Comment by axiomdata316

Comment by axiomdata316 18 hours ago

21 replies

Lol. You would only see this comment on Hacker News. Reminds me of an old comic I read on how mathematicians memorize their locker numbers. "1975? Oh that's easy. It's just the square root of 3,900,625!"

sebastiennight 18 hours ago

Ever since I've heard of the meme that "modern men can't spend 24 hours without thinking of the Roman Empire", I haven't been able to escape it, even on days where my only contact with the outside world is HN.

I guess it's like a curse, once you've heard about it you're doomed.

And for anyone finding out about it just now, alea jacta est

  • frollogaston 13 hours ago

    There used to be some SF Italian restaurant that showed first if you Googled "SPQR." Their SEO was stronger than Rome. I don't even live near there.

    I think this meme has bumped the real SPQR back to the top.

  • sverhagen 16 hours ago

    I need an faq or something then, to figure out what's wrong with me for never thinking of the Roman Empire. Except now then.

    • Moru 13 hours ago

      It's only a certain type of man that they are talking about. We are not that type of men I guess. Can't say I know anyone what that problem to be honest. And yes, I have heard that saying before. Didn't work then and doesn't work now.

      • sph 3 hours ago

        It's extremely easy if you're immersed in Southern European culture.

        Moru -> Flag of Sardinia, whose Wikipedia page incidentally I was reading yesterday (the Four Moors, "is cuatru morus") -> Sardinian language -> grammatically still the closest language to Latin -> the everlasting glory of the Roman Empire

        ---

        Reminds me of the fantastic, unreleased Monty Python sketch about memory association: https://youtu.be/KnpY46lOTX4?si=3Yb17jvGp-1vn6de&t=2058

        Also, Monty Python -> The Life of Brian -> the everlasting glory of the Roman Empire

  • thecupisblue 5 hours ago

    It's so funny to see this be a worldwide phenomenon. As someone who grew up playing in the ruins of Roman temples & villas and was obsessed with it as a child, it almost feels like people are talking about "some other Rome".

    • sebastiennight 2 hours ago

      I grew up in a school system which taught us about "our ancestors, the Gauls"...

      Which is fun if you're an Asterix fan, but one day you end up asking yourself - wait, we're in an ex-French colony here, but how much Gaul blood does anyone have in this place really?

  • kruffalon 17 hours ago

    Thank you for reminding me, this is so fun to have bobbing around in the back of your mind! :D

  • michaelsshaw 12 hours ago

    Join the club of people who acknowledge that there's much more interesting history than that, and you'll suddenly forget all about Rome.

    • AlecSchueler an hour ago

      For me it's not so much what's interesting as what affects my day to day. I love Chinese history but I'm unlikely to come across anything today with origins in Chinese law, or traverse the path of a Chinese road, or use an interesting word with a Chinese etymology and an associated story from old China.

    • sebastiennight 6 hours ago

      I love learning new history and I'm open to suggestions. Any less-trodden paths you'd recommend?

      • michaelsshaw 2 hours ago

        For national history, Chinese is probably my favorite by far.

        May I suggest you do a domain-specific history dive, such as the history of computing, the history of science or some other subject you may enjoy more. That's the real good stuff.

pdpi 18 hours ago

For this particular one, you could easily see that comment on any community with a sufficient number of Asterix fans. Banners and standards with "SPQR" written somewhere were common enough that they should produce a Pavlovian reaction.

  • mananaysiempre 17 hours ago

    Or any community large enough to have people who have, y’know, visited Rome IRL?

    • jbaber 10 hours ago

      I was delighted to see manhole covers with SPQR on them in Rome.

folgoris 14 hours ago

It's something collectively known as INRI or CCCP.