Ctotheg
Ctotheg t1_j7mt0e6 wrote
Reply to comment by likesleague in It's a Terrible Day for Rain by Meowmarlade
Interesting. Can you show me a source showing OP’s alternative variant of the kanji, please?
Ctotheg t1_j7mlqi4 wrote
Reply to comment by Option2401 in It's a Terrible Day for Rain by Meowmarlade
It’s the present dayJapanese kanji fir castle at the bottom and one strike away from the current kanji for tears at the top.
Very interesting that this artist chose an old Chinese kanji with a huge red circle at the bottom - kind of Japanese flag imagery.
Ctotheg t1_j74b0us wrote
Reply to comment by nerdline in I'm the head of video at France’s leading newspaper Le Monde. Our team recreated Charles De Gaulle's lost 1940 recording for France to resist the Nazis using historical sources and artificial intelligence. AMA about our investigation. by LeMonde_en
Very interesting question! Why aren’t we simply satisfied with the content of the speech, the script and its message?
Why do we require the voice to be “as historically accurate as possible”? What’s next, a replicated 3D video of the event that we can experience as if it’s happening in front of us? To what end?
Why isn’t the script and the content of the speech enough to satisfy our inquiring minds?
Ctotheg t1_j25m6a3 wrote
Reply to comment by as_a_fake in [WP] Quantum Physics responds when things are being observed. For some reason, the universe doesn't consider you to be an observer, and daily life can get pretty weird when no one is watching. by akschurman
This is an excellent explanation bc the prompt is based on a common misconception (no problem still a good prompt). But specifically your explanation hits all the parts I was nebulous on.
Ctotheg t1_jdvfd8n wrote
Reply to comment by Tap_Z_or_R_Twice in Oldest tartan found to date back to 16th Century - A scrap of fabric found in a Highland peat bog 40 years ago is likely to be the oldest tartan ever discovered in Scotland, new tests have established. by ArtOak
Braveheart was the nickname for King Robert the Bruce, not William Wallace.
And when Wallace was executed it was worse than the film: Four different horses, one per limb, dragged Wallace for miles to his execution. He was hanged almost to the point of death, before being taken down and horrifically mutilated. While still breathing, his genitals were sliced off, his entrails pulled out, and his innards burned in front of him. It was only then Wallace was decapitated and dismembered. Wallace's head was placed on London Bridge, while the four quarters of his body were placed in Stirling, Aberdeen, Berwick, and Newcastle.