What makes electric fields point or fluids swirl?
Detail of the gradient, divergence, curl, and Laplacian operators in Cartesian coordinates, with their formulas and a diagram mapping how they transform scalar and vector fields.
These tools model everything from electromagnetic waves to fluid dynamics and heat transfer.
Kenyan lady lectures all Kenyan single moms and Moms claiming that they got pregnant by mistake instead telling them the mistake aren't mens' but the ladies
PayPal CCTV Mpesa
On this day, May 31, 2026, BBC published a documentary video featuring a few survivors of the Nigeria-Biafra civil war recounting their experiences. Among the three men are a Biafran soldier and two Nigerian soldiers.
It remains true that the Nigerian government's insistence on going to war against Biafra for declaring its sovereignty was an evil that protected the British interests on the natural minerals (mainly the newly discovered oil in Igbo land) under the delusion of national unity, even if that meant THE EXTERMINATION OF THE IGBO PEOPLE, just to maintain a State that neither then nor now meets the definition of a nation but a country.
No one, with an understanding of the deep cultural and ideological differences across the 250 ethncities would have conceived of almagamation – a forced marriage, as proper and feasible for the people.
Considering its composition, to fix the problem of Nigeria, we must honestly, and with moral courage consider regional governance, or a peaceful separation of the country.
The attached video is a short clip from the an hour+ BBC documentary found on the attached link below. The documentary was produced by Meji Alabi who is famous for his edgy videos, and in this video wanted to explore more of Nigeria's traumatic past beyond his grandfather's war stories.
https://t.co/UD5ICbOMPs
Adam Aleksic, a Harvard-trained linguist, on why a single boring word reveals how AI is quietly reshaping human speech:
Aleksic says you can see something strange happening to human language in one small, unremarkable word: delve.
He explains that since ChatGPT came out, the numbers around this word have gone wild:
"Usage of the word 'delve' has spiked a 1,000% since before 2022."
So why does ChatGPT love "delve" so much? According to Adam, the answer is baked into how the model was trained:
"There is a bias in the reinforcement learning process... when the words get trained into the model."
@etymology_nerd lays out two reasons.
The first is about the people doing that training work:
"The reinforcement workers are in Nigeria and Kenya, where they do actually say 'delve' at higher rates — but still not that high."
The second is about the kind of vocabulary the model gravitates toward.
Adam notes that "delve" is a Latin word, and that ChatGPT carries a Latin-based bias, leaning toward dramatic-sounding words rather than the basic connective ones like "the" and "but."
His explanation for why:
"Because these models are trained to sound like they know what they're talking about, they're going to use more of the romance language stuff."
So ChatGPT keeps producing "delve." But here's the part Adam flags as genuinely unsettling:
The influence doesn't stay inside the machine. There's now evidence that, in just the past few years, humans have started using "delve" more often in their own spontaneous, spoken conversation.
As the interviewer Chris Williamson summed it up: "So the creature that programmed the AI is being programmed by the AI."
Adam's reply captures the entire phenomenon in five words:
"Its reality is influencing our reality."