The next train on platform 2 is going to Errore XSLT @[email protected]
The next train on platform 2 is going to Errore XSLT @[email protected]
In a bunch of kung fu movies, there's this very specific trope, of this one dude who's watching the fight and explaining the styles being used to his fellow audience members.
Functionally he's basically a Mr. Exposition, but he always kinda comes off to me a bit like a sports color commentator, and I really wonder whether the vibes of each influenced the other.
@[email protected] In Jackie Chan's Gorgeous the character in this role actually states he's now a commentator for sports matches; he likes being behind the microphone because with his knowledge from training 'he sounds like he's invincible' but he fell so far behind the lead character's skills he now hires people to fight him and comments on the fight instead of trying to fight him himself. So I think the film makers are pretty aware of the similarities!
I'm not quite sure how, but somehow this video manages to be a mind blowing display of skill, a hilarious display of grown men making fart noises into microphones, and an absolute banger of a tune all at the same time. Well played, Hiss and H-has. Well played.
@InsiderTreat can recommend. there's a reason I say getting diagnosed and medicated was the second biggest moment of my life.
@[email protected] @[email protected] I second this message, and basically everything else in this thread. Realising you're badly dehydrated and need to pee and then going back to what you were doing before you manage to do anything about it is... well. It is, I suppose.
it's also not just breaking captions when you seek, either: you can jump forward and see captions, jump backward and see captions, you just can't see any caption you've seen before. Like they're getting "used up" by watching them
@[email protected] vlc added its very own anti memetic?
Brutal political commentary from a madlib generator.
Even great stories start from humble beginnings. In the first session of a new round of Coding Games with a Story, some of our authors (9-11 year olds) successfully got a story up and running with a scene, background music, images of the person speaking... and a decision point.
@[email protected] @[email protected] arrrgh. That would have made a vastly superior punch line and I missed it. tips hat
Disagree. Victims blaming is a sophisticated mechanism of moving regulatory responsibility away from centralised and well resourced organizations in the government and company and distributing it amongst the poorly resourced and fragmented general public.
This Victorian attitude is unwise and unsound.
@everton137 @KimSJ @EverydayMoggie @noodlemaz @Ivovanwilligen
@[email protected] yeap. Unless you think that young children should be responsible for reading and perfectly understanding the implications of the t&cs, and the elderly, and the people learning the local language, and the expert carpenter who happened not to get a formal education, and... oh, anyone who's vulnerable in pretty much any way, and everybody who isn't better at lawyering on the fly than a corporate legal department with as much time as they want @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected]
eight hundred years later, the notoriously unlucky waterfall has a new staircase that is upwards of 5% less likely to kill you
#gloryinthethunder #lego #bricklink #bricklinkstudio #mastoart
"See, the Staircase of the Monarchs!"
"So if you make it to the top it proves you're the rightful heir?"
"No, no. But we gave it a name that makes it sound like that to filter out the stupid and those vulnerable to peer pressure. And it's pretty."
@simoncropp @kurdiumov but as a rich person, I agree, give me more
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] Isn't there basically no mathematical difference between GMI and UBI if you have a means based income tax system (which nearly everywhere does)? It seems like as long as you're calculating both things at the same time, you'd end up with the same answers. The only "bad" option would seem to be assessing income given and income taxed with two different systems which might be politically necessary in the short term, but is self-evidental more expensive to manage.
@[email protected] @[email protected] To get the ball rolling, NextCloud do offer an education product (including a hosted option) and are based in Germany, I believe. That said, I haven't used it and I don't know where the hosting happens. nextcloud.com/education/
@[email protected] @[email protected] (for context, NextCloud can be self hosted and is open source but the fact they offered paid for enterprise options to schools and universities suggests they think it can take the place of classroom in at least some ways)
@[email protected] @[email protected] # LibreClassroom sounds good, it doesn't seem like a thing that would need to be EU only (as long as solutions are able to be hosted in the EU). I'd be interested in this as well.
@[email protected] @[email protected] To get the ball rolling, NextCloud do offer an education product (including a hosted option) and are based in Germany, I believe. That said, I haven't used it and I don't know where the hosting happens. nextcloud.com/education/
@_elena 😃 Elena! Yes, do you have any suggestions?
# EUClassRoom, # LibreClass ? It's tough coming up with a good one. The essence should be about "libre" educational collaboration tools...
@[email protected] @[email protected] # LibreClassroom sounds good, it doesn't seem like a thing that would need to be EU only (as long as solutions are able to be hosted in the EU). I'd be interested in this as well.
John Calvin Batchelor wrote, in a novel, of a place where there are billboards and neon arrows, all pointed to Plato's Cave.
"World's Oldest Continuously Operated Parable, Three Miles Ahead!"
Plato's Cave is a very old parable, to be sure. Not sure it's the oldest, tho. (One presumes we're speaking of the West. I have no clue what the oldest parable is in Asia.)
@[email protected] hmm. I think there's a difference here in that the cave was explicitly a story for teaching purposes, while the Babylonian exile was a record of historical events (of whatever accuracy, but it definitely wasn't considered made up to teach a specific point). No arguments with the commentary on the hypocrisy of effectively exiling people and then being surprised they find more truth in the old testament than your 'helpful' theology though...
you ever think about how if you call someone "unsavory" you are remarking on their moral character, but if you call someone "savory" you are remarking on how delicious they are
@[email protected] all those ghouls cursed with empathy are out there looking for the unsavoury savoury people
One thing I'll be forever grateful for my mum teaching me is not to be afraid of turning ingredients into food (and some basic rules for helping the results not be disgusting). We've opted for a rather more planned take on food than my family of origin in general, but sometimes you're tired and you haven't had time to shop and it is so powerful to be about to just grab a handful of ingredients and make 'a meal'.
Made university life a lot cheaper too...
One thing I'll be forever grateful for my mum teaching me is not to be afraid of turning ingredients into food (and some basic rules for helping the results not be disgusting). We've opted for a rather more planned take on food than my family of origin in general, but sometimes you're tired and you haven't had time to shop and it is so powerful to be about to just grab a handful of ingredients and make 'a meal'.
To all of you who love your old school parser based #interactivefiction , the smack talk in this 1-1 game jam style competion over at the IntFiction forums is why the chef's kiss emoji exists... intfiction.org/t/iron-chif-s...
That’s not a verb I recognize.
Footnote: the outcome of the Epstein/Gates email itself is immaterial—what's interesting is the mind set underlying it, which seems to have strong explanatory power for our current mess: there are too many poor people, and Epstein and his mates would like to get rid of us.
@[email protected] I don't actually know the context of the emails, but from the quote it does seem that the exact wording is both second hand and ambiguous; is it the poorness that is suppose to go away, or the people?
Not that I'm feeling generous enough to the people involved to assume the nicer option, but I'd feel dirty to not at least acknowledge both exist.