks.
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What are you reading this week? [7/16/23]
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@Entropy Never did much like Color of Magic, but I love the guards books. Men at Arms and Night Watch are all-time favorites. Pratchett loved Carrot, but he was fascinated with Vimes (and Vetinari).
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What are you reading this week? [7/16/23]
@McBinary
Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary. Fascinating stuff.
Liz Williams, Detective Inspector Chen Novels 1-3 A fun mystery / fantasy series based on Asian mythology.
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What's an innocent misconception about your hobby/profession that drives you up the wall?
I'm an English professor, and I get a lot of "Oh, I'll have to make sure to use good grammar around you." First, I have better manners than to go around correcting other people.* Second, I know enough about the development of the language to realize how fluid and often artificial the "rules" are.
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What are you reading this week? [6/18/23]
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Have you read Cook's Garrett series? They're actually mysteries--think Nero Wolfe in a fantasy setting. Less dark than Black Company. First one is Sweet Silver Blues.
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People who 'stop looking for work' are no longer counted as 'unemployed.' How do you *stop* looking for work if you need money to survive?
@inkican I suspect many of them decide to return to school for degrees / certifications?