Bears place RB Johnson, LB Edmunds on IR https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/47063159/bears-place-rb-roschon-johnson-lb-tremaine-edmunds-ir
🇺🇦 Auf radioeins läuft...
bbno$ feat. Rich Brian:
🎵 Edamame
#NowPlaying #bbno$ #RichBrian
https://playlistr.bandcamp.com/track/bbno-rich-brian-edamame-danny-dove-remix
https://open.spotify.com/track/1golLrmqyxDWedF7YUHCOD
"Two new Edmontosaurus mummies—a late juvenile and an early adult—with large continuous areas of preserved external skin surface" from #Wyoming #paleontology
"#Dinosaur 'mummies'…
I just fell down a history hole due to how we celebrate Christmas Eve today and how many folks don’t get around to it until tomorrow. It is mildly fascinating and boils down to: Before mechanical watches were a thing, a new day was counted from when the sun went down. So the 25th starts on what is now the 24th. You can still see traces of it in language such as in fortnight:
Eatman: Can’t be a bend-AND-break defense https://www.dallascowboys.com/news/eatman-can-t-be-a-bend-and-break-defense
Good Morning #Canada
In 1905, when Alberta joined Canada, a temporary provincial legislature resided in Edmonton and they were given the task of choosing the capital. Edmonton, by a vote of 16 to 8, was selected over their southern rival Calgary. This choice was despite Calgary's larger size and incorporation as a city a full decade before Edmonton. But the new capital had used their history as an important trading post established on the fur trade route and federal relationships to secure their status as the capital. In 1941, Edmonton was still a relatively small city, ranking 9th in population in Canada. Oil would transform the entire province, and Edmonton would rapidly grow as the gateway to the resource rich Alberta north.
#CanadaIsAwesome #CanadianCapitals
https://thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/edmonton
Bears top 3 LBs Edmunds, Edwards, Sewell out https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/47050530/bears-top-3-lbs-edmunds-edwards-sewell-steelers
RE: https://hachyderm.io/@thomasfuchs/115766665024442971
The author (Edmund Berkeley) is the co-founder of the ACM (I’m a member), he definitely did some other good stuff like being a peace activist and coming up with concepts that highly influenced the personal computer revolution 25–30 years after the book was published.
But the extreme toxic positivity about computers that “will solve all social problems” because “humans are so irrational” remains a huge problem with AI stans since the late 1940s.
50 years, not a single major commercial shipwreck on the Great Lakes since. Great 5 minute listen on the Edmund Fitzgerald https://www.npr.org/2025/11/06/nx-s1-5518215/edmund-fitzgerald-shipwreck
Eatman: Defense, that’s all you need to do https://www.dallascowboys.com/news/eatman-defense-that-s-all-you-need-to-do