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Daniel Gross
The Tetris Effect:
We tend to assume things happen as a result of proximate causes. The case is often more complicated.
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Katie Evanko-Douglas 12. sij
Odgovor korisniku/ci @danielgross
Great description of life “It’s hard, often impossible, to predict the exact block that will cause the wave function collapse. The events aren’t sequential, and you often don’t know the entire board.” Even with a perfect bird’s eye view you never really know what will drop next
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Payfrit 7. sij
Odgovor korisniku/ci @danielgross
there should be a tetris game that's really wide and tall (like 200 x 200 and your goal is to "touch" certain targets on this massive new board by building a "tree" of shapes as they drop, instead of trying to clear rows.
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Payfrit 7. sij
Odgovor korisniku/ci @danielgross
maybe you have to do them in order. first board has one target. then two. etc.
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Stas Kulesh 🥝 7. sij
Odgovor korisniku/ci @danielgross
I’ve just stumbled upon a better cover pic for this
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christian 8. sij
Odgovor korisniku/ci @danielgross
On the memories point, it’s like a paradox. You can’t recreate a scenario because recreation the bad ingredient and spontaneity is the good ingredient. Almost like I need to forget I ever read this. Great clarity, thanks for sharing!
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