SVP Technology at Fiserv; large scale system architecture/infrastructure, tech geek, reading, learning, hiking, GeoCaching, ham radio, married, kids
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A Tongue-in-Cheek Look Back at Broderbund's 'The Print Shop'

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JayM
4 minutes ago
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Ahhhh, The Print Shop.
Atlanta, GA
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The Trap of "I am not an Extrovert"

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JayM
10 hours ago
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This post is all over the place. Some is exactly right... some I am afraid the person leans more of a natural extrovert than they realize, or is adaptable to situations, and expects everyone else should be as well.

Also, they haven't seen the top exec levels of companies yet. At the top, it is all FULL BLOWN EXTROVERTS pretty much and they cannot understand Introverts at all from what I've seen - or like this person they believe everyone can "learn extroversion skills" and dismiss those who don't.

Unless an Introvert has done massive work on their communications skills and has the desire to "move ahead" I just don't see the reality of the believe that folks have a pride in introversion.
Atlanta, GA
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Bald Eagle Officially Declared US National Bird After 250 Years

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The bald eagle is now officially the national bird of the US, after President Joe Biden signed a law on Christmas Eve bestowing the honour upon the white-headed and yellow-beaked bird of prey. BBC News: The bird has been a national emblem in the US for years, appearing on the Great Seal of the US -- used on US documents -- since 1782. But it had not been officially designated to be the national bird until Congress passed the bill last week, sending it to Biden's desk to be signed. "For nearly 250 years, we called the bald eagle the national bird when it wasn't," said Jack Davis, co-chair of the National Bird Initiative for the National Eagle Center, in a statement. "But now the title is official, and no bird is more deserving." Not everyone has always agreed about the national status of the bald eagle. Founding Father Benjamin Franklin objected to the creature being chosen to represent the country, calling it a "bird of bad moral character."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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JayM
10 hours ago
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Atlanta, GA
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A Minecraft server written in COBOL

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JayM
10 hours ago
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Why. :P
Atlanta, GA
denismm
10 hours ago
There’s a “why” section in the readme! Impressive that it’s their first COBOL project.
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High housing prices are caused by government's zoning laws

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JayM
10 hours ago
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Atlanta, GA
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Esperanto: The Language That Hoped to Unite the World

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Close up of a Dutch etymology dictionary showing Esperanto, and a candle

Christmas: a good time to broach a topic of hope. We’re talking Esperanto. This language that spurred the hope it one day could hack the barriers between people, eliminating war and miscommunication. The video below unpacks the history of this linguistic marvel. Esperanto was a constructed language dreamed up in 1887 by Ludwik Zamenhof, a Polish-Russian eye doctor with a knack for linguistics and great ideals. If you’re a little into linguistics yourself, you’ll sure know the name stems from the Latin esperi: to hope.

Inspired by the chaos of multilingual strife in his hometown, Zamenhof created Esperanto to unite humanity under a single, simple, easy-to-learn tongue. With just 16 grammar rules, modular word-building, and no pesky exceptions — looking at you, English — Esperanto was a linguistic hack ahead of its time.

But Esperanto wasn’t just a novelty—it almost became the lingua franca of diplomacy. In 1920, Iran proposed Esperanto as the official language of the League of Nations, but the French vetoed it, fearing their language’s global dominance was at risk. From there, Esperanto’s journey took a darker turn as both Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia persecuted its speakers. Despite this, Esperanto persisted, surfacing in quirky corners of culture, from William Shatner’s Esperanto-only horror film Incubus to its inclusion on NASA’s Voyager Golden Record.

Fast-forward to the digital age: Esperanto is thriving on online learning platforms, where over a million learners explore its minimalist elegance. It appears at places in various editions of Grand Theft Auto. It has even inspired modern makers to create new constructed languages, like Loglan, Toki Pona, and even Klingon. Could Esperanto—or any reimagined language—rise again to unite us? For curious minds, watch the video here.

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JayM
22 hours ago
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Heh. Know what language is even more thriving in the Internet? And the world over? English. Not because it is superior or anything. Just because it is useful.
Atlanta, GA
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