the complete mathematical works of
As supply and demand converge toward a zero point, their angle of intersection nears 1 over infinity. Such a ratio defines the relation of this balog to its imaginary readers. They've all forgotten about its existence, because its author has given no reason for them to expect otherwise. It has expired. Or so we thought. But then out of the woodwork trees sprout again.
Thought for the evening comes at random from the Brian Eno/Peter Schmidt set of Oblique Strategies: "Define an area as 'safe' and use it as an anchor"
Reminds me of those games you played in summer camp as a kid. I don't really remember how it works, but it involves lots of kids all swarming around outside. Some kids are trying to "get" the other ones. And there's an area that's "safe" -- the anchor. And then lots of expeditions outward from the safety. Or something like that.
Thought for the evening comes at random from the Brian Eno/Peter Schmidt set of Oblique Strategies: "Define an area as 'safe' and use it as an anchor"
Reminds me of those games you played in summer camp as a kid. I don't really remember how it works, but it involves lots of kids all swarming around outside. Some kids are trying to "get" the other ones. And there's an area that's "safe" -- the anchor. And then lots of expeditions outward from the safety. Or something like that.

1 Comments:
listen, honey. frogs sometimes fall from the sky. no math book has ever explained that to me. but one math book did once tell me that if i got married and my husband and i split shifts driving a sixteen-wheeler rig cross country for a decade, keeping cost of living minimal and depositing all salary in a bank savings account pulling x% annual interest, then, at the end of the decade, we could live off the interest and NEVER HAVE TO WORK ANOTHER BLESSED DAY IN OUR LIVES. ya hear?
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