All posts tagged: Repetitive

Toy Story 5 review – It’s time to end this repetitive, increasingly bad franchise

Toy Story 5 review – It’s time to end this repetitive, increasingly bad franchise

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter We can only say goodbye to Toy Story so many times before it starts to get a little absurd. The series first ended in 2010 with Toy Story 3, as Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen), et al waved their beloved owner Andy off to college and prepared for a new life with his young neighbour Bonnie. Then it ended again with Toy Story 4 (2019), an existential, pseudo-epilogue about making peace with life’s many endings, as Woody and Bo Peep (Annie Potts) retired from the toy life to take a shot out in the wilderness. Yet somehow, the pair turn up back at Bonnie’s bedroom window in Toy Story 5. Scratch that personal growth. There’s more money to be made. This one is certainly topical. It tackles the impact of technology on children’s imaginative play, and arrives in the …

How to Automate Repetitive Business Tasks Using Claude Code

How to Automate Repetitive Business Tasks Using Claude Code

Claude Code provides business owners with a structured approach to managing tasks and improving efficiency. According to Simon Scrapes, this AI-driven system supports activities like content generation, workflow automation and integration with CRMs or project management platforms. A standout feature is the customizable Claude.md file, which allows users to specify preferences such as tone and style, making sure outputs align with their brand. By using natural language prompts, even non-technical users can delegate routine tasks effectively. Learn how to write prompts that enhance Claude Code’s functionality, integrate it with your existing systems and use its context window to manage segmented workflows. Gain insight into its predefined task-specific playbooks, called Skills, which simplify tasks like creating SEO-friendly content or drafting polished emails. This deep dive offers clear steps to help you incorporate Claude Code into your business processes. What is Claude Code & How Does it Work? TL;DR Key Takeaways : Claude Code is an advanced AI tool designed to automate repetitive business tasks, improve efficiency and enable focus on strategic priorities. Key features include natural …

Fighting Your Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviors Is Why You’re Stuck

Fighting Your Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviors Is Why You’re Stuck

For many individuals living with body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs) like trichotillomania (hair pulling) or excoriation (skin picking), life often feels like a constant struggle. Each morning begins with a vow that today will be the day the BFRB stops forever, only for them to find themselves locked once again in a grueling battle against an urge that feels far more powerful than their own resolve. In clinical practice, we often see clients trapped in a punishing cycle of experiential avoidance. They seek help to “stop the behavior,” viewing their internal urges as enemies that must be wrestled into submission. They operate under the exhausting belief that if they could only pull hard enough on the rope of willpower, they would finally win. But BFRBs thrive on the tension of that very struggle. What if the “win” isn’t found in pulling harder? What if the path to thriving begins the moment you stop the tug-of-war altogether? This exercise, adapted from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), invites a radical shift in perspective, moving the goal from the …

New psychology research reveals how repetitive thinking primes involuntary memories

New psychology research reveals how repetitive thinking primes involuntary memories

New research provides evidence that the repetitive thoughts occupying a person’s mind can directly influence the spontaneous memories they experience later. This phenomenon, termed “preoccupation priming,” suggests that focusing on a specific topic creates a tendency for the brain to retrieve personal memories related to that subject. The study was published in the scientific journal Consciousness and Cognition. Psychologists have studied involuntary autobiographical memories for many years. These are memories of past personal events that pop into consciousness without any deliberate attempt to retrieve them. They often occur during mundane activities, such as walking down the street or washing dishes. Previous research indicated a strong connection between a person’s current life concerns and the content of these spontaneous memories. For instance, diary studies showed that individuals going through a breakup or starting a new diet often reported involuntary memories centered on those specific themes. However, these earlier studies were primarily correlational. They relied on participants recording their daily experiences, which made it difficult to determine the direction of cause and effect. It was unclear if …

Micro Softy 66: Reducing Repetitive Repetition

Micro Softy 66: Reducing Repetitive Repetition

Good programmers have to be BFF’s with numbers. With this in mind, here’s this week’s Micro Softy. It’s tough and mathy. Choose any three-digit number, say 567, and repeat it: 567,567. Divide it by the prime numbers 13, then 11 and then 7. In each step, round to the nearest integer if necessary. The result will be the original three-digit number: 567. For example, · 567,567 divided by 13 is 43,659. · 43,659 divided by 11 is 3969, and · 3969 divided by 7 is 567 which is the original three-digit number. Wow. This works for any three-digit number. So this week’s (difficult) Micro Softy asks: Why? Solution to Micro Softy 65: Fathers and Sons Here’s the solution to last week’s relatively simple Micro Softy. Two fathers and their two sons walked into the Bass Pro Shop in Memphis, Tennessee. Each bought an AK47 rifle. But only three rifles were sold. How can this be? The men entering the Bass Pro Shop were a teenage boy, his father and the boy’s paternal grandfather. So there …