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Thursday, June 6, 2019

ƒ Flag — The Function Flag

The Super Long "f" that is known as the ƒ is an interesting symbol.  It is usually introduced during to is in high school diring trig or calculus class.  This is where the semamtics of formula and equation go beyond normal conversation to a very particular definition. 


Cowboys, Football, Grillin', and Funky-Jacked Up Cars...an American Tradition, or rather an American Funktion.


≥ Flag and ≤ Flag


> ≥ = ≤ <

 The ≥ Flag is orange, green and yellow.  The colours are reflective of the order of the rainbow.  Orange is 2 since most people recognize it as the second colour while green is ordered to 4 as the fourth colour after yellow.   The ≥ symbol is yellow since it is the assigned contrast colour indicator.


The less than flag's third bay is yellow due to this colours position as the 3rd in the spectrum.  As you can see the ≥ flag has a greater size and proportion of orange than the ≤ flag.

Oddly this signs can be confusing on a subconscious level because the ≥ is the Roman Number 4 on its side as IV:  ≥ — ≤ is the Roman Number 6 on its side as VI.  Thus on a level it is saying 4 is greater than while 6 is less than.


IV ≥ VI?  Just think of it this way VI legged animals are usually Greater than by size than VI legged creatures.  Or rather, VI legged bugs are less than VI legged animals by mass.  Eveyone know the alligator or Pac-Man always eats the greater number but this will help you distinguish which mean 'less than' or 'greater than'



≈ Flag, Approximately Flag


The ≈ Flag is a tri-bar of orange, green, and violet.  Reason being, the colours are coded to the order of the rainbow.  Do you see it?  See if you can figure it out for yourself.  But for the yellow ≈ symbol, you can ignore it, because it is the assigned contrast indicator for the colour coded to the number four.


º Flag: The Degrees Flag


The º Flag is a tribar of red, indigo, violet.  Red is coded to 1, indigo is coded to 6, and violet is coded to 7.  The code is based upon the standard order of the rainbow.  The contrast indicator for violet is yellow so the degrees symbol is put here instead of the middle, to show it is not the centered circle key.

Below is the trio of Three Degreesººº.  Did you ever notice that radio only plays pop hits from the 80s, 90s, and, 00s.  At least in Philly they have been playing that same track since 1986!  What about all the cool pop songs from the early 1970s and 1960s!  My gosh there is so much hidden gold.  Love em' but Yaz' gotta give Madonna, Cindy L., U2, and 70s Hard Rock a Break.

Here is lovely song from 1974, and we are finally meeting up in 2019!  Way too long!  DJ on the radio, you failed!

 Also on the video below, you will see that walking your pet in 100º+ weather is bad. 
https://www.facebook.com/ABCNews/videos/police-rescue-two-dogs-trapped-in-hot-car/10156004912548812/



£ Flag

£ Flag in ASCII
 1£  ><)))°>

This £ Flag is a vertical tribar of red, blue, and indigo.  Why?  Because the colours are reflective of the order of the rainbow as established by Issac Newton.  In truth there are nearly an infinite number of colours in the rainbow but the dominant way of looking at white light broken up by a prism is red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.  Consequently, each number is assigned its corresponding value as determined by this natural law order.  Thus 1, 5, and 6 is the order represented, which is tied to the ASCII code of for the £ key.

Oddly blue is one of those colours whose labels is not quite fixed, much as was the colour orange 1000 years ago.  Previously in ancient England red and orange were one in the same colour.  Today blue/sky blue/cyan/navy blue are in that same position.  Some people know the difference, but in common speech its easy to get them confused.  Cyan/baby blue is the lighter hue of blue after green.  While navy blue/dark blue/indigo is the darker version of blue just before violet.

What American Idol Looks Like to People who Don't Watch


What Pop Culture Looks like to Aliens


The Source Code of Pop Culture - You had to be there, to appreciate it!

¢ Flag: The Cents Flag

¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢
Oddly there is no ¢ key on the keyboard.  Why not?  We have a dollar key "$" hiding under the 4 key after all!  The secret to getting the ¢ to appear is to hold the ALT key and then hitting 1, let go, 5, let go, 5, let go while keeping the ALT key down until the ¢ appears. 

Perhaps you heard of 101 Dalmations?  Did you hear of the 155 Delmations of Ancient Rome?   In some weird way it is the land of Ancient Croatia.  In the year 155 BC Mr. Nasica, Scipio defeated more than 101 Illyrians.

Also the word cent is derived from the ancient Roman language of Latin that means 100.

Hopefully, you can see that in 155 BC more than 101 Delmations lost their lives to Rome.  Although most countries had their own denominations at one time, they still carry on the tradition of dividing their currency into 1/100ths..."CENTuries."

As for the flag colours, red represents the number 1 since red is the 1st colour of the rainbow.  Blue/Cyan is coded to 5 since it is the 5th colour of the rainbow.  Coincidentally the contrast indicator for cyan is red so it reflects a connection to the fractional value of unit dollar.   It makes real the expression of not handing over one "One Red ¢." 




Sunday, June 2, 2019

± Flag, Plus/Minus Flag ±

Flag for the ± Symbol
The ± Flag is a tri-bar of orange, green, and red.  Using colour metrics, orange is coded to 2 because it is the second colour of the rainbow; green is coded to 4 becuase it is the 4th colour of the rainbow; and red is coded to 1 because it is the 1st colour of the rainbow.  The yellow ± symbol is yellow because it is the assigned contrast indicator for green.

The ± is like the Yin and Yang symbol from the East.

Here is a song that has that transitional 80/90s bop beat!