physalys tired and away
I need to be get ready for an oral exam so I’ll focus on “low platelets” this week end ;)
physalys tired and away
I need to be get ready for an oral exam so I’ll focus on “low platelets” this week end ;)
physalys tired and away
I started looking at the Python Language works. It could be fun ;)
physalys tired and away
Being in med school, I know a lot of things that are obscure/unuseful. I know a lot about music too, I guess. But I just need this one thing to know a whole lot about. Not to show off. Just ‘cause.
~ John Lee ~ setting my sights lower so I can set them higher
It all started with a song and a sneeze.
Dave Kapell, founder of Magnetic Poetry, was suffering from writer’s block while trying to compose song lyrics. To overcome this problem, he wrote down interesting words on pieces of paper and rearranged them, looking for inspiration. What he hadn’t figured into this experiment was his allergies. One good sneeze and any progress was sent flying across the room. Dave decided to glue the words to pieces of magnets and stick them to a pizza tin. Then he got hungry and the now magnetized words made their way to the refrigerator door. Before too long, Dave wasn’t the only one rearranging his would-be song lyrics. When friends came over, Dave noticed they started to move the magnets around, amusing themselves by writing the first magnetic poems.
After seeing his friends having fun, Dave thought he might be able to sell his word kits at a local craft fair. He made up 100 kits and set up shop at Calhoun Square, a mall in the Uptown area of Minneapolis. All 100 kits were gone after 3 hours. That night, he recruited as many friends as pizza and beer could draw and made up more kits—all of which sold as rapidly the next day.
From these beginnings, Magnetic Poetry® has now sold over three million word kits, over one billion word tiles—growing from the Original Kit to a kid’s line of kits, to foreign language kits, to Voice/theme kits.
And since March 2008 Magnetic Poetry has been a part of Tuesdays and Thursdays – Making Ordinary Days (and refrigerators) Extraordinary
~ John Lee ~ setting my sights lower so I can set them higher
it’s a fun story, and if I really play the Magnetic Poetry angle well, I can incorporate it into Toastmasters with some fun visuals. (repeating things, such as a the story of Magnetic Poetry is one of the best ways I know to commit something to memory)
My choice for this task is to memorize everything about the Periodic Table (can we say “Uber Nerd”?). Currently I can remember the names of about 100 of the 118 elements. Then I need to work on what their atomic number is, what they’re used for, and what their properties are, which is helped along by what I remember from my chem classes.
Quick! What’s Ytterbium’s number of valence electrons?
~ John Lee ~ setting my sights lower so I can set them higher
I wonder if Magnetic Poetry is obscure enough? There is a charming story, with a bit of a “why didn’t I think of that” element, plus all sorts of specialty versions of it.
(plus, I sell the stuff, so I there is the chance of prospering from my knowlege of something obscure, ka-ching)
Hmmmmm
~ John Lee ~ setting my sights lower so I can set them higher
does anyone have any suggestions of something obscure for which I should learn everything?
~ John Lee ~ setting my sights lower so I can set them higher
What a freakishly brilliant obscure goal!
Discovering this goal may have just made my day!