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IonAddis

@IonAddis@lemmy.world

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IonAddis,
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The nice thing about being a regular person is that very few people have any reason to care.

One crazy ex (or, hopefully ex) and one’s tune changes quick.

Or sometimes you’re born into a shit family, and THEY stalk you when you try to get away.

IonAddis,
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For me, what’s way scarier is, it isn’t that everyone is being quiet, it’s that there isn’t any one else out there, and we’re one of the first civilizations to develop.

Why would you find that scary?

Is it because of the ‘great filter’ stuff, that there must therefore be something ahead of us in time that wipes us out (like self-inflicted climate change)? Or is it something like humans being awfully flawed to go down in universal history as the “first” intelligent and technologically advanced species? Or something else?

IonAddis,
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I forgot about the kid’s shoes trick. It can be hit or miss…sometimes kid’s shoes aren’t made as well as they’re expected to be outgrown. But sometimes the toe boxes are bigger, which I appreciate because it sucks looking for 5 wide women’s. (And size 3 men’s isn’t always available.)

IonAddis,
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Someone who can do a “pull the pork apart” robot attachment for a crock pot could probably make a pile of money.

Although now I’m imagining a little robot treading in the crock pot like old timey winemaking, where they stomped on the grapes.

IonAddis,
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What’s your favorite Indian dish?

IonAddis,
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The topographical features of the cave walls could also have inspired the artists’ imagination. Cave dwellers may have experienced pareidolia, the psychological phenomenon of seeing unintentional forms in nature, like seeing shapes in clouds. If a bulge of rock looks a little like a horse’s head, the artist might imagine the complete form, filling in the rest of the details.

For example, one newly discovered horse image measures around 460 x 300mm and is painted in red using variably spaced dots. It depicts the head with the corner of the mouth, an eye, an ear, and the beginning of the cervico-dorsal line. The figure makes use of natural features of the cave wall, with cracks in the rock incorporated into the outlines of the head and chest. The cervical-dorsal line adapts to a concave area of the wall.

I guess previously scientists were looking at the art like how you or I might look at a horse drawn on a piece of paper, but some of the art was more like going up to a funny rock sort of shaped like a horse, and adding onto it/altering it in order to show others how much like a horse (or whatever) the funny looking rock is.

Which kind of crossing between artistic mediums, from 2D painting to something more like sculpture.

Anyway, this is cool. I didn’t really consider that someone might do that with their art before reading this article.

IonAddis,
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In the past, I probably wouldn’t be found out, but I’d probably also die more easily. I’d have to be in Tudor England to even have a chance of speaking the language. If it was a dice roll of going to where “my ancestors” lived, I could end up anywhere in Europe, and parts of western asia and north africa.

In the future, they might find me out, but I’d also probably have a much better time of surviving. I’d prefer to go to the future.

A translator app on a phone could probably make heads and tails of my English dialect (I mean, they can do that today), and travel would be as fast as modern travel or faster, so once I identified a locale that I thought I’d like I could try to get to it. Basically, more opportunity would mean more options to be safe, and to survive.

IonAddis,
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I bet Covid got you a lot of fun data to play with re: “supply line collapse”.

I’ve always been interested in work like this–I took a class that covered lean manufacturing and kept thinking about how “just in time” inventory seemed like it’d be awful for a hospital, as the hospital would be MOST needed if supply lines collapsed, and JIT stuff seemed a dumb move. But I was only spitballing on the surface as an outsider.

IonAddis,
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My school dropped their computer aided drafting degree due to (I think) Covid making instructors impossible to find.

So I’ve a half-done drafting degree, and naturally places like yours won’t touch me, heh. Gonna have to redo a bunch of credits.

IonAddis,
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I’m glad you’re healing well. I broke my foot earlier in the year in July…lis franc injury, but mild enough that they decided not to do surgery for fear of fucking up with the tiny foot bones (I got a lot of little breaks at the end of the bones which are nigh-impossible to put screws through without making it worse), which seems to have been the right call as I’m walking on it 4 months later.

I absolutely loved the doctors that got all excited and doctory talking about stuff! With me, I ended up with some of the history of lis franc injuries, which used to be common for soldiers on horseback, as they’d fall from their horse and get the midfoot stuck in the stirrup, breaking it.

I also had an unrelated small skin biopsy, and my surgeon was happily chattering away about doing it by hand so I don’t get weird skin flaps by the punch, and how the little cauterization tool worked. You know, as I lay there with bits of my flesh burning, lol.

Nerdy doctors are cool.

IonAddis,
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Huh–crossing my fingers then! It’ll be interesting to see if it actually gets into development.

I was thinking about casting Corwin, and after the finale of Loki, I kinda think Tom Hiddleston would do a great Corwin. I think he could portray Corwin’s arc of fighting for the throne at first just so his brother wouldn’t get it, to someone who doesn’t even want the throne wonderfully. He’d also do great as one of Corwin’s brothers.

But I’d also kinda like to see some newcomer knock it out of the park too.

IonAddis,
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Yeah, it’s a really distinct take on necromancers. The visual look of everything, the rules of the world–all really well designed.

It’d be a great YA movie or series.

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

They’re only trivial to separate if you think the only “real” sci-fi is hard sci-fi. Star Wars, Star Trek, and plenty of other beloved sci-fi series that blur the lines would get lost in the infighting.

I mean, the “war” between sci-fi and fantasy has been going on for decades, and it’s always been ridiculous.

IonAddis,
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I’m honestly surprised none of Scalzi’s works have ended up movies or television series or anything.

But yeah, Old Man’s War would be awesome. It’s such a fun concept.

IonAddis,
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Are you sure about that? Wizard’s First Rule was great, and they slowly (then quickly) started to unravel.

Richard being a white savior showing the mud people how to make tile roofs seems like it’d be nigh-unfilmable/unwatchable if it were rendered book-accurately cuz boy is it chock-full of veiled racism!

IonAddis,
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Oh, I like that. Make use of something that’d otherwise be trash.

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, I kind of oops’d my way into this. Have a plastic tub, and I use…not zip ties, but reusable variants of them…to keep various cables together.

It’s mostly SATA cables, HDMI or DVI cables, and computer power cables and a few small power/USB strips. There’s a weird satisfaction to needing a cable for something, opening the tub, and being able to just lift the right one out without dealing with a rat’s nest of whatever.

IonAddis,
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Holy shit, it’s true.

I’m telling all my friends.

In scheduled texts, of course XD

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve never heard of pre-sending texts. Is it linked to a specific type of phone?

(I use Android and never have had an iPhone, so sorry if I’m asking something obvious!)

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

I think your outlook and mine are similar.

People like to say things like, “It’s so inspiring you got through XYZ! I could never do that!” The news sites run a lot on that sentiment.

But if you look through history, people of all stripes actually are good at surviving through stuff, simply because there’s no choice. You just go forward. You see this in action in war-torn countries…everyone, of all different stripes and different personalities, surviving in one way or another. It’s not all that unusual to survive shitty things.

So I feel like the worth is in what you learned from those experiences, as some people survive them but don’t learn much from it, while others wring the crappy experience of every scrap of knowledge it can possibly offer.

But you can wring experience from good experiences just as well as bad ones, so wouldn’t it be nice if nobody had to have bad experiences?

Basically, I don’t think suffering brings any sort of grace, but if you are forced to suffer, it seems important to wring any scrap of knowledge from it you can. Tear the silver lining out with your fingernails if you have to, haha.

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

I just kept critiquing myself after a negative interaction and trying to figure out why I got angry or frustrated.

This bit really is key.

Some of our emotions are legit. Sometimes someone really did try to screw you over or something. But a lot of times…our feelings are based on assumptions that aren’t true, and when you pick at the emotion a bit you start to realize you assumed the wrong thing, or didn’t consider something else.

So it’s important to critique yourself, and think about what happened, and try to dig down into the true root of the situation, separate truth from fact.

I grew up in an abusive home and generally am laid-back so it’s hard to get me angry. I had to learn that in my case, the anger I felt actually was valid and not just something I was blowing out of proportion–most people who talk a lot about anger are approaching from the other angle, and have to learn the opposite, that not everything is worth getting angry about.

But both of us, regardless of our “natural starting point”, have to learn how to think about stuff that happened, and ask questions, and try to figure out what happened and why.

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

I’m curious what country/culture you’re from that this is a significant problem in your life?

It kinda sounds like you’re a medieval serf who got an arrow shot in your ass while poaching off the king’s preserve.

…or like, you’re reading an awful lot of fantasy…and thinking 500-year-ago-problems are today’s problems…

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

Then you put googly eyes and a little rhinestone pantsuit on it and stick a video up on…well, I guess YouTube wouldn’t take it.

Pornhub, maybe?

During travel, what can I prepare beforehand as meal, which can be eaten without access to fire or microwave?

I’m going from Hong Kong to Iceland next month. I’ve read that everything there, including food, are quite expensive. So my wife and I have been researching on how to prepare meal or snack that we can eat during the day instead of going to restaurant....

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t have any good suggestions, but I have two questions that might be relevant to you or to other people who do have ideas.

  • Will you be visiting a grocery store in Iceland to get your ingredients? Or will you be packing them in your luggage on the flight over?
  • If they are in your luggage, will there be any customs tomfoolery if you’re bringing lots of food with you? (I have never flown with lots of food in my luggage; I have no idea if this is even a concern, but wanted to bring the question up in case it is.)
IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

Oh yeah.

I’m pretty convinced that Livejournal was Russia’s test bed for weaponizing social media. I think they used it against their own citizens first, and data-mined the English-speaking side to understand how it worked, and took what they learned to perfect the shit-storm of lies on modern social media (on Tumblr/Twitter/Reddit/everywhere.)

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