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alehlopeh 3 hours ago [-]
I wonder how the plumbing worked for the bathroom in his private office at the top of the tower.
allan_s 5 minutes ago [-]
I also wonder how practical it was to climb there, I went to the eiffel tower several times and climbing stairs is an exercice by itself ,especially spiral ones
sneak 14 hours ago [-]
All spiral staircases have a single guardrail. That’s why they aren’t double helix staircases.
nottorp 11 hours ago [-]
> with no safety barriers
A guardrail isn't a safety barrier? The photos of the staircase don't look like star wars walkways to me at all.
MithrilTuxedo 14 hours ago [-]
Ahhh.... I couldn't figure out why they said that. I forgot the Statue of Liberty had double-helix staircases.
madaxe_again 11 hours ago [-]
We call them “spiral staircases” yet rarely do they actually contain a single spiral - but they do have a helix. I guess “helical staircase” was just too much for people to care about as the term embedded in the 1600s. Previously they’d been winding stairs, screw stairs, and earlier yet just a “vice”, so common were they. Weird how language adapts to what’s easy rather than what’s correct.
nkrisc 7 hours ago [-]
> Weird how language adapts to what’s easy rather than what’s correct.
It’s not weird at all, it’s quite sensible. The purpose of language between people is not to produce correct sounds, it’s to facilitate some other activity or intent, so people will tend towards whatever manner of language makes achieving their goals the easiest.
It’s the same reason desire paths form: it’s less effort.
It also looks like a spiral when looking up or down.
cheschire 8 hours ago [-]
If some language conveys meaning successfully, it ultimately doesn’t matter what the rules are.
technothrasher 7 hours ago [-]
The old prescriptive vs descriptive linguistic battle rears its head once again.
ianpurton 10 hours ago [-]
That site is everything that's wrong with the internet at the moment.
A dizzying array of adverts and popups.
pwg 4 hours ago [-]
Using UblockOrigin, in default deny all javascript mode, the article is fully readable with zero adverts and zero popups.
I had no idea the article even contained any of those until I read your comment.
consp 9 hours ago [-]
And it was very persistent In should enable those. No thank you.
tjoff 8 hours ago [-]
Not a single popup, didn't find any ads more than a text-only banner on top asking to subscribe. Some whitespace where ads might go though. No adblock.
I'm in EU though, maybe they actually respect GDPR. Or maybe it is just a glitch.
Andrew2565 10 hours ago [-]
As seen in "The Lavender Hill Mob"
deadbabe 4 hours ago [-]
I kind of feel like in the old days, people weren’t really afraid of heights. Heights were fairly new, and exciting, and the consequences of falling were not well understood yet. It’s why you would see skyscraper construction workers jumping around and sitting on beams to enjoy a casual lunch thousands of feet up, without a care in the world.
tvier 4 hours ago [-]
I'm pretty sure people have been falling off things for a quite a while.
fulafel 3 hours ago [-]
> Heights were fairly new, and exciting, and the consequences of falling were not well understood yet.
Indeed. Until Herbert Fall wrote his treatise about it in 1902 the entire concept was really absent from our collective imagination.
mikestew 4 hours ago [-]
…the consequences of falling were not well understood yet
Eh? Cliffs, trees; fall off anything at 10 meters or higher, and your odds of dying are around 50%. I’m pretty sure folks were aware of the consequences long before Eiffel showed up.
deadbabe 2 hours ago [-]
A guy literally jumped off the Eiffel Tower to test an early parachute, ignorant of what would happen if it failed.
yencabulator 18 minutes ago [-]
Perhaps it was more that risk taking and dying young from various illnesses was a thing that happened around you a lot, so you were more accustomed to it and didn't expect to live to 80.
FrustratedMonky 7 hours ago [-]
Wasn't the Eiffel Tower built as a temporary exhibition?
Can't believe the resources that took for 'temporary', and that it lasted this long.
pimlottc 15 minutes ago [-]
That's part of what makes it impressive. "Our country is so advanced and powerful that we can make a giant tower like this just for a glorified art show"
bookofjoe 5 hours ago [-]
>Eiffel’s contract dictated that the structure would stay up for only 20 years.
SV_BubbleTime 14 hours ago [-]
Look, I know ads are the mechanism for some sites. And I don’t normally “this site gave my phone cancer”.. but on IOS with blockers, everything except the text on the site can go fuck itself.
Been to the top of the Eiffel, it was a long enough set of elevator rides to flirt with and eventually date a French girl. So that probably wouldn’t have happened on stairs.
procaryote 11 hours ago [-]
FWIW, on android with firefox + ublock origin it's clean from ads.
On iOS with firefox it's filled with ads; with firefox focus it's mostly clean but you get a dismissable "please disable adblocker" style prompt I didn't get on android. I don't know if there's a browser with a good adblocker allowed in iOS walled garden, but I'd be happy for suggestions
aaronbrethorst 12 hours ago [-]
Do you think you might have also broken up if it had only been stairs?
onetokeoverthe 4 hours ago [-]
[dead]
alsetmusic 3 hours ago [-]
Well, that certainly wouldn't have overwhelmed my fear of heights. /s
I'd probably physically lock up in a state of panic. My SO had to rescue me on a far less severe stairway last year when I freaked out at a third story height that was kind of open. Imagine what this could do to someone with vertigo.
A guardrail isn't a safety barrier? The photos of the staircase don't look like star wars walkways to me at all.
It’s not weird at all, it’s quite sensible. The purpose of language between people is not to produce correct sounds, it’s to facilitate some other activity or intent, so people will tend towards whatever manner of language makes achieving their goals the easiest.
It’s the same reason desire paths form: it’s less effort.
It also looks like a spiral when looking up or down.
A dizzying array of adverts and popups.
I had no idea the article even contained any of those until I read your comment.
I'm in EU though, maybe they actually respect GDPR. Or maybe it is just a glitch.
Indeed. Until Herbert Fall wrote his treatise about it in 1902 the entire concept was really absent from our collective imagination.
Eh? Cliffs, trees; fall off anything at 10 meters or higher, and your odds of dying are around 50%. I’m pretty sure folks were aware of the consequences long before Eiffel showed up.
Can't believe the resources that took for 'temporary', and that it lasted this long.
Been to the top of the Eiffel, it was a long enough set of elevator rides to flirt with and eventually date a French girl. So that probably wouldn’t have happened on stairs.
On iOS with firefox it's filled with ads; with firefox focus it's mostly clean but you get a dismissable "please disable adblocker" style prompt I didn't get on android. I don't know if there's a browser with a good adblocker allowed in iOS walled garden, but I'd be happy for suggestions
I'd probably physically lock up in a state of panic. My SO had to rescue me on a far less severe stairway last year when I freaked out at a third story height that was kind of open. Imagine what this could do to someone with vertigo.