After work today, I sat outside under the trees, listening to podcasts and eating lunch. It felt so great to be out in the warm weather and fresh air. I've been feeling happy in general lately.
One of the podcasts I was listening to (NPR Science Friday) is about some of the first recorded sounds, some created by french scientists before Edison developed phonographic technology. Some of those first sounds are actually on this website (
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).
There are actually photoautograms sounds from 1857 on it. It's not very discernible, but I still find it interesting. The first guy who really developed this kind of technology was a french scientist. He wasn't interested really in the idea of records. Mostly, he just wanted to translate sound into a record on paper. I guess that was where he and Edison differed.
Oh, and I went with a friend lately to a good Indian restaurant downtown (Gandhi's). I wasn't sure if that was the one
(e:James) had suggested to me, but I liked it. They made excellent Naan(?) bread and a chicken dish that I can't remember the name of.
(e:Paul)- thanks for helping me with the links! I always have trouble with that.
(e:jenks)- I think he is biologically a man. I find it really confusing, to be honest. I was curious if anyone else here new anything about it.
i couldn't find the basic story- is he really a man? like XY chromosomes? I just don't get it. Why? Just to make news?
The only "male pregnancy" I've heard of before is a woman who had a partial sex change operation, but retained her sex organs, but was living as a man.
Better than this :::link:::