Tim Regan

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Tim Regan

Tim Regan

@dumbledad

Programmer in Cambridge. Living back in Essex. Dad. Grandpa. Cyclist. Yogi. Opera lover. Quaker. Atheist. Keen but shite violinist. Too many obsessions to list!

Cambridge, England Entrou em Mart 2007
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@pickover Fabulous visualization. What dictates the angular velocity in each circle?
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Cliff Pickover
Cliff Pickover@pickover·
Math. This mystery space-filling curve is a variant of Hilbert's curve, built from epicycles. Watch it evolve as more harmonics are added. Source: I created this animation using Hopperpop's Epicycle Drawer, an interactive tool: hopperpop.github.io/EpicDrawer/
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@Sheril_ Does that feel correct — that secretaries are towards the least adaptable?
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Janet Murray
Janet Murray@jan_murray·
I keep thinking about a post I shared recently. In it, I mentioned the bliss of having breakfast alone in a hotel - at a time in my life when I’d usually have had a small child with me. Which might have meant, among other things, cutting their food up while trying to drink a cup of coffee before it went cold. Someone commented that helping a child eat their breakfast was a “first world problem.” And people liked that comment. There was something about that casual dismissal of motherhood that stuck with me. Because while motherhood is the greatest joy of my life - and sadly I’ve only been able to have one child - it’s also the hardest job I’ve ever done. And one you never get to retire from. My daughter is living away from home right now, and I still sometimes wake in the night, go to the loo, and panic for a second because her room is empty. I’m also the person she doesn’t think twice about calling at any time of the day or night when she needs someone to talk to. One of the hardest moments of my breast cancer experience was having my mum in the room during my mammogram callback appointment. Watching her face as the doctor kept returning to the same spot, frowning, counting enlarged lymph nodes on the ultrasound screen before taking a biopsy from under my arm there and then. It was painful to watch because I knew exactly what she was thinking. If it had been my daughter lying there, I would have swapped places with her in a heartbeat. And I knew my mum was thinking the same thing. Of course none of this takes away from the role fathers play. Many are wonderful parents and bring things to their children’s lives that mothers can’t. But there is also something uniquely powerful about the bond between a mother and her child. In the early years - even when we have a male partner, and regardless of whether we also work - mothers still tend to do the lion’s share of the wiping, soothing, feeding, cleaning scraped knees and drying tears. Partly because we have to (and want to). But also because our children want us to. There is something primeval about the bond between mother and child. When I looked at the profile of the man who left the comment, I noticed he appeared to have a disability. While I couldn’t know the specifics, I wondered if the remark came from reflecting on his own need for help. But even if it had, would that make the dismissal of the role mothers play in society sting any less? Especially at a time when women are increasingly being erased from the language used in healthcare and in public life - reduced to “pregnant people” or “birthing person”. And while this post isn’t about one individual (comments like this are common enough) it’s worth remembering that some mothers never stop providing the kind of practical care people casually dismiss - cutting up food, helping with toileting, offering physical support. Mothers of disabled children often do these things for an entire lifetime. Some of the most chilling messages I receive as someone who speaks up for women’s sex-based rights come from mothers who say: “Thank you for speaking up for my disabled daughter’s right to same-sex personal care. I’m terrified she’ll have no one to advocate for her when I’m gone.” So yes - sometimes motherhood means cutting up someone’s food. And that’s significant. Not because it’s difficult or because you begrudge doing it. But because it captures something essential about motherhood: you’re never really off duty. And if you occasionally get five quiet minutes to finish your breakfast while it’s still hot, it’s still a very small return on a lifetime of care.
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@JusBrierley He looks fabulous. My (grown up) family's just listening to the new audio version of PoA so Sirius is about to make an entrance!
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Justin Brierley
Justin Brierley@JusBrierley·
Toby dressing up for World Book Day… but who is he??
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@Glinner . @emilymbender & @timnitGebru wrote (with others) On the Dangers of Stochastic Parrots: Can Language Models Be Too Big? 🦜, though sadly they are no longer of this parish
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Graham Linehan
Graham Linehan@Glinner·
Who are the best people on AI on here? I mean thinkers and nerd philosopher types rather than creatives (but that too if anyone's doing anything interesting)
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@CarlBovisNature My wife loves sitting at the window watching Mr & Mrs Pigeon at work in our garden
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Carl Bovis
Carl Bovis@CarlBovisNature·
If you see this photo, please leave a comment! 😊 This is a Woodpigeon caught in the act of eating blossom! 😁 Woodpigeons are regular visitors to my garden, do they come to yours? 🐦
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
I loved this debate, though at times frustrating it is amazing how deep two interlocutors who respect and listen to each other can go. Plus, a Christian appologist who gives their platform and so much time to a sharp witted and knowledgeable atheist gets my praise — go Justin!
Justin Brierley@JusBrierley

This is a barnstormer... @CosmicSkeptic & @glenscrivener debate morality, freedom, slavery & the Bible! ▶️ WATCH or 🎧 LISTEN to Episode 2 of Uncommon Ground RIGHT NOW! 👉 justinbrierley.com/uncommon-groun…

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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@glenscrivener I thought it was fascinating. I thought you were out-gunned (sorry!) but that does not matter. I learnt tons about Christianity and about the Bible from both of you, and I saw how deep a debate between two interlocutors who respect and listen to each other can go. Thank you Glen.
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Glen Scrivener
Glen Scrivener@glenscrivener·
It’s in that context that people are finding faith. This is a thing. THAT’S why I think this stuff matters and how I’m finding it helpful. It’s not “the gospel”, but it is addressing the post-Christian hearer of the gospel and it’s helping many to hear it for what it is. /END
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Glen Scrivener
Glen Scrivener@glenscrivener·
People are rightly asking, Why have a debate like this?👇 It’s not a debate about the truthfulness of Christianity. An atheist might strongly agree with me that our culture’s been thoroughly Christianised (many do!). A Christian might strongly disagree (many do!). Why bother? 🧵
Justin Brierley@JusBrierley

This is a barnstormer... @CosmicSkeptic & @glenscrivener debate morality, freedom, slavery & the Bible! ▶️ WATCH or 🎧 LISTEN to Episode 2 of Uncommon Ground RIGHT NOW! 👉 justinbrierley.com/uncommon-groun…

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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@paycircleUK I cannot login, and you are not responding to support requests.
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Paycircle
Paycircle@paycircleUK·
Our customers are experiencing problems logging into Paycircle at the moment. We are working on this right now and we will update this message as soon as the problem is fixed.
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
I just pledged towards PROTECTED a film soundtrack by @DOSMars on @Kickstarter kickstarter.com/projects/danie… The London gig and screening sounds like a very special evening, Joël Espi's film of Halyna Andrusenko's work should be beautiful, and Daniela's flute playing is sumptuous.
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Strike
Strike@CormStrikeFan·
It’s becoming a tradition that, before catching my train home, I go into the bookshop at St Pancras and sort the Strike books out
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@CarlBovisNature Firecrest? Wow, I've never seen one, and I would love to.
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Carl Bovis
Carl Bovis@CarlBovisNature·
For anyone who needs cheering up... here's Britain's smallest bird having a bath today in a woodland puddle. 😁😍🐦❤️
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Tim Regan
Tim Regan@dumbledad·
@CarlBovisNature Wow, the wing colour means there's no way I would have thought "chiffchaff"
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Carl Bovis
Carl Bovis@CarlBovisNature·
Chiffchaff wings! 😍 I hope you like this one, because I love it so much! 😀 It might even be a calendar contender! 🤔♥️🐦
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Drew Boylhart
Drew Boylhart@DrewBoylhart·
@bo66ie29 Interesting, I don't see any shorts, flip flops and any open arm pit tee shirts any were.
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Bobbie
Bobbie@bo66ie29·
England in 1903. Whoever filmed this had no idea what a beautiful gift they were capturing for the future.
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Carl Bovis
Carl Bovis@CarlBovisNature·
If you see this photo, please leave a comment! 🙏😊 Did you know that in certain light, a Magpie's tail is multi-coloured? 😍 Magpies aren't very popular.... do you like them? 🐦
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Strike
Strike@CormStrikeFan·
I tried to recreate the cover photo for #TheHallmarkedMan with my own photo!
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