Community Page
- theappslab.com/ Jump to website »
-
Subscribe -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Popular Threads
-
Recent Comments
- Ah, cursed by geography. You should get satellite phones :)
- There's a hill directly between my house and the nearest tower, so I get all sorts of strange bounces and things changing as the atmospherics change. My wife for her work only uses her cell,...
- I'd like to see the app - please send the link to shawn.flahave@oracle.com Thanks
- Sounds like you live out of the way a bit. I thought SoCal down that way had better coverage, or do all the towers burn down each year? When I had Vonage, you had to opt in to call 911, which is a...
- Yeah, I remember parents being all freako about calling relatives on the other side of the country. Now I get on the wife (and soon the kids, I'm sure), "let's remember we get roaming...
Jump to original thread »
My wife introduced a theory to me years ago. She observed that certain odd themes tend to repeat themselves in high frequency over the course of about a week, then disappear back into obscurity.
Her theory was that if you apply numerology to these coincidences, you could translate chance into ... Continue reading »
Her theory was that if you apply numerology to these coincidences, you could translate chance into ... Continue reading »
11 months ago
I was reading this Wikipedia article today and got reminded of your post.
"The Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon occurs when a person, after having learned some (usually obscure) fact, word, phrase, or other item for the first time, encounters that item again, perhaps several times, shortly after having learned it."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baader-Meinhof_Phe...
Seems somewhat related, although this one is specifically about obscure facts. It does fall in the "Bugs In The Matrix" category though.
11 months ago
1 year ago
1) "Planes, Trains and Automobiles": Haven't watch the movie in years. In fact, I find it to be a little irritating. However, I've been seeing snippets all week - TV, in a movie theater ad, even a quote in a podcast.
2) O.A.R.'s tune "Hold On True": I heard it for the first time in months at my nephew's Bar Mitzphah last Saturday. Heard it on Internet streaming radio twice this week. Heard it again last night due to a glitch in the Smart Playlist I set up for my iPhone.
Still trying to figure out what these two things have in common and what it means (okay, so it might not mean anything but it's still fun to speculate).
1 year ago
Plus, mine come in bunches, then disappear complete with the data fix (memory wipe). I need to document this stuff and review it for patterns.
1 year ago
I think a lot of this is down to how observant you are. Chances are that song is played in the mall every week, but you only noticed it because you heard it on My Name Is Earl, which brought it to your attention.
In the same way, when you buy a car, you start to notice similar cars for the first time. They were always there, but you ignored them.
That's my totally unscientific opinion. :)
Cheers
Tim...
1 year ago
This is different. It's obscure things that appear in random patterns that are impossible to reproduce. Believe me, I would recognize "Take Me Home, Country Roads". Being from Pittsburgh, right near the West Virginia border, we heard that way too much.
The problem is that these bugs come, are obvious for a short time, then go. So you can only remember them briefly.
Exactly like a bug, a patch and a data fix.
1 year ago
chet
1 year ago
1 year ago
1 year ago
1 year ago
Another example is seeing a picture of Garth Brooks on tv or a magazine cover and I think of my childhood best friend who looks a lot like Garth. Then I'll remember playing basketball with him or something and his phone number will pop in to my head; 489-4548. It's easily been more than twenty years since I've dialed that number and I have only seen Frank twice in the last seven years since I live in a different state. Go figure!
1 year ago
She hasn't played my numbers though, and surprise, I don't play.
I like your take, i.e. making me remember something I didn't intend to, which I think gives credence to the bug theory. Someone's running system tests on me.
11 months ago
The similar, but related phenomenon is coincidental, i.e. you notice something, and find it's repeated in a cluster, then it disappears again. Like a song you haven't heard in a decade that's suddenly in a movie, on the radio, on the speakers at the supermarket, then gone back into the archives.
7 months ago
when you get a new car
you strat observing people with similar car