thomaswilson-sveltekit/.netlify/server/chunks/2021-02-19-things-i-learned-28-9e389556.js

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const metadata = {
"title": "Things I learned this week #28",
"author": "Thomas Wilson",
"date": "2021-02-19T00:00:00.000Z",
"draft": false,
"slug": "2021-02-19-things-i-learned-28",
"tags": ["things-i-learned"]
};
const _2021_02_19_things_i_learned_28 = (0, import_index_10ac95e2.c)(($$result, $$props, $$bindings, slots) => {
return `<ul><li><strong>This collective noun</strong>: If I was to make a list of small-talk and first date conversation topics it would go something like this: food, the tube, podcasts or books, and then collective nouns for animals. How many times have I been told the words \u201Ca parliament of owls\u201D in my life? I don\u2019t know, but I love re-remembering every time. This week I learned a new collective noun, and I\u2019m sorry if you heard this one already: a scurry of squirrels. Of also a \u201Cdray\u201D of squirrels. But I think \u201CScurry\u201D is cuter and definitely deserves the headline. (<a href="${"https://www.quora.com/What-is-a-group-of-squirrels-called"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>)</li>
<li><strong>This early gay selfie</strong>: This week I came a picture of some early gay rights activist. Two handsome Victorian looking gentlemen holding a sign which read \u201CNot married but willing to be\u201D. Which is beautiful in sentiment and heartbreaking in reality. I think it popped up on one of my social feeds, and I hunted it down. It looks like the photo re-surfaced last year when Hugh Nini and Neal Treadwell published <em>Loving : A Photographic History of Men in Love 1850s-1950s</em> (<a href="${"https://www.hive.co.uk/Product/Hugh-Nini/Loving--A-Photographic-History-of-Men-in-Love-1850s-1950s/25003310"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">buy it on Hive (UK)</a>). The Guardian took some of the photos from this piece and published them with some nice art direction on their website. The two un-named gentlemen I saw were photographed circa 1900s in Provenance, USA. Also of note is a very early selfie, entitled \u201CIn the mirror\u201D - it\u2019s a photograph of two men taken in a mirror with a simply darling 1900s camera on the table between them. In a time when they couldn\u2019t have photos taken or developed by anyone (what with homosexuality being illegal), it makes a lot of sense. (<a href="${"https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2020/oct/16/men-in-love-from-the-1850s-nini-treadwell-in-pictures"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>)</li>
<li><strong>This colour</strong>: The browser has some default colours, like <code style="${"color: black; background-color:white;"}">black</code> or <code style="${"color: blue; background-color:white;"}">blue</code>. Some of them are a little odd, like <code style="${"color: indianred;background-color:white;"}">indianred</code> or <code style="${"color: mediumquamarine"}">mediumquamarine</code>, but they\u2019re there. You can use whatever colour you want in the browser (and people do), but you have to define them with computer-readable code like <code style="${"color: #BD1A0F"}">#BD1A0F</code> or <code style="${"color:#0FBD7E;"}">rgb(15,189,126)</code>. So being a human-readable colour name isn\u2019t the usual or standard approach. CSS comes with <code style="${"color:rebeccapurple;background-color: white;"}">rebeccapurple</code>. This colour, which was the colour used in the original branding for Twitch, the online streaming platform, is named in memory of Rebecca Alison Meyer, the six year old daughter of Eric Meyer. Eric is one of the pioneers in standardising CSS, one of the three truly foundational and essential web technologies. This particular shade of purple was Rebecca\u2019s colour. After Rebecca passed away from brain cancer, this colour was added to the CSS standard, and so comes with every browser, as a beautiful little reminder and honorary to Rebecca. (<a href="${"https://medium.com/@valgaze/the-hidden-purple-memorial-in-your-web-browser-7d84813bb416"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>)</li>
<li><strong>This French translation</strong>: You know pie charts? The worst form of data visualisation (@ me you cowards). In French these can be translated to <em>diagramme circulaire</em> (formal) or <em>camembert</em> (informal). Yeah, it\u2019s a funny joke: ha ha the French love cheese they saw a graph and saw cheese *twiddles moustache*. But we looked at exactly the same thing and saw pie. What does that say about us? Would you rather have a pie or some fresh bread with a baked camembert and garlic? Learning this fact made me happy, and then made me sad that my culture just doesn\u2019t love camembert like the French do. (<a href="${"https://www.quora.com/How-do-we-say-%E2%80%98pie-chart%E2%80%99-in-French"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>)</li>
<li><strong>This health advice from Leondardo</strong>: One of the most famous figures of the Italian renaissance, Leonardo was one cool guy. He had a pretty varied mental diet: anatomy, fluid dynamics, natural science, art (obviously), inventing underwater breathing gear, optics, engineering, and so on. In one of his notes he detailed a mixture of mental and physical advice for staying healthy. Go and <a href="${"https://www.pbs.org/food/the-history-kitchen/leonardo-da-vinci/"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">read it</a>. The advice is surprisingly modern, reasonable, and holistic. He advises to remain standing after eating, which is <a href="${"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3119587/"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">good advice</a> for weight loss. \u201CBeware anger and avoid stuffy air\u201D, the latter of these points is something with a <a href="${"https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/when-fresh-air-went-out-fashion-hospitals-180963710/"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">surprisingly detailed history</a>. Similarly he advocates to \u201Crest your head and keep your mind cheerful\u201D. Leonardo understood well that our physical and mental health, our sleep, food, and physical activity all contribute to making us happier. That\u2019s not to say it\u2019s all good advice: he calls medicine \u201Cill advised\u201D, says exercise shouldn\u2019t be \u201Ctoo strenuous\u201D so as with everything, take it with a punch of salt. (<a href="${"https://www.pbs.org/food/the-history-kitchen/leonardo-da-vinci/"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>)</li></ul>
<h2>What I\u2019ve had on Rotation</h2>
<ul><li><strong>Something New</strong>: <em>Dark Days</em> by Yard Act (2021, Indie Rock). This is a four track EP from a new-ish band from Leeds, UK. It\u2019s punk, and genuinely quite funny, painting a really rich portraits of characters in sometimes-singing-sometimes-talking tones. It reminds me a little bit of The Streets in the lyric/narrative blurred line. I am really excited to see the band drop an LP! (<a href="${"https://songwhip.com/yardact/darkdays"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">links</a>)</li>
<li><strong>Something Old</strong>: <em>Bits of Naaz</em> by Naaz (2018, Pop). This fresh, clean pop sound sounds like happier times to me. It\u2019s lovely songwriting and and pleasing melodies. I\u2019m always a fan when someone contrasts obviously drum-machine beats over more organic samples and Naaz does that nicely throughout this album. (<a href="${"https://songwhip.com/naaz/bitsofnaaz"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">links</a>)</li></ul>`;
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