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24 votes
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Russell's paradox
4 votes -
Bellevue, WA police responded to a call from a US Air Force museum that said a man had offered to donate a Cold War-era missile stored in his late neighbor’s garage
12 votes -
shī shì shí shī shǐ - Story of Stone Grotto Poet
14 votes -
More Americans are nonreligious. Who are they and what do they believe?
39 votes -
Welcome to Sealand, the world's smallest state
13 votes -
The parliament of Imperial Austria
6 votes -
The state of the world’s 7,168 living languages
18 votes -
The dirty secrets of Pompeii: Brothels, art, and more
15 votes -
Joscha Bach: Synthetic Sentience - Can Artificial Intelligence become conscious?
3 votes -
100 years since death of Lenin marked by silence from China’s Communist Party
20 votes -
The misguided war on the SAT
30 votes -
God and the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics
26 votes -
What happened to David Graeber?
6 votes -
DNA from stone age chewing gum sheds light on diet and disease in Scandinavia's ancient hunter-gatherers
11 votes -
Feminism versus multiculturalism [an argument against feminism and multiculturalism being 'incompatible']
5 votes -
Engraving on an almost 2,000-year-old knife believed to be the oldest runes ever found in Denmark
11 votes -
Tools for thinking about censorship
9 votes -
News sources or other subtitled media in Traditional Chinese?
So I recently got back from a very comforting trip to my motherland in Taiwan. I always joke that when I get back from Asia my Chinese gets better by a lot. One thing I kinda wish I was better at...
So I recently got back from a very comforting trip to my motherland in Taiwan. I always joke that when I get back from Asia my Chinese gets better by a lot.
One thing I kinda wish I was better at was reading Traditional Chinese, since it's one of the barriers I have for fully communicating with my family and dimishes my confidence when navigating Taiwan.
Don't get me wrong, I'm fluent in speaking, I've had full on conversations with native Taiwanese and they're always surprised that I'm from America.
At the same time I feel like I should be keeping up with the news and general day to day life in Taiwan, since I plan on visiting more often because my grandparents are getting older and I really miss the country a lot.
I know we have a couple of people who are in East Asian countries/Taiwanese/Taiwanese-adjacent, I was wondering if y'all had any suggestions on things like news channels on YouTube or day in the life content that I can follow along with and match characters to practice my reading a bit. I can read at maybe a kindergarten level if that helps LOL.
15 votes -
Ohio pastor charged for housing the homeless
45 votes -
The tragic story of this famous meteorite and the boy who fought the museum that took everything from him
14 votes -
Your favourite creators who cover non-Anglo countries/cultures in English?
(That title is kind of awkward, feel free to suggest a better one.) I came across aini's channel on Youtube a while back. She does videos on different topics focused on East Asia. Her most recent...
(That title is kind of awkward, feel free to suggest a better one.)
I came across aini's channel on Youtube a while back. She does videos on different topics focused on East Asia. Her most recent video being "Why Chinese People Will Choose $5 Over $10".
I'm especially interested in native creators; those who can present a personal view from the inside. Even more so for countries that are not as well-covered for whatever reason—like places with less technological access or government limitation.
My own preference is for a more analytical presentation. I.e. looking through an academic lens incorporating sociology, psychology, etc, rather than "footage of daily life". That style is still welcome, of course!
22 votes -
G36
9 votes -
No one's names were changed at Ellis Island
41 votes -
A brief history of the United States’ accents and dialects
12 votes -
Capitalism is dead. '[Technofeudalism is] something much worse’: Yanis Varoufakis on extremism and the tyranny of big tech
36 votes -
Which word begins with "y" and looks like an axe in this picture?
58 votes -
Before I reach my enemy, bring me some heads
12 votes -
Book review - A Fabulous Failure: The Clinton Presidency and the Transformation of American Capitalism by Nelson Lichtenstein and Judith Stein
4 votes -
A secret tunnel in a NYC synagogue leads to a brawl between police and worshippers
50 votes -
Ali Abdullah Saleh obituary [2017]
5 votes -
Does free will exist? | Sapolsky vs. Huemer debate review
14 votes -
Queen Margrethe II is the first Danish monarch to abdicate in 900 years – but it is just a sign of the times
17 votes -
Designing a Framework for Measuring Inference Generation and Communicative Efficacy During Board-game Play
16 votes -
What is systemic racism?
15 votes -
Huge ancient city found in the Amazon
37 votes -
Commentary - on archaeology and small mundane discoveries
4 votes -
The insane machine that conquered Antarctica for the USSR - the Kharkovchanka
9 votes -
Recommendations for a grammar checker?
I'm looking for a French grammar checker. I think I'm in that intermediate-level plateau where I just need to keep talking / chatting in French but I want to eventually get to a point where I have...
I'm looking for a French grammar checker. I think I'm in that intermediate-level plateau where I just need to keep talking / chatting in French but I want to eventually get to a point where I have correct grammar, maybe even some suggestions for idioms.
Some info for my use-case:
- I don't expect to go past 100 "consultations" a month.
- Would be nice if there was an extension that helps for email / Messenger / Telegram / WhatsApp.
- Would be nice if it did help with idioms.
I did my homework and found out that:
- Grammarly does offer this but only in English.
- Language Tool exists but it's 20 euros monthly or 60 euros per year, which are both steep prices for just trying it out.
- Asking ChatGPT works most of the time, but it's a bit annoying to load up that website every time and ask. I'm open to coding something based on the API if that would be the most cost-effective option.
Thanks in advance for all your suggestions!
10 votes -
"Birds Aren't Real" leader TED talk about his movement | Peter McIndoe
29 votes -
Frantz Fanon’s enduring legacy – The post-colonial thinker’s seminal book, “The Wretched of the Earth,” described political oppression in psychological terms
11 votes -
Notes on the Ivory Coast
6 votes -
Studies suggest that relying on will power is hopeless [to eliminate bad habits]. Instead, we must find strategies that don’t require us to be strong.
46 votes -
Six Flags | Bankrupt
12 votes -
Sweden's most popular tourist attraction, a 17th-century vessel that foundered minutes after launch, needs another financial rescue
11 votes -
The Vikings and the Muslim scholar
11 votes -
Many prehistoric handprints show a finger missing. Canadian scientists say evidence shows digits may have been ritually removed to appease deities or aid social cohesion.
26 votes -
Ancient Sahul's submerged landscapes reveal a mosaic of human habitation
17 votes -
Recommendations for medical history
My dad (a veterinarian by trade) is really into medical history, so I was wondering if folks had any recommendations or favorites. I know he's done a lot of reading about the history of vaccines...
My dad (a veterinarian by trade) is really into medical history, so I was wondering if folks had any recommendations or favorites. I know he's done a lot of reading about the history of vaccines and the Spanish flu epidemic, but it's really not my area of interest, so I'm somewhat at a loss for how to find him something. Ideally it would be something available on audiobook because that's mostly how he consumes books these days.
Edit: Thanks everyone for the suggestions. I am not sure he has the wherewithal to do podcasts, but the book recommendations are great. I'm going with The Emperor of All Maladies and The Ghost Map, assuming he doesn't have them already.
12 votes -
There's a better English alphabet
8 votes