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20251117
From today's featured article
Alicella gigantea is a giant species of amphipod that lives in the deep sea. It is sometimes referred to as the "supergiant amphipod", with some individuals of this species reaching 34 cm (13 in) in length, making it the world's largest species of amphipod. The large body size is sometimes presented as an example of abyssal gigantism, though the specifics of this trait remain under investigation. Its genome is exceptionally large, which may be linked to the large size of the body. The species lives only at 4,850–7,000 m (15,910–22,970 ft) in depth. Although rarely encountered, A. gigantea is considered cosmopolitan and may inhabit up to 59% of the world’s oceans. It is primarily a scavenger of carrion, although the diet varies with age. It has been inferred that individuals of this species have long life spans and can live for over 10 years. Despite its isolation from the surface, human pollutants such as DDT and chlordane have been detected in specimens. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that according to an urban legend, Queen Victoria was too scared to travel across the Digswell Viaduct (pictured)?
- ... that Anita Lidya Luhulima and her husband died during their terms as ambassador and deputy ambassador, respectively?
- ... that the stern of the wrecked freighter William C. Moreland was used in the construction of another ship?
- ... that a young Joseph Norman watched artists when he was at amusement parks?
- ... that the mothers of three missing children went on a talk show to confront a suspect in a 1991 child disappearance?
- ... that an episode of Smiling Friends was originally intended to feature a different video game?
- ... that Alfred Kubin based the novel The Other Side on his own illustrations for a different novel?
- ... that one of Michael Tene's examiners attended his thesis defense immediately after a government cabinet meeting?
- ... that "Racing Mount Pleasant" from Racing Mount Pleasant was written before Racing Mount Pleasant were Racing Mount Pleasant?
In the news
- An amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan creates a new court of final appeal and establishes the position of Chief of Defence Forces, strengthening military rule.
- A suicide bombing kills 12 people in Islamabad, Pakistan.
- Typhoon Fung-wong (satellite image shown) hits the Philippines, leaving more than 27 people dead.
- A car explosion in Delhi, India, kills at least 13 people.
On this day
- 1592 – Sigismund III Vasa, who was already King of Poland, succeeded his father John III as King of Sweden.
- 1921 – Rioting broke out in Bombay, India, during the visit of Edward, Prince of Wales, leading to at least 58 deaths.
- 1943 – World War II: Australian forces launched an assault on Sattelberg, New Guinea, against Japanese forces, initiating the Battle of Sattelberg.
- 1950 – The 14th Dalai Lama (pictured) assumed full temporal power as ruler of Tibet at the age of 15.
- 2013 – Tatarstan Airlines Flight 363 crashed during an aborted landing at Kazan International Airport, Russia, killing all 50 people on board and leading to the revocation of the airline's operating certificate.
- Zanobi Strozzi (b. 1412)
- Bernardo Bellotto (d. 1780)
- Ng On-yee (b. 1990)
- Rikard Wolff (d. 2017)
From today's featured list
The British mystery and crime television series Sherlock received numerous accolades. Sherlock is based on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes detective novels and stories. It was created by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss, and stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Doctor John Watson. The series won the Peabody Award in 2011 for "A Study in Pink". Sherlock garnered forty-seven nominations from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, including four BAFTA TV wins: Best Drama Series, Best Supporting Actor (Freeman and Andrew Scott), and the Audience Award. The series received thirty-nine Primetime Emmy nominations (with nine wins), including a win for Outstanding Television Movie (for "The Abominable Bride"). Cumberbatch and Freeman both won Emmys for their performances, as did Moffat for his screenwriting. (Full list...)
Today's featured picture
The Council of Clermont was a mixed synod of ecclesiastics and laymen of the Catholic Church, called by Pope Urban II and held from 17 to 27 November 1095 at Clermont, Auvergne, at the time part of the Duchy of Aquitaine.
While the council is known today primarily for the speech Pope Urban gave on the final day, it was primarily a synod focused on implementing the Cluniac reforms, enacting decrees and settling local and regional issues. This also included the extension of the excommunication of Philip I of France for his adulterous remarriage to Bertrade of Montfort and a declaration of renewal of the Truce of God, an attempt on the part of the church to reduce feuding among Frankish nobles.
Pope Urban's speech on 27 November included the call to arms that would result in the First Crusade, and eventually the capture of Jerusalem and the establishment of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
The image comes from the Passages d'outremer, a chronicle of the Crusades published and illustrated three centuries after this event, and isn't particularly historically accurate, but also considered a masterpiece of mediaeval illustration, and a document showing the 15th-century interpretation of the crusading movement.
Illustration credit: Jean Colombe
20251116
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20251116
From today's featured article
Black Widow is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by editor Stan Lee, scripter Don Rico, and artist Don Heck, the character debuted as an enemy of Iron Man in 1964. She reformed into a hero in The Avengers in 1966. Black Widow has been the main character in several comic titles since 1970, receiving her own Black Widow series in 1999. She also frequently appears as a supporting character in The Avengers and Daredevil. Natalia Alianovna "Natasha Romanoff" Romanova was introduced as a spy for the Soviet Union until she defected to the United States. Her stories often explore her struggle to define her own identity as a spy and the trauma she endured from her life of training in the Red Room, a Soviet training facility. Black Widow has been adapted into a variety of other media, including film, animated series, and video games. A version of the character was portrayed by Scarlett Johansson (pictured) in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that local folklore links Boghead (ruins pictured), a Northumbrian bastle house, to the story of Barty Milburn, an accomplished swordsman and killer of Scots?
- ... that Adolf Real declined re-election as Mayor of Vaduz in 1900?
- ... that a crew member of the film Velký vlastenecký výlet walked out after a protagonist justified rape?
- ... that periodontist Angela Pack called the Dental Council board "lily-livered chickens" for hesitating to allow training of dental hygienists in New Zealand?
- ... that the "books within books" of the European Geniza are a collection of manuscript fragments recovered from medieval and early-modern book bindings?
- ... that Bob Barrabee studied tobacco farming in Cuba and played in the NFL in the same year?
- ... that the Our Lady of the Holy Spirit Center was the site of a building collapse, a radio station, and the 5th National Eucharistic Congress?
- ... that Eschiva of Montbéliard left her children, fled to Buffavento Castle disguised as a monk, brought ample provisions, and joined an old knight in defending it?
- ... that the most senior crew member of the Titanic to survive the disaster, as well as an American colonel, one of the telegraphists, the chief baker, and a teenage boy were all saved on an upturned boat?
In the news
- A suicide bombing kills 12 people in Islamabad, Pakistan.
- Typhoon Fung-wong (satellite image shown) hits the Philippines, leaving more than 27 people dead.
- A car explosion in Delhi, India, kills at least 13 people.
- David Szalay is awarded the Booker Prize for his novel Flesh.
On this day
- 1776 – American Revolutionary War: A Dutch fort on Sint Eustatius fired The First Salute to an American brig (pictured), marking the first international recognition of the American flag.
- 1885 – After a five-day trial following the North-West Rebellion, Louis Riel, a Canadian Métis leader and "Father of Manitoba", was hanged for high treason.
- 1938 – Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann first synthesized the psychedelic drug LSD in Basel, Switzerland.
- 1967 – Aeroflot Flight 2230 crashed after takeoff from Koltsovo Airport, Russia, killing all 107 people aboard.
- 1981 – About 30 million people watched the fictional couple Luke Spencer and Laura Webber wed on the television show General Hospital in the highest-rated hour in American soap opera history.
- Ælfric of Abingdon (d. 1005)
- Charles-Antoine Campion (b. 1720)
- Clark Gable (d. 1960)
- Hannah Hampton (b. 2000)
Today's featured picture
The African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) is a species of true buffalo in the Bovidae family. It is native to sub-Saharan Africa, where it is found in a number of disjoint ranges stretching from south-eastern Senegal through West and Central Africa to South Africa. It lives in savannas, swamps and floodplains, as well as mopane grasslands, and the forests of the major mountains of Africa. The Afiran buffalo is a large bovid, with a shoulder height ranging from 1.0 to 1.7 m (3.3 to 5.6 ft) and head-and-body length between 1.7 and 3.4 m (5.6-11.2 ft). There is variation between subspecies, the African forest buffalo having a mass of 250 to 450 kg (600 to 1,000 lb) while the Cape buffalo weighs 425 to 870 kg (937 to 1,918 lb), males being about 100 kg (220 lb) heavier than females. The adult African buffalo is known for its characteristic horn. This male African buffalo was photographed in Phinda Private Game Reserve, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. It has a red-billed oxpecker (Buphagus erythrorhynchus) standing on its muzzle.
Photograph credit: Charles J. Sharp
20251115
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Delila Hatuel,曾為2008年夏季奥林匹克运动会以色列代表团花剑選手。今天是她的生日。
20251115
From today's featured article
The Aston Martin DB11 is a two-door grand touring car. It was manufactured as both a coupe and a convertible, the latter known as the Volante. The British carmaker Aston Martin produced the DB11 from 2016 to 2023 and was replaced by the DB12. The DB11 succeeded the DB9, which was made between 2004 and 2016. Designed by Marek Reichman, who became Aston Martin's lead designer in 2005, the DB11 debuted at the Geneva Motor Show in March 2016. The first model of Aston Martin's "second-century plan", the DB11 incorporates aluminium extensively throughout its body. Manufacture of the DB11 began at the Aston Martin facility in Gaydon, Warwickshire, in September 2016. Two engine configurations of the DB11 were available: a 4.0-litre V8-engine model produced by Mercedes-AMG and a 5.2-litre V12-engine model produced by Aston Martin. In 2018, Aston Martin replaced the DB11 V12 with the DB11 V12 AMR, which brought an increased engine output. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that Bayden Barber (pictured), the chair of Ngāti Kahungunu, has supported establishing a parliament for Māori?
- ... that The London Standard described the lyrics in a Taylor Swift song as "a car crash of outdated millennial cringe"?
- ... that Xavian Stapleton was given a list of 55 schools to which he was not allowed to transfer?
- ... that the Kaman-Kalehöyük Archaeological Museum, opened in 2010 and styled as a mound covered by natural grass, received the US-based "Best Green Museum" award?
- ... that Theo Waimuri's bid for the General Elections Commission caused three lawmakers to walk out of his assessment hearing?
- ... that the region of Inazuma was used to allay concerns that Genshin Impact imitated The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild?
- ... that, after a policeman held up traffic to let a mother cat cross a street, Harry Warnecke staged a re-enactment of the moment for a photograph?
- ... that some Japanese railway companies have their own character mascots?
- ... that the voice of the UK X Factor has narrated 30,000 adverts?
In the news
- David Szalay (pictured) is awarded the Booker Prize for his novel Flesh.
- American molecular biologist James Watson, co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, dies at the age of 97.
- UPS Airlines Flight 2976 crashes after takeoff from Louisville, Kentucky, United States, killing 14 people.
- Typhoon Kalmaegi leaves more than 240 people dead in the Philippines.
On this day
- 655 – Penda of Mercia and Æthelhere of East Anglia were defeated by Oswiu of Northumbria at the Battle of the Winwaed in Yorkshire, England.
- 1864 – American Civil War: Union army general William Tecumseh Sherman (pictured) began his March to the Sea, inflicting significant damage to property and infrastructure using scorched-earth tactics on his way from Atlanta to Savannah, Georgia.
- 1908 – As a result of numerous atrocities in the territory, the Congo Free State was annexed to Belgium to form the Belgian Congo.
- 1922 – Fountain of Time, in Chicago's Washington Park, was dedicated as a tribute to 100 years of peace between the United States and Great Britain following the Treaty of Ghent.
- 2000 – Edoardo Agnelli, son of the industrialist patriarch Gianni Agnelli, was found dead under a bridge on the outskirts of Turin, Italy.
- Johannes Kepler (d. 1630)
- Eugénie Hamer (b. 1865)
- Howard Baker (b. 1925)
- Yuriko, Princess Mikasa (d. 2024)
Today's featured picture
The pied-billed grebe (Podilymbus podiceps) is a species of water bird in the grebe family, Podicipedidae. It is found in ponds throughout the Americas, from Canada south to Argentina and Chile. The pied-billed grebe is small, stocky, and short-necked, with a length of around 31 to 38 centimeters (12 to 15 in), a wingspan of 45 to 62 centimeters (18 to 24 in) and a mass of 253 to 568 grams (8.9 to 20.0 oz). It is mainly brown, with a darker crown and back. The undertail is white and it has a short, blunt, light-grey bill, encircled in summer by a broad black band, giving the bird its name. There is no sexual dimorphism, and juveniles have black and white stripes. The pied-billed grebe rarely flies, but is known for its slow dive, which can reach depths of 6 meters (20 ft). It feeds mainly on aquatic invertebrates, and also on small fish and amphibians. This pied-billed grebe of the subspecies P. p. antarcticus was photographed in Parque La Florida, Cundinamarca, on the outskirts of Bogotá, Colombia.
Photograph credit: Charles J. Sharp
20251114
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- 山梨縣的哪座市在古代為甲斐國東部軍事防衛的最前線,近年來則憑藉其地理位置發展成日本首都圈的睡城?
- 日本哪一個藩以須坂陣屋為藩廳?
- 哪一位学者被誉為日本近現代新聞學及新聞教育的奠基人?
- 哪一首2021年6月发行的歌曲是游戏《梦幻之星Online2》的合作曲?
- 哪位伊朗插画家曾获得阿斯特丽德·林格伦纪念奖提名,但因在2006年9月1日逝世,而未能入选?
- 索尼曾面向业余电子游戏开发爱好者推出过哪款初代PlayStation的开发套件?(圖)
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位於義大利弗留利-威尼斯朱利亚大区的弗留利多洛米蒂山自然公園,Spalti di Toro山脈群。
20251114
From today's featured article
Elinor Fettiplace (c.1570 – in or after 1647) was an English cookery book writer. Probably born in Pauntley, Gloucestershire into an upper-class land-owning farming family, she married into the well-connected Fettiplace family and moved to a manor house in the Vale of White Horse, Berkshire. In common with many ladies of the Elizabethan era, Fettiplace wrote a manuscript book with details of recipes for dishes and meals, medical remedies and tips for running the household. She dated the work 1604, but it is possible that she began writing it several years earlier, when she was still living with her mother. The book was passed down through her family, initially to her niece, until it was handed to the husband of the twentieth-century writer Hilary Spurling. Fettiplace's husband died in 1615; she moved back to Gloucestershire and married a local man, Edward Rogers, who died in 1623. She lived until at least 1647. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that Fort George (pictured) was the execution site of Maurice Bishop, the prime minister of Grenada?
- ... that choreographer Nat Horne's father, a Baptist minister, opposed dancing, and Horne began his dance training by sneaking out of Saturday-night prayer meetings?
- ... that the television drama This Thriving Land revived public interest in Chinese sage?
- ... that Red Seidelson worked as a dentist at the same time he played in the NFL?
- ... that in 1982 HMS Junella carried a naval mine from the Falkland Islands to Great Britain on her deck, covered by a wet mattress to keep the explosives cool?
- ... that Indonesia's ambassador to the United Nations Umar Hadi co-produced a movie during his tenure as consul general in Los Angeles?
- ... that the Mongol forces at the Chem River Battle used carts with iron-shod wheels to handle the rocky terrain?
- ... that Bijal P. Trivedi wrote on how cystic fibrosis went from being a "death sentence" for children to becoming a treatable condition due to new drugs that brought "weeping with joy"?
- ... that the school of Corpus Christi Church educated at least eleven sets of twins during the 1953 school year?
In the news
- David Szalay (pictured) is awarded the Booker Prize for his novel Flesh.
- American molecular biologist James Watson, co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, dies at the age of 97.
- UPS Airlines Flight 2976 crashes after takeoff from Louisville, Kentucky, United States, killing 14 people.
- Typhoon Kalmaegi leaves more than 240 people dead in the Philippines.
On this day
November 14: World Diabetes Day; Dobruja Day in Romania
- 1680 – German astronomer Gottfried Kirch discovered the Great Comet of 1680, the first comet to be discovered by telescope.
- 1910 – Aviator Eugene Burton Ely performed the first takeoff from a ship (pictured), flying from a makeshift deck on USS Birmingham in Hampton Roads, Virginia.
- 1967 – American physicist Theodore Maiman was given a patent for his ruby laser systems, the world's first laser.
- 1970 – Southern Airways Flight 932, chartered by the Marshall University football team, crashed into a hill near Ceredo, West Virginia, killing all 75 people on board.
- 2010 – Red Bull Racing's Sebastian Vettel won the Drivers' Championship after winning the final race of the season, becoming the youngest Formula One champion.
- Fanny Mendelssohn (b. 1805)
- Claude Monet (b. 1840)
- Mary Greyeyes (b. 1920)
- Neil Heywood (d. 2011)
From today's featured list
King Christian IX of Denmark, known as the "father-in-law of Europe", ruled Denmark from 1863 to 1906. He and his queen consort, Louise of Hesse-Kassel, became the ancestors of many members of European royalty. Christian and Louise had three sons and three daughters together. Although Christian had an affectionate relationship with his daughters, he rejected his eldest son, Frederick, over political differences. After the start of Christian's reign as King of Denmark, Louise helped marry their children into royal families across Europe, including their daughter Princess Alexandra with Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, and their daughter Princess Dagmar with Alexander, Tsarevich of Russia. Some of Christian and Louise's grandchildren became monarchs themselves. For example, Constantine I, Nicholas II, and George V reigned over Greece, Russia, and the United Kingdom, respectively. (Full list...)
Today's featured picture
The Czapski Palace is a palatial complex in the center of Warsaw, Poland. It was constructed in about 1686 for the country's Catholic primate, Michał Stefan Radziejowski, using a design by Dutch-born Polish architect and engineer Tylman van Gameren. The palace was reconstructed between 1712 and 1721, and acquired its present rococo character in 1752–65. The building has been home to various notable individuals, including artist Zygmunt Vogel, composer Frédéric Chopin, and poets Zygmunt Krasiński and Cyprian Norwid. It now houses the Academy of Fine Arts. This photograph shows the front façade of the Czapski Palace's main building.
Photograph credit: Adrian Grycuk
20251113
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巴西卡皮瓦拉山脈國家公園,一隻红绿金刚鹦鹉(Ara chloropterus)的眼睛微距照片。
20251113
From today's featured article
270 Park Avenue, also known as the JPMorgan Chase Tower and the Union Carbide Building, was a skyscraper in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. Built in 1960 for Union Carbide, it was designed by the architects Gordon Bunshaft and Natalie de Blois of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM). The 52-story skyscraper, which later became the global headquarters for JPMorgan Chase, was demolished in 2021 to make way for a taller skyscraper at the same address. At that time, the Union Carbide Building was the tallest voluntarily demolished building in the world. The building occupied a full city block bounded by Madison Avenue, 48th Street, Park Avenue, and 47th Street. It included a 52-story tower facing Park Avenue to the east and a 12-story annex facing Madison Avenue to the west, along with public plazas. About two-thirds of 270 Park Avenue was built atop two levels of underground railroad tracks, which feed into the nearby Grand Central Terminal. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that Sidney Gish (pictured) has described her composition process as "Frankensteining"?
- ... that the roof of Aljunied station has been described as a "caterpillar" and a "rib cage"?
- ... that a Japanese YouTuber launched a project aiming to "eradicate poverty in Ghana"?
- ... that the Coldplay song "Politik", written on September 11, 2001, was inspired by the September 11 attacks?
- ... that a neo-Nazi was offered $5,000 by Richard Nixon's election fundraising group for his participation in a scheme to help Nixon's campaign?
- ... that North Korean archaeological papers, inspired by the state ideology of Juche, often contain nationalist elements?
- ... that Pedro Berroeta Morales, a diplomat and later the president of a Venezuelan television channel, has also written fiction and essays on topics from science to esotericism?
- ... that the comic novel Diary of a Provincial Lady provided inspiration for later fictional diaries such as the Bridget Jones series?
- ... that freelance journalist Phil Patton's collection of coffee-cup lids was featured in the Cincinnati Art Museum?
In the news
- American molecular biologist James Watson (pictured), co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, dies at the age of 97.
- UPS Airlines Flight 2976 crashes after takeoff from Louisville, Kentucky, United States, killing 14 people.
- The United States federal government shutdown becomes the longest in US history.
- Typhoon Kalmaegi leaves more than 240 people dead in the Philippines.
On this day
- 1642 – First English Civil War: Royalist forces engaged the much larger Parliamentarian army at the Battle of Turnham Green near Turnham Green, Middlesex.
- 1775 – American Revolutionary War: Patriot forces captured Montreal without significant opposition as part of the Invasion of Quebec.
- 1940 – Walt Disney's Fantasia, the first commercial film shown with stereophonic sound, premiered at the Broadway Theatre in New York City.
- 1985 – The volcano Nevado del Ruiz (pictured) erupted, causing a volcanic mudslide that buried the town of Armero, Colombia, killing approximately 23,000 people.
- 2015 – Coordinated terrorist attacks in Paris perpetrated by the Islamic State killed 130 people and injured 413 others.
- Dorothea Erxleben (b. 1715)
- Moshe Pesach (d. 1955)
- Franz Joseph II, Prince of Liechtenstein (d. 1989)
- Giovanni Reyna (b. 2002)
Today's featured picture
The Lockheed T-33 is an American subsonic jet trainer produced by Lockheed. It was manufactured between 1948 and 1959 with Lockheed producing a total of 5,691 and a further 866 built under licence by other manufacturers. The two-seater T-33s were used in the United States Air Force as an advanced trainer, and it has also been used for such tasks as drone director and target towing. It has also been supplied for use in the militaries of around 25 other countries. The plane was retired in the US in 1997 and its final operator, the Bolivian Air Force, retired it in 2017. This photograph shows a Lockheed T-33 aircraft in flight during the Arctic Thunder Special Needs and Family Day at Joint Base Elmendorf–Richardson, Alaska, in 2016.
Photograph credit: Alejandro Pena, for the United States Air Force
20251112
20251112
From today's featured article
Bejeweled is a 2000 match-three video game developed and published by PopCap Games. The game involves lining up three or more multi-colored gems to clear them from the game board, and was inspired by a similar browser game, titled Colors Game. Originally released in 2000 under the title Diamond Mine as a browser game on the team's official website, Bejeweled was licensed to be hosted on MSN Games under its current name. PopCap released a retail version titled Bejeweled Deluxe in May 2001. Bejeweled has since been ported to many platforms, particularly mobile devices. The game has been commercially successful, having sold more than 10 million copies and been downloaded more than 150 million times. It is credited with popularizing match-three video games and launching the casual games industry, which grew to be worth $3 billion within a decade. The game was followed by a commercially successful series of sequels and spin-offs. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that the Chapel of St. Cornelius the Centurion (pictured) in New York City was designed by Charles C. Haight, whose father had previously served in the clergy of the chapel's parish?
- ... that archaeologist Arne Furumark intended to follow a career in business until he visited the British Museum as a teenager?
- ... that the 2025 book The World After Gaza was deemed "repugnant" and "monstrous" for being both overly and insufficiently critical of Israel?
- ... that future NFL player Kato Serwanga's family fled Uganda when he was a child after three of his uncles were murdered and his father was nearly killed by Idi Amin's regime?
- ... that Yew Tee station has a kampong-styled roof and a colour scheme that blends in with its surroundings?
- ... that the second president of the American Association of Geographers had no formal geography education?
- ... that the long hair of the Red Yao people in China has become a tourist attraction?
- ... that Victor-David Mbuyi Bipungu went from being a Catholic priest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo to becoming an Anglican bishop in Canada?
- ... that two full freight cars were swallowed in 1918 at what is now Glory Hole Park?
In the news
- American molecular biologist James Watson (pictured), co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, dies at the age of 97.
- UPS Airlines Flight 2976 crashes after takeoff from Louisville, Kentucky, United States, killing at least 14 people.
- The United States federal government shutdown becomes the longest in U.S. history.
- Typhoon Kalmaegi leaves more than 240 people dead in the Philippines.
On this day
- 1330 – Led by the voivode Basarab I, Wallachian forces defeated the Hungarian army in an ambush at the Battle of Posada (depicted).
- 1920 – The Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes signed the Treaty of Rapallo to establish national borders east of the Adriatic Sea.
- 1940 – World War II: Free French forces captured Gabon from Vichy France.
- 1970 – The deadliest tropical cyclone in history made landfall on the coast of East Pakistan (present-day Bangladesh), killing at least 250,000 people.
- 2011 – An explosion in the Shahid Modarres missile base led to the deaths of 17 members of the Revolutionary Guards, including Hassan Tehrani Moghaddam, a key figure in Iran's missile program.
- Auguste Rodin (b. 1840)
- Liu Shaoqi (d. 1969)
- Anne Hathaway (b. 1982)
- Stan Lee (d. 2018)
Today's featured picture
The large milkweed bug (Oncopeltus fasciatus) is a medium-sized hemipteran (true bug) in the family Lygaeidae. It is distributed throughout North America, from Central America through Mexico, the Caribbean and the United States, to southern Canada. It inhabits disturbed areas, roadsides, and open pastures. Due to this widespread geographic distribution, this insect exhibits varying life history trade-offs depending on the population location, including differences in wing length and other traits based on location. Adult large milkweed bugs are around 11–12 mm in length and have a red/orange and black X-shaped pattern on their wings underneath the triangle that is typical to hemipterans. Its diet often consists of milkweed seeds, but it has also been observed feeding on aphids, monarch caterpillar eggs, and larvae, displaying opportunistic behavior. The insect is often used as a model organism and reared for laboratory experiments due to being easy to rear and handle, short developmental time, few instars, and high fecundity. This large milkweed bug was photographed in the Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York City, United States.
Photograph credit: Rhododendrites
20251111
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20251111
From today's featured article
The 1975 Australian constitutional crisis culminated on 11 November when Governor-General Sir John Kerr dismissed Gough Whitlam of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) as prime minister and appointed Malcolm Fraser, the opposition leader, as caretaker. The Whitlam government had been rocked by scandals and political miscalculations. In October, the Opposition blocked bills in the Senate financing the government, and urged Kerr to dismiss Whitlam unless he agreed to call an election for the House of Representatives. On 11 November, Whitlam intended to call a half-Senate election instead, but when he met with Kerr to seek his approval, Kerr dismissed him as prime minister. Before the ALP parliamentarians knew what had happened, Fraser and his allies secured passage of the appropriation bills and Kerr dissolved Parliament. Fraser and his government were returned with a large majority in the following month's election. Kerr resigned early as governor-general and lived much of his remaining life abroad. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that two queens of Jerusalem—Maria and her daughter, Isabella II—died in childbirth (pictured), one after delivering the other?
- ... that Al Sheehan, despite being WCCO's expert on contract bridge, did not know "a trump from a rubber"?
- ... that chloroform extracts from the seeds of the Spanish fennel flower have exhibited anti-inflammatory properties?
- ... that Sabine Kirchmeier reported her mayor to the police as a local politician, and then became the first director of the Danish Language Council?
- ... that sound recordings were not copyrighted under United States law until 1972?
- ... that Leik Myrabo invented a laser-propelled type of spacecraft?
- ... that the premiere of the second season of Arrested Development required David Cross to paint himself blue, taking up to three showers a day to remove the paint?
- ... that Formula One drivers are required to wear fire-resistant underwear for safety reasons?
- ... that Burger Continental served dishes like "Chicken Erotica" to jurors in high-profile cases, including the trials of O. J. Simpson and the Menendez brothers?
In the news
- American molecular biologist James Watson (pictured), co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, dies at the age of 97.
- UPS Airlines Flight 2976 crashes after takeoff from Louisville, Kentucky, United States, killing at least 14 people.
- The United States federal government shutdown becomes the longest in U.S. history.
- Typhoon Kalmaegi leaves more than 240 people dead in the Philippines.
On this day
November 11: Armistice Day (known as Remembrance Day in the Commonwealth of Nations and Veterans Day in the United States); Singles' Day in China and Southeast Asia.
- 1805 – War of the Third Coalition: French, Austrian and Russian units suffered heavy losses at the Battle of Dürenstein.
- 1920 – In London, the Cenotaph was unveiled and the Unknown Warrior was buried in Westminster Abbey in remembrance of the First World War.
- 1940 – Second World War: The Royal Navy launched the first all-aircraft ship-to-ship naval attack in history against the Italians in the Battle of Taranto.
- 1960 – A coup attempt by the Army of the Republic of Vietnam against President Ngô Đình Diệm was crushed after he falsely promised reform, allowing loyalists to rescue him.
- 1965 – Rhodesia, led by Prime Minister Ian Smith (pictured), unilaterally declared independence from the United Kingdom.
- Arsacius of Tarsus (d. 405)
- George S. Patton (b. 1885)
- Jeanne Demessieux (d. 1968)
- Francisco Blake Mora (d. 2011)
Today's featured picture
Kurt Vonnegut (November 11, 1922 – April 11, 2007) was an American author known for his satirical and darkly humorous novels. In a career spanning over 50 years, he published fourteen novels and three short story collections; further works were published after his death. Born and raised in Indianapolis, Vonnegut enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1943. Deployed to Europe to fight in World War II, he was captured by the Germans and interned in Dresden, where he survived the Allied bombing of the city in a slaughterhouse. Vonnegut published his first novel, Player Piano, in 1952. Two of his novels, The Sirens of Titan (1959) and Cat's Cradle (1963), were nominated for the Hugo Award. Slaughterhouse-Five (1969), a best-seller that resonated with its readers for its anti-war sentiment amidst the ongoing Vietnam War, thrust Vonnegut into fame as an important contemporary writer and a dark humor commentator on American society. Numerous scholarly works have examined Vonnegut's writing and humor. This photograph by Bernard Gotfryd shows Vonnegut in 1965.
Photograph credit: Bernard Gotfryd; restored by Adam Cuerden
各位手机都是准备着用几年去买的?每次都准备用个两年 结果每次都一年就换了
买之前搜这个 cpu 那个 cpu 寻思用个好几年 结果第二年就忍不住换新了 主要是配置变化太快了 基本 2 年前和 2 年后的机器基本不是一个概念了
争者留其名, Faker 六冠王
作为一个云玩家,昨晚 Faker 夺冠有感而发。 从 07 年 Faker 泪洒鸟巢才开始关注英雄联盟世界赛。在了解了 Faker 个人的故事后,发现他身上有很多值得普通人学习的地方,也许他的天赋是我们普通人不具备的,但是从他身上我们看到了谦逊,努力,坚韧的品质。 本来以为 07 年以后再也没机会夺冠了,没想到拿了个三连冠。 周一开始了,希望 Faker 夺冠的故事能给我们每个人跟生活对线的力量。
我写了个“教学版”比特币,用 10 个 Python 脚本带你彻底搞懂核心原理
比特币、区块链,一问到 UTXO 、PoW 、数字签名这些核心细节,可能就有点模糊了。看理论文章又常常觉得枯燥,不够直观。
为了彻底搞懂它,我决定用纯 Python 从零撸一个简化版的比特币,并把过程整理成了 10 个循序渐进的脚本,希望能帮到有同样困惑的 V2EXer 。
这个项目最大的特点就是 “为教学而生”。
🔗 项目地址: https://github.com/picasso250/my-bitcoin/
✨ 这个项目有什么不同?
- 100% 循序渐进:从
step1(生成密钥) 到step10(模拟网络共识),每个脚本只专注一个核心概念。你可以python step1_...python step2_...这样一步步执行下来,看着它从无到有,完全没有学习断层。 - 代码即文档:我写了大量“保姆级”的注释,不仅解释代码“做了什么”,更解释了“为什么这么设计”。比如,为什么地址需要校验和?为什么交易要确定性序列化?
- 聚焦核心,抛弃噪音:项目砍掉了复杂的 P2P 网络层和 Base58 编码,让你能把全部精力放在 密码学 (ECDSA)、交易结构 (UTXO) 和工作量证明 (PoW) 这些真正奠定比特币大厦的基石上。
- 💡 鼓励与 AI 结对学习:项目 README 和注释风格都非常适合与 Gemini 这样的 AI 助手互动。看不懂的地方,直接把代码和问题丢给它,把它当成你的 24/7 助教,学习效率翻倍。
📚 10 步学习路径概览:
step1_generate_keys.py: 生成你的第一对公私钥。step2_sign_and_verify.py: 理解签名的本质。step3_public_key_to_address.py: 从公钥到我们熟悉的地址。step4_build_simple_transaction.py: 构建第一笔“交易”。step5_create_a_block.py: 把交易打包进区块。step6_mine_a_block.py: 引入工作量证明 (挖矿)!step7_single_utxo_transaction.py: 核心概念! 理解 UTXO 和“找零”。step8_multi_input_utxo_transaction.py: 模拟“凑钱”支付。step9_coinbase_in_utxo_block.py: 搞懂矿工奖励和手续费。step10_simulated_network_consensus.py: 上帝视角,看多个节点如何达成共识。
这个项目不求生产可用,只求能让一个聪明的开发者在一个下午的时间里,通过亲手跑代码,对 比特币 的运作原理有一个清晰、深刻、代码级的认知。
项目完全开源,代码和文档都在 GitHub 上了。
如果你觉得有帮助,求个 Star ✨ 就是最大的鼓励!也欢迎随时提 Issue 或 PR 交流。
谢谢大家!
当代女性似乎在用男性的方式度过她的生命?
生命中接触的第一个女人大概率是自己的母亲, 成为母亲的时候女性的魅力才是最大化的时候吧。 那么男人心中女性的魅力不是来源母亲嘛?
冬天突然就来了,看到一只孤雁
成都的冬天感觉是一夜就到了,今天外面风好大,格外的冷,加上满地的落叶,感觉冬天不知不觉已经到了。
早上在外面看见了一只孤雁,正在奋力的往前飞,突然感觉它好孤单,身边路过了好几波其他的鸟,没有丝毫影响它奋力往前,是不是它也没想道冬天来的如此之快,导致今天匆忙赶路呢。
又想到可能并不是它孤单,而是我把自己的思想强行赋予到了它身上,它也许只是不小心掉队了在努力追赶中。
BeeCount🐝蜜蜂记账两周大更新: AI 自动记账、批量操作、国际化完善
🎉 两周更新总结
距离上次发布已经过去两周了,感谢各位 V 友的关注和反馈!
这两周根据大家的建议疯狂迭代,合计 179 次提交,发布了 23 个版本 (v1.5.2 → v1.11.0),带来了多项重磅功能。
⭐️ 重点更新
1. 🤖 AI 自动记账(最受期待)
还记得评论区有 V 友建议的自动记账功能吗?已完成!
核心功能:
- ✅ Android: 截图自动识别记账
- ✅ iOS: 快捷指令自动识别记账
- ✅ 支持微信、支付宝、云闪付等主流支付 App
- ✅ 本地 OCR + 云端 AI 双模式,隐私可控
- ✅ 智能提取金额、商家、时间、交易类型
- ✅ AI 推荐分类,一键确认入账
技术亮点:
- 自研
flutter_ai_kit框架,支持多 AI Provider 切换 - 离线优先策略,网络异常时自动降级到本地模型
- 完全开源,代码可审计
感谢有 V 友提供的苹果快捷指令思路,给了我很大启发!
2. 📊 批量操作功能
评论区有 V 友提到"从微信导入后,想批量修改分类太麻烦",已解决!
新增功能:
- ✅ 搜索页面支持批量选择
- ✅ 批量修改分类、账户、标签
- ✅ 批量删除交易记录
- ✅ 批量导出为 CSV
使用场景:
- 导入账单后批量归类
- 清理错误数据
- 分类整理历史交易
3. 🌍 国际化完善
已支持 8 种语言:
- 简体中文 🇨🇳
- 繁体中文 🇹🇼
- English 🇺🇸
- 日本語 🇯🇵
- 한국어 🇰🇷
- Français 🇫🇷
- Deutsch 🇩🇪
- Español 🇪🇸
新增 10 种货币支持: EUR, GBP, JPY, KRW, HKD, TWD, SGD, AUD, CAD, CHF
完善了所有页面的翻译,包括 OCR 识别页面、自动记账、批量操作等新功能。
4. 📱 iOS TestFlight 公测开启
感谢社区捐赠支持,iOS 版本 TestFlight 公测已开启!
TestFlight 地址: https://testflight.apple.com/join/Eaw2rWxa
App Store 正式版正在审核中,预计本周通过,敬请期待!
🔧 其他重要更新
账单导入优化
- ✅ 支持支付宝、微信、京东、淘宝账单导入
- ✅ 支持 XLSX 格式
- ✅ 智能表头检测
数据分析改进
- ✅ 修复平均值计算逻辑
- ✅ 支持按周期筛选交易记录
- ✅ 新增账户余额追踪
小组件支持
- ✅ Android 和 iOS 小组件
- ✅ 实时显示收支统计
- ✅ 自定义主题色
开发者友好
- ✅ 完善英文文档和 Issue 模板
- ✅ 优化 CI/CD 流程
- ✅ 新增贡献指南
📊 数据统计
两周成果:
- 🎯 179 次代码提交
- ✨ 59 个新功能
- 🐛 66 个 Bug 修复
- 🔧 42 项优化重构
- 📦 23 个版本发布
🙏 特别感谢
感谢所有在上个帖子中提供建议和反馈的 V 友们,你们的每一条评论我都认真看了:
- 账单导入功能建议 ✅ 已实现
- AI 自动记账建议 ✅ 已实现
- 批量操作需求 ✅ 已实现
- 图标优化建议 📝 已列入计划
- 国际化完善建议 ✅ 已实现
特别感谢 4 位捐赠者,让 iOS 版本得以上线!
🔮 下一步计划
近期规划(根据社区反馈):
-
🤖 训练专用账本识别模型(重点)
- 基于真实账单数据训练轻量级 OCR 模型
- 支持本地部署,完全离线识别
- 针对中文账单优化,识别准确率更高
- 模型体积小(<10MB),不影响 App 大小
- 隐私保护:数据不出设备,无需联网
-
📸 优化 AI 识别准确率
-
🎨 UI/UX 持续优化
-
🌐 HarmonyOS 版本
长期规划:
- 数据分析增强(趋势预测、异常提醒)
- 家庭共享账本
- 资产管理(股票、基金等)
📱 功能演示
AI 自动记账演示

账单导入演示

📥 下载体验
Android:
- GitHub Release: https://github.com/TNT-Likely/BeeCount/releases/latest
- 支持 Android 5.0+
iOS:
- TestFlight: https://testflight.apple.com/join/Eaw2rWxa
- App Store: 审核中,即将上线
- 支持 iOS 14+
源码:
- GitHub: https://github.com/TNT-Likely/BeeCount
- License: Business Source License (个人使用免费)
💬 反馈渠道
- GitHub Issues: https://github.com/TNT-Likely/BeeCount/issues
- Telegram 群组: https://t.me/beecount
- 微信: 见 GitHub 首页
- Email: 见 GitHub Profile
欢迎提 Bug 、建议和 PR !
🎯 写在最后
这两周的快速迭代证明了一件事:开源社区的力量是巨大的。
每一条评论、每一个建议,我都认真看了,能实现的都尽快实现了。这才是做开源项目的乐趣所在。
接下来会继续保持这个节奏,持续优化产品,回馈社区。
如果觉得项目不错,欢迎 Star ⭐️ 支持一下!
感谢 V2EX ,感谢各位 V 友!🙏
项目地址: https://github.com/TNT-Likely/BeeCount 功能特色: 本地优先 | 云同步可选 | AI 智能识别 | 完全开源 | 隐私安全
炒币的各位用的什么机场呢?
测试了很多都不太行,求推荐一个稳定的,对 websocket 支持良好的
16 个月月龄的宝宝很喜欢哭闹,一不顺她心意就哭唧唧,而且对妈妈依赖很重,请问是正常的吗?
白天时候她会自己玩,大人也会陪她玩,暴躁的情绪较以前越来越严重,不顺她的心意就会哭,比如她指着某个东西又拿不到,急得不行拉着大人的手去拿,大人不帮忙拿就开哭。不帮忙拿的原因是因为她希望去拿平板,感觉她有点太依赖平板了,平常看宝宝巴士基本都在半个小时以上,平均一天会看两次至少,工作日是长辈在带,会给看多久我们更控制不了。
其他方面,说话说只会喊爸爸妈妈,其他的词,单个或者叠词都还不太会说,但是基本上家里接触到的事物和人她都认识了,让帮忙丢垃圾、递手机什么的都可以正常按照指令去做,平时吃饭喝奶睡觉拉粑也蛮好的,吃的多睡得香拉的好,但这几天有点感冒,鼻塞有点严重,这两天大人小孩都没怎么睡好,不知道周末我观察期间情绪暴躁是否跟这个也有关系,然后就是晚上很依赖妈妈,就算跟我睡一边,没睡着的情况下她也会迷迷糊糊翻山越岭去找她老娘。
问了 AI ,但是 AI 认为是“宝宝语言功能不完善,无法完整表达需求和想法,只能通过哭闹表达不满”、“和进入情感发展阶段,情绪波动较大,容易因焦虑、害怕而哭闹”。
现在仍然有点焦虑,不想惯着她这种暴躁哭闹的问题,怕予取予求惯了,惯出毛病不好。但如果是发育阶段中的正常情况,我感觉就可以先放任下,等她大点再告诉她有需求就正常表达,就算一时没法满足也不可以哭的那么厉害。不知 V 友在带娃过程中,有没有这个阶段呢。
看到一些引战话题(情感宣泄)有感
下面仅是一些随想随笔,看官你不同意,那你是对的。
1. 首先所有人要分清楚自己讨厌的是这个小区和还是小区物业公司,这很重要。
2. 人的利益点决定观点,网民中藏龙卧虎,每个人家庭背景、社会关系差异巨大, 他们可能家里面姓赵,也可能有朝廷当差人的子女或其他裙带利益相关者,他们的态度对待某些主题天然就有偏向性,这是无可厚非,也能能够被理解的(你跺你也麻!)
3. 基于《第 56 次中国互联网络发展状况统计报告》的数据显示,网民年龄结构中 0-19 岁的人占比 18.6%,又参考《中国青年报》报道( 2017 年 07 月 06 日 ):“人类大脑 25 岁才可发育完全”。这些孩子们也是最容易产生极端民族主义者的,他们最容易被煽乎起来(参考历朝历代学运),无论是脏话语句还是诡辩技巧,已经参与社会分工的人都无法跟他们对抗。
4. 顺便普及一下逻辑谬误:
-双标谬误:
A:他们去你那里穿马面裙、广场舞、脸谱格局是宣扬传统文化;
B:你去他们那里穿传统服饰是间谍、是行走的 500 万。
-稻草人谬误:
A:西方文化很多地方确实比东方文化要更科学一些。
B:你不爱国!你个汉奸!
-人身攻击谬误
“你连政治都没学过,还敢批评政策?”
“你留学回来的,被洗脑的汉奸。”
-诉诸大众谬误
“所有阳光小区的人都这样想,你不同意你就是傻逼”
BayMax-Trader 开源 - nof1 在 A 股以及每股市场的竞技
BayMax-Trader 基于 AI-Trader 项目优化而来,让五个不同的 AI 模型,每个都采用独特的投资策略,在同一个市场中完全自主决策、竞争,看谁能在纳斯达克 100 或上证 50 交易中赚得最多!
🎯 BayMax-Trader 特色 🎨 nof0 现代化主题: 全新设计的 Web 界面,采用现代化设计语言 📱 响应式设计: 完美适配桌面和移动设备 🌙 主题切换: 支持深色/浅色主题,提供个性化体验 📊 增强可视化: 更直观的图表展示和数据分析 🚀 性能优化: 更快的加载速度和更流畅的交互体验 🎯 核心特性 🤖 完全自主决策: AIAgent100%独立分析、决策、执行,零人工干预 🛠️ 纯工具驱动架构: 基于 MCP 工具链,AI 通过标准化工具调用完成所有交易操作 🏆 多模型竞技场: 部署多个 AI 模型( GPT 、Claude 、Qwen 等)进行竞争性交易 📊 实时性能分析: 完整的交易记录、持仓监控和盈亏分析 🔍 智能市场情报: 集成 Jina 搜索,获取实时市场新闻和财务报告 ⚡ MCP 工具链集成: 基于 Model Context Protocol 的模块化工具生态系统 🔌 可扩展策略框架: 支持第三方策略和自定义 AIAgent 集成 ⏰ 历史回放功能: 时间段回放功能,自动过滤未来信息 https://github.com/jwangkun/BayMax-Trader
https://github.com/jwangkun/BayMax-Trader/blob/main/README_CN.md
兄弟们,你们喝可乐,会执着于品牌吗?
起因是昨天去小卖店买可乐,看到货架上没有可口可乐了,就问老板。“老板儿,可乐没了啊?”。“那儿不是啊”。看老板指着百事说。我说我要可口可乐,老板说不是一样吗,喝起来又没区别。
我以为大家都和我一样,都是喝可口可乐,但是从老板的话来听,原来很多人是不分“可口可乐”、“白事可乐”的,之前看盲测喝不出来两个的区别,但我自己原来试过,是能喝出来的。我的感觉是可口可乐的二氧化碳要强一点,甜味比百事弱一些。无糖的区别更明显一些。现在听说百事换配方,口感更差了,不过没试过,因为就一直喝的可口可乐。
兄弟们呢,会执着只喝某一个品牌吗?
PS:现在都喝无糖了的,感觉无糖芬达是口感和有糖的几乎一样。
Wails2+Vue3 本地的绑定文件和 Vite 上的不一致
v2 的各位大家好,我用 Go 的 Wails 框架写桌面端 app 的时候出现了 wails dev 不识别绑定文件,wails build 正常的问题。具体表现为:
使用 wails dev 以调试模式编译启动,在点击其中一些功能的时候前端无反应,dev tool 报错:
SyntaxError: The requested module '/wailsjs/go/main/App.js' does not provide an export named 'CheckFirmwareStatus'
Uncaught (in promise) SyntaxError: The requested module '/wailsjs/go/main/App.js' does not provide an export named 'CheckFirmwareStatus'
经过检查,原因在于本地 frontend/wailsjs/go/main/App.js 中缺少两个导出函数,但在本地的相同文件中是完整的。So far ,我已经尝试过清除 vite 缓存,删除 dist 和 node_modules 并重新安装依赖,均不奏效。不知道有没有人遇到过这个问题?
版本信息:
Golang:1.24.5 windows/amd64
Wails: 2.10.2
VUE:3.4.5
vitejs/plugin-vue:5.0.2
Nodejs: 20.19.5
npm:10.8.2
父母这一辈都喜欢把很多意外归结为“命中注定有一劫”之类的而不是吸取教训
大家是如何提高父母的安全意识的?

























