coveredwithsnow
coveredwithsnow
welcome to my blog, i hope you like cats
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I'm a Canadian cis woman (pronouns: her & she). Cat lover owned by two nerdy kitties, Lola and Oreo.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
coveredwithsnow · 14 hours ago
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coveredwithsnow · 14 hours ago
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I've developed mathematics for a non-human mind, for my comic "The book written by tiny paws"
Sapient distant descendants of rats, known as packers, living on Earth millions of years after the extinction of humans, began to develop mathematics using cognitive mechanisms never intended for such tasks. Due to an evolutionary quirk, multiplication came more naturally to them than addition, and their mathematics reflects this.
Packers write numbers as shapes, with each number having a corresponding number of corners.
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And they write large numbers as nested shapes. The number inside is multiplied by the number outside.
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Examples of some numbers:
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Packers haven't invented 0 yet. They haven't even invented 1! In fact, they don’t need the concept of "one" much in their system. There's no need to say "I ate one fish" when they can simply say "I ate fish".
Packers can't yet write large prime numbers, like 101 or 10,501, because they would have to draw a huge shape to represent them! Even writing 17 or 19 would be quite difficult if they only used convex shapes.
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So packers use non-convex shapes too!
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Many years later, some packer noticed that large prime numbers look suspiciously symmetric.
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So this packer improved the notation system and made it clearer.
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Later, another packer simplified this system even more, deciding that there was no point in writing the same shapes twice.
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This packer was the first in their culture to declare that "a dot isolated from a number" should also be considered a number. The packer called this dot "the wonderful number that's less than two".
Many years later, another packer made an important innovation: the "dot isolation" could be repeated multiple times as long as the result remained odd. When the result became even, it could undergo a "two isolation" (division by two). The final result will be a series of dots and twos.
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This invention led to the creation of a binary system based on one and two, which had a significant impact on the technological advancement of packers.
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The comic "the book written by tiny paws" talks about all of this in more detail. There will be mistakes, debates, the invention of rational, irrational, multivariate numbers, and some other stuff. Some stuff will be very much like human math, and some will be different. After all, math is still math, only the point of view has changed.
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coveredwithsnow · 20 hours ago
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“Octavius knows what I can do 😏” Norman Osborn I know what you are
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coveredwithsnow · 21 hours ago
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coveredwithsnow · 21 hours ago
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“Octavius.” “Osborn.” when they’re first reunited
“Otto.” “Norman.” when Octavius is himself again
OH IM SICK
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coveredwithsnow · 2 days ago
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It really is 2003 again Jesus Tapdancing Christ.
Like, all Republicans did was replace Iraq and gay people with Iran and trans people.
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coveredwithsnow · 2 days ago
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My journey thru my kid’s Paw Patrol phase via posts from my Bluesky account.
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coveredwithsnow · 2 days ago
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so i wore a pride flag pin to work the other day and the kids were all interested (obviously) (find me a classroom of preschoolers who are not obsessed with rainbows) (i'll wait) so they crowded around to see.
"aww!" they said, "it's a flag!!"
but the thing is: they're little. a lot of them don't really have a handle on all their mouth sounds yet.
such as, notably, that tricky tricky "L" sound.
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coveredwithsnow · 5 days ago
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Frog receiving a letter from the postbee
By India Rose Crawford
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coveredwithsnow · 5 days ago
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“We all knew that he was obviously quite ill, and it was pretty clear that this was going to be the last role he would play in a movie. And the fact that it was one of the Final Destination movies made it that much more poignant. Zach Lipovsky and Adam Stein, our directors, they made a very shrewd decision to take the last couple of lines that were scripted and say, ‘Tony, just say what you would want to say to the fans. What would you like to impart to them in this moment?' So, everything that makes that scene so emotional is authentic because that was just Tony talking through the camera to the very fans who supported him for so many years. So, it was a very magical moment on set."
Craig Perry, producer for FINAL DESTINATION: BLOODLINES (2025)
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coveredwithsnow · 5 days ago
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A Lively Bluegrass Cover of the ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’ Theme Song
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coveredwithsnow · 5 days ago
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“i'm the last of the time lords” you bigenerated. you're not even the last of yourself
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coveredwithsnow · 5 days ago
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i walk a fine line between “i’m asexual and i hate how much the world revolves around sex” and “sex is way too stigmatized and people should be able to be more open about it if they want to”
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coveredwithsnow · 5 days ago
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Have you guys heard of cats. They're great.
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coveredwithsnow · 6 days ago
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Some Queenie fo today
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coveredwithsnow · 6 days ago
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The good feeling when a little cat rests their head against you like you’re a pillow is actually pretty significant
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coveredwithsnow · 6 days ago
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