Post Awp4fgTkAcUXFnmH7Q by NeoCat@sacred.harpy.faith
 (DIR) More posts by NeoCat@sacred.harpy.faith
 (DIR) Post #Awp1dud6HqVGhUcMO8 by NeoCat@sacred.harpy.faith
       2025-08-04T09:31:39.477261Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Just so it's clear. It wasn't simply made up. "They, in turn, taught him numbers:One man in particular, I kept looking at his numbers–his number tattooed on his forearm ... he started – you know, when–during the dinner break, when everybody was eating and not learning, he would point to the numbers. And he would say, that is a two, and that is a four. And then he'd say, and this is a eight, and that's a one. And I'll never forget this. And he said, and that's a nine. And then he crooked his arm and inverted his arm and said, and see, it becomes a six. It's magic. And now it's a nine, and now it's a six, and now it's a nine and now it's a six. And that's really how I learned my numbers for the first time ... the irony of all that, and the gift of that lesson, never really dawned on me until I was much older.[13]"666, inverted. Either that. Or Steven Spielberg just really likes oral sex.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Spielberg
       
 (DIR) Post #Awp4fgTkAcUXFnmH7Q by NeoCat@sacred.harpy.faith
       2025-08-04T09:45:04.733523Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Zergling_man  I think you might find Steven's father a little more interesting.As the creator of the POS machine.Arnold Meyer Spielberg (February 6, 1917 – August 25, 2020) was an American electrical engineer who was instrumental in contributions to "real-time data acquisition and recording that significantly contributed to the definition of modern feedback and control processes".[1] For General Electric[2] he designed, with his colleague Charles Propster, the GE-225 mainframe computer in 1959.[3] He cited as his greatest contribution the first computer-controlled "point of sale" cash register.[4]