What are your most recently visited Wikipedia pages?
What are your most recently visited Wikipedia pages?
Check your web history for "wikipedia", what are the most recent 5-10 Wikipedia pages you have read?
What are your most recently visited Wikipedia pages?
Check your web history for "wikipedia", what are the most recent 5-10 Wikipedia pages you have read?
Mine:
🎶 Talkin' 'bout Bugsnax 🎶
I wanted to know the difference between them because I was drawing digitally and changed the color picker settings.
I was wondering why we forget stuff when walking into a different room sometimes.
I don't remember—but I know the compose key is useful.
I was looking at different spins of Fedora Linux, and saw the Budgie version, which I hadn't heard of before.
Saw a post on Lemmy about recent protests in the US so I went and checked how big protests were.
It was Father's Day in some places, but not where I live, so I was curious about Father's Day dates.
My desktop ones are probably different
(From most to least recent)
The first three all related to a recent conversation in !vampires@lemmy.zip.
Always good to stay up to date on WoT.
Taskmaster, as we tried to figure out how big the production team was! I don't think we figured out precisely, but larger than what my husband thought, just going off of how many editors and producers were listed.
I'm super curious with what you roughly came up with! I never would have thought to look it up.
"More than four people in the room for writing tasks" is what we agreed on lmfao. So a very rough guess (he said less than, I said more than)
Might it not also depend just on how you define "the production team"? Since editing is often termed "post-production", it would be reasonable to exclude the editors from the "production team". To me that term seems more to imply the lighting, cameras, audio, PAs, and other people actually on set, rather than the task writers or editors.
Sure. But we were just going to use production team to get a general idea of how many people were task writing! More people in general probably means more task writers! It was all very slap dash guessing on our part!
There’s an excellent podcast on this project if it interests you.
Vitamin B7 (Biotin)
I was looking up whether it is fat- or water soluble, because the former can be dangerous to your liver if you are taking supplements like I do. This was the only vitamin with far over 100% the recommended amount in said supplement.
...i reset my browser daily, so i only have the past twenty-four hours of browsing history...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/July_2025_Central_Texas_floods
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pergamon_Altar
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishtar_Gate
...that's really only an hour or so of browsing between returning home last night and this morning, not including the bulk of my time at work yesterday...
The most recent one had to do with a drug I took in Disco Elysium - wanted to see if it actually exists.
Not sure about the second most recent anymore.
In university, I had learned about proto-indoeuropean and wanted to see if there's a common language ancestor for African language. Turns out there are several origin languages.
And the last two have to do with my SLP apprenticeship. Both are concepts learned about in voice therapy and the latter is also a concept learned about with singers
I don't really like this list, because it's more sorted by the last tab I closed than the last tab I visited, which is not really the same.
French Leave
Clara Vestris Webster
Tiny Tiim
John William Polidori
The Fall of the Angels
In case you were wondering:
The Yellowstone Volcano Observatory monitors volcanic activity and does not consider an eruption imminent.
Interestingly, the buildup of magma causes the plateau to be uplifted by about 1 in. per year on average, which is one of the ways we monitor it. NASA studied how we could go about preventing an imminent eruption by cooling the magma, but another scientist said we could accidentally trigger it by trying. We may have to wait for something else for our next extinction event though. Yellowstone going off again soon would be a bit ahead of schedule.
Most of the other articles were just fleetingly topical to a conversation or book or something. Cymothoa exigua is interesting though. It's a fish parasite that severs the tongue of its host and effectively replaces it. I think I looked at it from another thread where people were posting their favorite deep sea animals.
The fact that oxygen may have shot up to modern levels really early on for a bit fascinates me in particular.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_far_future https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_universe https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultimate_fate_of_the_universe https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threads_(1984_film) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_After https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_vacuum https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_the_Wind_Blows_(comics)
Nothing like a bit of bedtime existential dread.
Fight Oligarchy tour, The Limits to Growth (haven't actually read it), quicksort, La Marseilles and Borzoi (is it worth it?).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yukigassen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_lockdowns
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_Age
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Terminal
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legality_of_cannabis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_cab
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_wage
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_Air_Flight_072
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debian_version_history
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_of_the_Ants_(novel)
I only included pages from the English Wikipedia. There was quite a few visits to Wikipedia in my native language too.
plants family mostly the ones that evolved to lose thier chlorophyll (specific familys, and thier phyologeny) then search for research papers for in depths explanations.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_problems_in_loop_theory_and_quasigroup_theory
And I'm pretty sure a bunch of other pages related to loops and quasigroups. I don't still have them open, though.
If you were able to see what IP addresses had visited a Wikipedia page, would you be able to take the lists here, assume a reasonable time period going back, and identify uniquely which addresses had visited all 5 (or more) pages listed by each commenter?
Lucky you can't, I guess?
Chimera (genetics)
Monty Oum
Dodo: Extinct species of bird
Paul Lynde: American comedian and actor
The Plague Dogs (novel): 1977 novel by Richard Adams
Airbus A400M Atlas
Dennis Rader: American serial killer
Neville Goddard: Barbadian writer
Potentilla norvegica: Species of flowering plant
Orestes: Figure in Greek mythology
Not sure if this counts but the wiki site for Guild Wars 2. It’s a wiki but not directly in wiki.com
And
Anna Sorokin
My wife sent me Andrees Arctic Balloon Expedition. From there, the rabbit hole into Svalbard was self-inflicted.
I mean, I have reason to believe they're not the most recent, but recentish:
The Varieties of Religious Experience
The Matrix
Julie Kavner
LAGEOS
Church of the Universe
A&M Records
Paris Syndrome
List of films featuring hallucinogens
I Got Plenty O' Nuttin
Ryan Juanzemis
I just checked out the article about the active volcano in Réunion Island, named Le Piton de la Fournaise. That's because I am staying there this month and hoping to catch some lava (not with my hands, duh. I will use a bucket).
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piton_de_la_Fournaise
From there I read about the Deccan Trapps, a large western part of the indian subcontinent that was pretty much formed by serial lava flows about 60MY ago. Then I was led to the article about LIPs (large igneous provinces), and I'm still falling down that rabbit hole as we speak. Fascinating stuff
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapps_du_Deccan
Fluid construction grammar
Unscented transform
Heteroglossia
Lorenz system
Relict (biology)
Yuezhi
Are you a palaeoclimatologist who is struggling to convince someone of something?
I have in my Obsidian Daily Note a "Today's random data" and this has brings me the last five days:
Now I kind of want to have a daily Lemmy thread where we read and discuss a random Wikipedia article as a community.
It would be really great!
This thing for a DIY air filter because I saw it here yesterday or two days ago
Looks interesting, might have to try it.
I don't keep a browser history at all, but my most recent visit was to:
My browser history clears after every session.
I believe I last visited it to read the synopsis for the 2017 film The Ritual.
Mine:
In a fun piece of trivia, I was looking up Katee Sackhoff because I was trying to find out who did the voice for Bitch Pudding on Robot Chicken and then laughed my ass off when I realized it was the same lady who played Bo-Katan Kryze in The Mandalorian. I really need a Robot Chicken sketch with Bo-Katan going all Bitch Pudding on the Mando now. BLAM!
ADX Florence, thanks to an earlier post about TSA ruling back their mandate that people take off their shoes at airport security control. Now I have nightmares.
Wait, how do you go from TSA policy on shoes to a supermax prison in Colorado?
Shoe bomber is the answer
Point Nemo
:3
I don't think there's an easy way to do that in Firefox. Or at least it doesn't give you information such as last visited time.
Oh, a genet !! They live in the forests of Mayotte, I've seen exactly one live before, she was crossing a road in town, around dusk. It's weird because she looked so much like a cat (same overall size), but thinner and longer, and her walk was super straight, like felines do when they're approaching prey and trying to stay low, you know. You could have mistaken her for a cat on a picture... but the way she moved was a total callout.
I have a cat now, very long and thin also, whom I affectionately call "little genet". Heheh
They're peculiar little critters :3