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Education Writer | Aspiring Narrative Designer | Science Fangirl | teaching myself computer science one kids’ game at a time | Mom of 3

I'm fascinated by the Inuit-Yupik-Unangan languages in Alaska, Canada and Greenland. There are many of these languages: they ring much of the Arctic Ocean. I just learned that they use a base 20 system for numbers, with a 'sub-base' of 5. That is, quantities are counted in scores (twenties) with intermediate numerals for 5, 10, and 15. This makes a lot of sense if you look at your fingers and toes.

But the Inuit didn't have a written form of their number system - until the early 1990s, when high school students in the town of Kaktovik, Alaska invented one! There were just 9 students at this small school, and they all joined in.

They used 5 principles:

• Visual simplicity: The symbols should be easy to remember.

• Iconicity: There should be a clear relationship between the symbols and their meanings.

• Efficiency: It should be easy to write the symbols without lifting the pencil from the paper.

• Distinctiveness: There should be no confusion between this system and Arabic numerals.

• Aesthetics: They should be pleasing to look at.

They decided that the symbol for zero should look like crossed arms, meaning that nothing was being counted.

This was the start of quite a tale!

(1/n)

My child just wrote a really fascinating origin story for a fictional country that's equal parts Russian and Tlingit, whose heritage is deeply rooted in sustainable resource management. He wrote it WITH chatGPT-4...

It's the 2nd such story he's written since trialing chatGPT-4 a few days ago. The first is about a boy living alone in a hardwood hammock in the Everglades in the 1920s.

I don't know what to think about all of it...

I was promised a sci-fi future where robots would do all the menial tasks so that humans could focus on creating art and instead you assholes built robots to do the art so we all have to fight over the jobs doing menial tasks, good job.
I'm at the point where I'm applying to speak for $10/hr so an AI can learn my accent. I didn't get it, by the way.