The same point expressed beautifully by Jocko Willink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyMEQMt6yAw
2 is possible (Preferences > Interface > uncheck "Allow only one instance").
Your rare awareness makes me hopeful that it's withing your power to turn your life around. Anyways, this makes a good argument why IQ is largely inconsequential in the real life:…
They are not organized by BPM range.
This is discussed in the book Incognito by David Eagleman. I remember reading about someone learning to "see" with their tongue. Along the same line, his team developed a vest which translates information into vibration…
It reminds me of how old German books written in Schwabacher used roman typeface for Latin and other foreign words. In this case, it was intentional, but I have always found it a bit irritating from the aesthetic…
I especially like the clever analogy with genetics. Douglas Hofstadter said something along the lines of analogy being more powerful when the two concepts it connects are otherwise very distant from each other.
One concept I really like for teaching Go (and I think it would be a great addition to this site) is the "Go teaching ladder": http://gtl.xmp.net/ It lets you submit a record of your game and people who are just a bit…
The same point expressed beautifully by Jocko Willink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyMEQMt6yAw
2 is possible (Preferences > Interface > uncheck "Allow only one instance").
Your rare awareness makes me hopeful that it's withing your power to turn your life around. Anyways, this makes a good argument why IQ is largely inconsequential in the real life:…
They are not organized by BPM range.
This is discussed in the book Incognito by David Eagleman. I remember reading about someone learning to "see" with their tongue. Along the same line, his team developed a vest which translates information into vibration…
It reminds me of how old German books written in Schwabacher used roman typeface for Latin and other foreign words. In this case, it was intentional, but I have always found it a bit irritating from the aesthetic…
I especially like the clever analogy with genetics. Douglas Hofstadter said something along the lines of analogy being more powerful when the two concepts it connects are otherwise very distant from each other.
One concept I really like for teaching Go (and I think it would be a great addition to this site) is the "Go teaching ladder": http://gtl.xmp.net/ It lets you submit a record of your game and people who are just a bit…