Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for December 02, 2017

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    BE THIS GUY  almost 7 years ago

    It’s Steve Jobs’s way of haunting you from the great beyond.

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    Templo S.U.D.  almost 7 years ago

    aren’t there some little trinket that you wrap your unused ear buds around? could that even work for Rat?

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    Packratjohn Premium Member almost 7 years ago

    Hence Bluetooth….

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    Sherlock Watson  almost 7 years ago

    I prevent my garden hose from getting tangled by fastening the two ends together when I’m not using it. Too bad headphone cords don’t work that way.

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    Liverlips McCracken Premium Member almost 7 years ago

    These devices are sentient, and they wish to torture us hapless humans.

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    PICTO  almost 7 years ago

    @SHERLOCK WATSON…I do believe the accepted method is to never take them off. I mean the headphones not the garden hose.

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    x_Tech  almost 7 years ago

    A pair of scissors will fix that. Snip, snip and now your earbuds are wireless.

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    Lee Cox  almost 7 years ago

    Christmas lights, anyone?

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    chris_weaver  almost 7 years ago

    No way to uninstall the tangle app!

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    AKHenderson Premium Member almost 7 years ago

    Maybe he should call Peter Venkman.

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    Plods with ...™  almost 7 years ago

    It’s the Tangle Fairy. Quick little sucker.

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    Queen of America  almost 7 years ago

    I figure that as long as they’re going to get tangled up anyway, why bother trying to prevent it? I just toss them in the drawer.

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    Silly Season   almost 7 years ago

    It’s SCIENCE!

    http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/seriouslyscience/2014/06/18/scientific-explanation-earphones-always-tangled/

    Spontaneous knotting of an agitated string.

    “It is well known that a jostled string tends to become knotted; yet the factors governing the “spontaneous” formation of various knots are unclear. We performed experiments in which a string was tumbled inside a box and found that complex knots often form within seconds. We used mathematical knot theory to analyze the knots.

    Above a critical string length, the probability P of knotting at first increased sharply with length but then saturated below 100%. This behavior differs from that of mathematical self-avoiding random walks, where P has been proven to approach 100%.

    Finite agitation time and jamming of the string due to its stiffness result in lower probability, but P approaches 100% with long, flexible strings. We analyzed the knots by calculating their Jones polynomials via computer analysis of digital photos of the string.

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    Mostly Water Premium Member almost 7 years ago

    Entanglement is a precursor to life. It’s how complex chains of amino acids are formed.

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    Masterskrain  almost 7 years ago

    Douglas Adams used to complain about his box of “Dongly Bits”, all the cords and attachments that came with his electronic goodies…

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    Kaputnik  almost 7 years ago

    My Android earphone cords have never gotten tangled.

    This may be because I can’t stand using earphones, and never took off the tie-wraps in the first place, or even took them out of their little box. I assume I still have them somewhere, but if they can find a way to tangle themselves under those conditions, they’re welcome to do so.

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    Cameron1988 Premium Member almost 7 years ago

    The same goes for earbuds, Rat

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    jski14  almost 7 years ago

    Never have been able to figure out how the vacuum cleaner cord manages to tie itself into knots.

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    Silly Season   almost 7 years ago

    joefearsnothing and Lyman Elliott

    Yeah, you’re right.

    What possible use could there be for attempting to understand how and why a string of something might get tangled up and coiled around?

    Just FYI…

    RNA is a single string with ‘knobs’, DNA is a ladder shape.

    https://www.diffen.com/difference/DNA_vs_RNA

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    Number Three  almost 7 years ago

    I’m good at untangling earphones. All it takes is a bit of patience and skilled fingers.

    xxx

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    Bruce1253  almost 7 years ago

    Give up, you are fighting a fundamental force of nature, found in both classical physics and Quantum Mechanics: Entanglement & String Theory. Otherwise known as “Shit Happens.”

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    Marvin Premium Member almost 7 years ago

    Hey Rat, spring for a pair of AirPods.

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    Sisyphos  almost 7 years ago

    Save your sanity, Rat! Go wireless….

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    Bysshe  almost 7 years ago

    There is a method of coiling that works for anything flexible; microphone cables, garden hoses, extension cords, headphone leads… It leaves you with a smooth coil, with no tension or tendency to unwind, and doesn’t need to be fastened or held together. In it just sits there, ready for use.

    It’s a bit too hard to explain verbally without a diagram, but I’m sure you can find it on YouTube or if you know anyone who does recording or live sound, they should know it.

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    ND Cool Z  almost 6 years ago

    Rapunzel headphones!!

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    Just nate  over 4 years ago

    Get air pods

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