That's exactly what the BBC had to say about it too. Bad luck!! I wonder who did make some bucks out of it. Presumably the pamphlet printers
Chat
Re: Chat
Got this via forwarded email, thought it was pretty fun (although the clear-wings are really tough sometimes!)
My average time was 4.13 seconds.Hi everyone,
>
> In need of a pause in this busy month? Go on butterfly hunting for a few
> minutes!
>
> As part of a project led by researchers from CEFE (Montpellier, France),
> MNHN (Paris, France), and INRIA (Bordeaux, France) and the University of
> North Carolina (US), *we have developed a citizen science game to better
> understand camouflage* methods and their effectiveness against
> predation: https://findthebutterflyv2.cleverapps.io/
>
> If you have played the previous game "find the butterfly", no problem,
> just let us know by checking the box and play the new game! These are
> two independent games and your help will be precious this time too!
> If you have already played this very game, indicate it, but your
> contribution will not be taken into account. *We need inexperienced
> hunters to increase our sample size. *
>
> Play the role of a hungry predator looking for butterflies camouflaged
> in their environment and click as quickly as possible on the butterfly
> hidden in the image!
> To play, it's easy: take a card of the format of a credit card (so that
> we have an idea of the real size of the images on your screen), your
> favorite computer (the game is not designed to be played on a
> smartphone) and let's go: it will only take you about 10 minutes!
>
>
> Please share this link with your networks, friends, family, and
> colleagues...
>
> We need a lot of responses from all age groups, including children! The
> more players, the more consistent the results!
>
> Have fun and thank you for your contribution!
>
- pommystuart
- Posts: 1814
- Joined: Mon May 18, 2020 12:48 am
- Location: Cooranbong, NSW, Australia.
Re: Chat
First time I got 8.16 average. (Forgot to maximize screen.)
Second time 5.41 at max screen.
I still could not find some of the ones I missed even when the circle showed me.
Second time 5.41 at max screen.
I still could not find some of the ones I missed even when the circle showed me.
- pommystuart
- Posts: 1814
- Joined: Mon May 18, 2020 12:48 am
- Location: Cooranbong, NSW, Australia.
Re: Chat
Absolutely nothing to do with this forum but I found this 19min clip very interesting. We have been down one of the "Silo Trails" in Victoria. The trails have been developed to help dying towns attract visitors.
I hope you can get Australian Iview channel.
https://iview.abc.net.au/show/beautiful ... 108Q005S00
I hope you can get Australian Iview channel.
https://iview.abc.net.au/show/beautiful ... 108Q005S00
Re: Chat
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!! Cheers to another year! Thank you everyone!
Re: Chat
Seems fishy to me. https://www.etymonline.com/word/log#etymonline_v_43590 is all I've ever heard.Randi wrote: ↑Tue Sep 21, 2021 2:40 pmhttps://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/o/origin-navy-terminology.html wrote:LOG BOOK
Today any bound record kept on a daily basis aboard ship is called a "log." Originally, records were kept on the sailing ships by inscribing information onto shingles cut from logs and hinged so they opened like books. When paper became more readily available, "log books" were manufactured from paper and bound. Shingles were relegated to naval museums -- but the slang term stuck.
Re: Chat
I have to admit that it seemed a bit unlikely to me too
Jamestown wrote at least part of the log on a slate and then copied it to paper at the end of the day - at least most days
Jamestown wrote at least part of the log on a slate and then copied it to paper at the end of the day - at least most days
Bob wrote:Mon Jul 18, 2016 2:41 pm January 17, 1862
Hampton Roads
This day's remarks + columns
was accidentally erased from the
log slate before being copied.
They're keeping the rough log on a chalkboard?
https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorag ... 67_116.jpg
Bob wrote:Wed Aug 03, 2016 10:45 pm October 22, 1862
Another accidental erasure of the log slate before copying it...
https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorag ... 67_063.jpg
Re: Chat
That's all I've ever heard too. Shingles hinged to open like books sounds very strange.krwood wrote: ↑Wed Sep 29, 2021 11:12 pm Seems fishy to me. https://www.etymonline.com/word/log#etymonline_v_43590 is all I've ever heard.
But then again, what was that old saying about truth and fiction, and their relative strangeness to each other?
Re: Chat
I agree with both of you. If it hadn't been posted in Naval History and Heritage Command I would not have posted it at all.
Digging further...
The Sailor's Word-Book, by Admiral W. H. Smyth, 1867 says:
LOG-BOARD. Two boards shutting together like a book, and divided into several columns, in which to record, through the hours of the day and night, the direction of the wind and the course of the ship, with all the material occurrences, together with the latitude by observation. From this table the officers work the ship's way, and compile their journals. The whole being written by the mate of the watch with chalk, is rubbed out every day at noon. Now a slate is more generally used.
LOG-BOOK. Mostly called the log, is a journal into which the log-board is daily transcribed, together with any other circumstance deserving notice. The intermediate divisions or watches are usually signed by the commanding officer. It is also divided into harbour-log and sea-log.
Given the comments in Jamestown's log book (above) about the slate being erased before being copied, we know that this was originally the process.
Perhaps the Naval History and Heritage Command comment is more of a misinterpretation than a total fabrication.
Digging further...
The Sailor's Word-Book, by Admiral W. H. Smyth, 1867 says:
LOG-BOARD. Two boards shutting together like a book, and divided into several columns, in which to record, through the hours of the day and night, the direction of the wind and the course of the ship, with all the material occurrences, together with the latitude by observation. From this table the officers work the ship's way, and compile their journals. The whole being written by the mate of the watch with chalk, is rubbed out every day at noon. Now a slate is more generally used.
LOG-BOOK. Mostly called the log, is a journal into which the log-board is daily transcribed, together with any other circumstance deserving notice. The intermediate divisions or watches are usually signed by the commanding officer. It is also divided into harbour-log and sea-log.
Given the comments in Jamestown's log book (above) about the slate being erased before being copied, we know that this was originally the process.
Perhaps the Naval History and Heritage Command comment is more of a misinterpretation than a total fabrication.
Randi wrote: ↑Mon May 13, 2024 9:09 pm December 27 — Valparaiso
6 to 8 pm.
Received the following stores; Engineers Dept, ..., 2 Log slates, 1 Doz Bottles Ink, 2 Doz Pencils, 100 Slate pencils;
- pommystuart
- Posts: 1814
- Joined: Mon May 18, 2020 12:48 am
- Location: Cooranbong, NSW, Australia.
Re: Chat
I wonder how this day would have been entered.
Picture from Australia yesterday in the same story about a tornado at Bathurst. (Not taken by me)
running away
Picture from Australia yesterday in the same story about a tornado at Bathurst. (Not taken by me)
running away
Last edited by pommystuart on Fri Oct 01, 2021 4:39 am, edited 1 time in total.