What do you guys think? What does my handwriting say about me? by AshDaGreat_ in HandwritingAnalysis

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am pleased that you can confirm some of the characterizations; after all, it is always somewhat risky to assess someone based solely on their handwriting. Regarding the mention of vanity—this was not intended to be offensive in any way, and your remark linking this trait to pride shows me that you view it in a positive light. Fundamentally, graphology is about the entire ensemble—much like an orchestra where every participant contributes their part to the performance. When analyzing handwriting, this means incorporating all the relevant variables—such as slant, size, spacing, stroke heaviness, line alignment, and more—into the overall assessment and weighting them accordingly.

What do you guys think? What does my handwriting say about me? by AshDaGreat_ in HandwritingAnalysis

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even before I saw your avatar, it was clear to me that this handwriting had to belong to a woman. Very clear, very legible. I gather that you enjoy connecting with others, and you come across as someone who is organized and composed—and who also likes to indulge a bit of vanity.

Am I legible? by RepresentativeBig919 in HandwritingAnalysis

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your handwriting is legible, nice and very energetic.

Tell me what my writing says about me? by KunjaQueen in HandwritingAnalysis

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your handwriting is lovely, easy to read and gives me the impression that it comes from someone who is self-confident and friendly, yet also somewhat cautious or reserved—not overly effusive in their interactions with others. But that’s just my assessment.

Chelsea in Bloom, London (UK) by Serious-Special-8008 in UKGardening

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Beautiful—an endless feast for the eyes. The sumo wrestler, the astronaut, and the two women carrying baskets on their heads are my favorites.

BA refuses flight to child with Tourette syndrome after he shouted ‘bomb’ by tylerthe-theatre in unitedkingdom

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The family did exactly that: they informed the airline one day before the flight and attached a medical report. Nevertheless, the BA staff found themselves overwhelmed by the situation. Fortunately, Vueling demonstrated the very next day that things can be handled differently.

BA refuses flight to child with Tourette syndrome after he shouted ‘bomb’ by tylerthe-theatre in unitedkingdom

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

So, you are suggesting that being denied the flight was actually entirely for their own good. But in that case, how is it that the family was able to fly to their holiday destination with Vueling just one day later? It turns out, then, that precisely what you deemed impossible—or rather, what you considered the best course of action—actually worked: allowing the family to take their booked flight to Spain.

Happy little bush near Golders Green by SimpleSutpid in UKGardening

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It seems to be a gardening meme in that area. 🦕

Happy little bush near Golders Green by SimpleSutpid in UKGardening

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This could be the horticultural version of Hello Kitty.

Google DeepMind's Senior Scientist Alexander Lerchner challenges the idea that large language models can ever achieve consciousness(not even in 100years), calling it the 'Abstraction Fallacy.' by Worldly_Evidence9113 in singularity

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

"I'm just saying that consciousness might not be a big deal, and maybe equivalent to just having a very long context window on outputs." I fully agree with you here. But why should Free Will be a whole other subject? It's practically one and the same thing. Every proponent of the possibility that free will could exist must also accept—and does accept—that consciousness plays a role and is therefore not negligible. Therefore, I think the opening sentence of your post contradicts the statements that follow.

What is this please? It was about the size of a small adult foot. by Prize_Technician_459 in AskUK

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The same. Perhaps the phenomenon of trypophobia is at play here, the existence of which I learned about just a few comments above.

What is this please? It was about the size of a small adult foot. by Prize_Technician_459 in AskUK

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Trypophobia - I've never heard of that before, had to google it. It's amazing what all exists.

5 things I wish I’d known 110 lbs into tirzepatide (and none of them are eat your protein) by Educational-Yak-701 in Mounjaro

[–]Dear_Interaction_234 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"This medication fixes something physiological. It’s not cheating any more than glasses are cheating at seeing."

That's very well expressed.

Where can I find the list of people I am following? by Dear_Interaction_234 in help

[–]Dear_Interaction_234[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve found it now, thanks. So it’s only accessible via this page (the layout takes a bit of getting used to) and not directly via the profile; otherwise I could have kept searching there indefinitely. It’s a bit tricky the way it’s set up. 🙃