The Biblical “magi” are not the same as the “Persian clan” referenced in your source. The Biblical word is simply a generic term for “astrologers” or “magicians” but which is rooted in the Persian meaning. In fact, the singular “magus” is used in reference to a Jew who practiced some form of magic in Acts 13:6-8.
The word “magi” is plural for “magus” which means “astrologer”. In the Bible, God condemned all forms of astrology or similar “fortune telling” (e.g. see Deuteronomy 18:10-12). Thus, these astrologers were not some sort of God-ordained “wise men” as many believe. The “star” the astrologers initially followed was for the purpose of leading them and the child to King Herod, who planned to kill the child. God eventually intervened though to foil what was initially an evil plan.
I don’t know anything about using Elm in practice but I’ve been curating a newsletter[1] for front-end developers for almost 10 years now. I often share new scripts, plugins, and tools related to different JavaScript libraries. Over 450 issues later, I think I’ve only shared an Elm-related tool around 4 times. I don’t think Elm is dead, but it’s certainly not something I see come across the literally hundreds of sources I scour every month when curating the newsletter content.
Yeah I noticed that while refreshing because the same one came up again. Seems to go against the whole spirit of the “doesn’t exist” theme if it’s not auto generated IMO.
> SpotifAI is a system that uses deep learning to automatically create playlists from user-submitted playlists. Its algorithm has been trained on millions of playlists from Spotify.
Which is pretty cool sounding and has a cool name.
Hm, I’ve never noticed that before. I’m assuming maybe it’s your 2nd theory that this happens if you enter both a URL and text? Maybe it’s a new HN feature?
Nice. Very difficult though, even for a former Scrabble expert like me, :)
My suggestion is to not remove the letters as they’re typed. It’s very jarring and unusable that way. You should just “disable” the used ones and keep them in the same place.
Also, is there a way to remove letters from the play area after they’re used? Or start from a clean slate without refreshing the page?
And whoever posted it put a second slash at the end of the URL, apparently to trick the HN system into allowing it to be posted again. I’m not saying I care, I’m just pointing out that it seems like that’s what was done, because I believe you can only post a link again after a certain time has passed.
The nested divs themselves would not affect SEO. The problem may be caused by divs being used in place of proper semantic tags, which may have an effect. But even then, the affect would be minimal. And I’m not sure what you mean by certain “weak devices” being affected. I’ve been writing and blogging about HTML for 15 years and have never heard of that.
Where did you get that info? Reddit seems to be slow for me right now, so I couldn't search the subreddit you mentioned, but all of the I'm Not Norm videos have the following Instagram linked:
I don’t trust anything reported about North Korea. For all we know, the authorities themselves smuggled it in simply to make an example of a few, to maintain the status quo of fearful obedience. There’s just no way to verify anything that’s reported about NK.
> All clinical trials suffer from risks of bias in their design and conduct, as assessed by the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2.0 tool that assesses trial biases with the grades of “some concern, low, moderate, high, or serious”. Although one group of authors has assessed many of the trials as having moderate to severe risks of bias, performing meta-analyses of these trials can more accurately detect the true effects despite individual trial biases. Multiple groups, including ours, have performed meta-analyses of these trials, with all groups finding consistent benefits amongst the trials. In fact, the consistency of trial results from both sets of randomized and observational controlled trials from varied centers and countries and trial sizes and disease phases lend even more validity to the estimates of benefit.