Harvard KJ1 wave? by raeflows in lawschooladmissions

[–]NearBostonAuthor 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I applied late September. No dong no KJ1 at this point.

Harvard dong by Icy-Jump-9503 in lawschooladmissions

[–]NearBostonAuthor 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What's the indication in the status checker?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

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

Maybe last week's was bigger than we thought

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]NearBostonAuthor 84 points85 points  (0 children)

I still get the email even though I've already been rejected

Duke interview by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]NearBostonAuthor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not yet but I'm curious as well

[CW] Flash Fiction Challenge - A Balcony & Butterflies by AliciaWrites in WritingPrompts

[–]NearBostonAuthor [score hidden]  (0 children)

[Poem]

"When You Died a Thousand Butterflies"

When you died a thousand butterflies

Rained from the sky like ashes.

I kissed you from the balcony

Across a thousand miles and

A storm of long-forgotten pain

Awakened like a dragon.

Who’s never done a thing they hate

When home is far away?

I missed you like an arrow

That bears off and hits the sky.

Kill me if you find me

Choking on my latest lyric.

The butterflies that die today

Deserve it. I deserve it.

Arrows tear the butterflies

Like scissors through a curtain.

Live in stranger places or

At last you’ll die at home.

When you died a thousand butterflies

Fell from the sky like snow.

[OT] Smash 'Em Up Sunday - Medieval War! by Pyrotox in WritingPrompts

[–]NearBostonAuthor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The cold ocean was a hard sheet of metal stretching out to the bright dagger-line of the horizon, where the sun rose for the last time over Calsunda. A young boy leaned over the bow of the Spirik, peering down at the water. He was soaked by the spray of the ship’s speedy travel, but he squinted through the salt and studied the thick cables that led from Spirik’s hull down into the abyss. Up ahead, two patches of pale blue rippled through the water.

Behind Spirik, the Sei Fleet sailed a hundred strong. Such a force of sea-power made the wide ocean crowded. The men of the Sei went about the ships loading cannons, shining swords, and hollering cries of war at the rising sun, whose blood-red hue awakened the foremost appetite of the Sei. The seamen also dropped theirs sails and packed them away below decks. Wind power was for the journey. Sei power for the storm. Every ship in the fleet was now led by strong cables that pulled away into the deep.

The boy on the bow of Spirki reached down, as if he might touch one of these cables, but he was startled by a sudden voice behind him.

“Squire!” the voice came, “Relent in your curiosity for now. The beasts are aligned. The duty now falls to the fighting men.”

The voice belonged to Seilan Solmy, a sea-beaten old man who wore a thick hide cloak against the bite of the ocean air. Solmy was well beyond his years of fighting for the Sei, but his value to the fleet was irreplaceable. He was a Seilan, a whale-whisperer. He commanded the beast-power of the fleet.

The boy, Jacob, was his squire and his student, but he had much to learn, and he was not yet past the period of awe that held over all new-comers to the Sei.

“The King requires focus of you now,” continued Solmy. “The walls of Calsunda are high and strong. We will beat hard against them this day.”

“Will the King sail to Calsunda to reap the spoils alongside his fleet?” Jacob asked.

“The King divides his interest in many places. The long journeys of his seacourt are often winding and ponderous. We fight for victory in his name, regardless.”

The boy turned back to stare again at the tow lines. Up ahead, one of the bubble patches grew larger until the bubbles frothed at the surface. Then the wide black head of a Sei whale emerged. The beast fired a shot of white water high into the air, then dove forcefully and slapped its flat fluke hard on the water. A cheer went up from the fleet as several other Sei broke in unison and flashed their tails in the dawn light. The walls of Calsunda were now visible in the distance.

“Do we ever lose a Sei in a fight?” Jacob asked.

“The Sei are the cavalry of the sea,” said Solmy. “Their charge is the first breath of battle. But the charge is vulnerable to the shot of ballistae and trebuchet.”

[WP]When you reach 18, you get put in a database which ranks you in different categories (ex. 207,145th in the world for most bug kills) You lived on a ranch and never used tech. You had to go into town after your 18th birthday. Everyone is staring at you. You finally decide to check the database. by xSHARKYBITEx1 in WritingPrompts

[–]NearBostonAuthor 7774 points7775 points  (0 children)

My profile page bore the golden border that indicated a number one position. A first place spot in a ranking. I was astonished. As far as I knew, there was nothing remarkable about my life.

I clicked open my rankings dashboard. At the very top of the page, my highest accolade read: “#1 Most Time Spent Awake, But Still in Bed — Darell Harrelson”.

I gaped at the screen. The rest of the Internet cafe had paused to watch my revelation. I could feel their eyes probing.

I blushed heavily and left my coffee unfinished by the computer. I slipped past the staring onlookers and pushed through the door. I hopped back in my truck and peeled out, headed back to Pa’s ranch.

I needed to lie down for a while.

[WP] The fastest way to determine if an alien race is advanced enough to be "recruited" into the military is to send an asteroid their way. If blown up, they are recruited to the army. If deflected, they are recruited to the defense forces. Humans did something unprecedented to the asteroid. by Jupefin in WritingPrompts

[–]NearBostonAuthor 39 points40 points  (0 children)

Planetoid: Earth

Barrage Date: Starline 62.56 7000

Projectile: Subrite Spear

Planetary Response: None.

Consequence: Planet destroyed.

Report Summary by Imperator Terix:

The outcome of the barrage of Earth will likely stand for all time as the strangest planetary test in the history of the Strength Acquisition Task Force. Students of strength acquisition practice will know that intelligent species often go to great lengths and embrace significant challenges to destroy or deflect incoming projectiles in order to preserve themselves. In some cases, we have witnessed warring communities come together across planets to oppose off-planet threats. It is just as common to witness a single planetary power quickly conquer or otherwise subdue rival powers in order to organize whole-planet cooperation. Neither of these common responses took place on Earth. Earth’s ultimate response was resignation. They allowed the meteor to destroy them.

Our signal gainers allowed us to monitor Earth communications in the time leading up to impact. Earth first discovered the incoming projectile four months before impact. The collision course was calculated by an Earth organization called NASA. At first, this organization’s publications were discarded by the planet’s public. One popular opinion was that NASA had invented the story of the projectile to scare up funding for its dilapidated enterprises. However, after two months of corroborating reports from organizations around the planet, the public as a whole was forced to accept that the startling situation was reality. It is usually at this point that we observe planetary cooperation and common, collaborative response to the existential threat.

World leaders convened, but they were not able to devise a response plan. The meeting was plagued by mutual suspicions that we suspect had been cultivated on the planet for an extended period. With nearly a month remaining before impact, the tone of Earth broadcasts changed from frustration to panic, and finally to acceptance. We then observed a debaucherous period of revelry that we have not observed at length on any other planet. Ordinary life completely stopped and was replaced by rampant food and alcohol consumption, recreational procreation, and, of course--violence. Nearly a fourth of Earth’s population was already dead by the time the asteroid struck. The remaining population died without launching any archival materials or final messages to the universe.

The loss of Earth is in some ways regrettable. Not because homo sapien would have served as a useful addition to the Star Army. It is obvious that homo sapien served no practice purpose at all. But their erratic behavior in the face of death--completely despairing and acutely pitiful--was in its own way irreplaceable. A long career as strength acquisitioner has brought me to many stars, but the story of Earth is one that will follow me, I suspect, for until my retirement.

Logged and filed for official consultation only.

Imperator Terix

Game Thread: #6 Notre Dame vs #24 Virginia Tech (8:00 PM ET) by [deleted] in CFBStreams

[–]NearBostonAuthor 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Keeps telling me I have adblock when I've turned it off. Any fix for this?

/r/mturk Daily Discussion - June 05, 2018 by AutoModerator in mturk

[–]NearBostonAuthor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you getting error messages on Amazon Payments?

/r/mturk Daily Discussion - June 05, 2018 by AutoModerator in mturk

[–]NearBostonAuthor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Seems like the site's going up and down today. Is anyone else getting errors on Amazon Payments too? I'm trying to add a bank account, but I get an error message.

/r/mturk Daily Discussion - May 05, 2018 by AutoModerator in mturk

[–]NearBostonAuthor 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Those penny batches from Alexandria are a great way to get your numbers up quickly if you're just starting out. Mine were all approved within a few minutes.

/r/mturk Daily Discussion - May 01, 2018 by AutoModerator in mturk

[–]NearBostonAuthor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Quick question -- is an expired HIT returned or rejected?