Sujet : Re: The joy of FORTRAN
De : bowman (at) *nospam* montana.com (rbowman)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.miscDate : 17. Mar 2025, 22:36:23
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <m3riumFn89eU5@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
User-Agent : Pan/0.160 (Toresk; )
On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 01:39:37 -0400, c186282 wrote:
Um ... before my mother's eyesight got too bad, she was complaining
about a "mystery" novel she got that was writ by a man who knew just
TOO much about mountain climbing. The amount of technical detail from
his expertise kinda jammed-up the main story.
Basically "man-splaining" - but in paperback
He doesn't really man-splain but uses nautical terminology that most
readers would gloss over. There is a joke in sailing circles about a
newbie who was instructed to let out the sheet but not make it fast who
went into slow motion.
I forget which mystery author laid a little trap for his readers when he
described the character releasing the safety on a revolver. When the
complaints rolled in he pointed out he had written in one of the very few
revolvers to have had safeties.
In any case, the Vikings/Rus were VERY ROUGH PEOPLE for quite awhile.
Half, really over half, of my ancestry is Nordic (the volume of rapes
likely mean most of the rest is heavily so too). Wasn't until around
the Norman Conquest that Euro-style "sophistication" crept in.
According to 23AndMe my ancestry is over 96% German which corresponds to
what I know about my ancestors, which isn't much. The oddity is the Y
chromosome, I M253. Currently the highest concentration is over 50% of
the males in Västra Götaland, Sweden, and it spreads out from there.
The haplogroup is associated with the early hunter-gatherers, not the
farmers that moved in from the mid-east causing the neighborhood to go to
hell.