#MySummary not AI
It was a #LongWinded rant by #AnOldMan
To fellow #SeniorCitizens
In a very expensive #NursingHome
The only surprising thing to me is that they can control their bladders and bowels for that long

"The latest fundraising scheme is a chance to book a seat for the end of the show on 4 September 2640 (tickets are transferable)."

https://www.theguardian.com/music/2024/feb/04/john-cage-gig-2640-german-church-halberstadt-st-burchardi-

#Music #Germany #JohnCage #LongWinded

‘There’s a certain madness to it’ … fans await new chord in John Cage gig with 616 years left to run

Admirers of the avant-garde composer’s work hope the concert in the German church will stay the course – all the way to 2640

The Guardian

@midgephoto You can do whatever you’d like! ;)

I didn’t mean to be so prescriptive, though reading it again, I sounded awful bossy.

Putting hashtags in the main text just means screen readers read the word “hashtag” every time, so yes, the fewer in the text the better, I think. One “hashtag” in the text is far less disruptive than every other word, for example.

The only real case I can see for it, though, is if you’re running out of characters in your post, like this one! #Longwinded

A reply to @joel_olbrich on the “QWERTY” effect. Apologies to Joel.I don’t know (yet) how to make replies public. BEGINS
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English language keyboards have a letter-layout begining QWERTY... apparently because this order facilitated the mechanical operation of early typewriters. There was no linguistic logic in the design: there seem to be several layouts that would be easier to learn and faster to use. But the early manufacturers standardised, by default, on the QWERTY layout and it became universal. No typewriter having a different layout would sell because users had accommodated to the idiosyncrasy of QWERTY. The “QWERTY Effect” is, by analogy, any structure, however idiosyncratic, that has been entrenched by use. But, on reflection, the “Twitter effect” is not due so much to its QWERTY-ness but to the natural monopoly effect of network scale economies. First movers in many network spaces (railways, airlines, telephone networks, Twitter) who secure large scale quickly can often block new entrants simply because the scale of investments needed to compete against the reach of their established network is too large for new entrants (who have no customers, at first) to justify. #longwinded
@gme see the next post. Yeah, I'm #LongWinded. I'm a blogger. Not apologizing, just saying ;)