micro dosing heaven and hell by being unemployed

izzy's playlists!

JBB: An Artblog!
Not today Justin

titsay
occasionally subtle
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
๐ชผ
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
i don't do bad sauce passes

blake kathryn
d e v o n
Three Goblin Art

No title available
DEAR READER

Andulka
Stranger Things
we're not kids anymore.

if i look back, i am lost
tumblr dot com
KIROKAZE
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Tรผrkiye

seen from Germany
seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Guatemala
seen from Netherlands
seen from Guernsey
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Vietnam

seen from Germany

seen from Brazil
seen from Germany
@centripetalgravity
micro dosing heaven and hell by being unemployed
Once when I was in undergrad, someone described something as โproblematicโ in class and our professor was like, โThatโs cool, but โproblematicโ doesnโt really mean anything. It means that the thing youโre describing has a problem, and in and of itself thatโs not bad. Art, especially, should always have problems, or else itโs not interesting and not art, either. It sounds like youโre trying to say that this is bad, but you donโt want to say โbad.โ Is that right?โ
So from then on whenever one of us called something problematic, he would make us talk it out until we could name the โbadโ thing we were hinting at. In this particular class, 7/10 it was some type of oppression, and the remainder was like, โIโm uncomfortable because this is very new/confusing/pushing boundaries that made me feel safe.โ
Once we stopped calling things โproblematicโ and stopping at that, class got way more interesting and... we all had to say, like, โthatโs racistโ or โthatโs misogynisticโ or โew capitalism grossโ out loud, which a lot of us had never done in a classroom before. Or we had to be like, โUhhh... Iโm not sure whatโs so bad?โ and confront our own beliefs and that was maybe even more useful.
Anyway. Whenever I see the word problematic, I canโt help but think of this professor being like, โGood starting point, now letโs get specific.โ I think when we have to commit to saying โthatโs ___โ it requires a lot more careful thought about the truth and impact and complexities of whatever weโre claiming. Sometimes there really is some bullshit afoot, and also sometimes itโs art, and it should be full of problems, because thatโs what art is.
#'this is present in the text' is often a good first step #but those second and third ones (naming it; describing its function) are vital (via @elucubrare)
did you receive abstinence only education in school? (and please say where your school is located in the tags)
yes
no
happy new year -------------_--------------------
Movement nudge, walkies!
๐ ๐ ๐ X
you, reading this. you're a creature now. reblog to creature your followers
this creature is you
i dont care if monday sucks... tuesday cost me sixty bucks... wednesday thursday give no fucks. it's friday im a duck
Forest tree frog
Robby isnโt evil. Robby has empathy.
Trinity isnโt evil. Trinity has empathy.
Baran isnโt evil. Baran has empathy.
Itโs clear as day in episode after episode, in ways both big and small. They arenโt infallible, and they do fuck up, but at their core, they are good people. This whole show is about showing how good people fuck up and keep trying anyway. They want to be good. They want to do better. We just have to give them the chance to learn and grow!
People say they want 20+ episode seasons, but they canโt even handle these complex characters for 15. You people are incapable of sitting with these characters long enough for them to have development. The Pitt isnโt tiktok; youโre not going to get one neat, perfect ending in a 60 second long video.
Im reading Supremacy: AI, Chat GPT, and the race that will change the world and at current I'm reading about Sam Altman. Apparently one of the startups he invested in, and got on the waiting list for, is nectome which hopes to preserve bodies so that they can one day be integrated with computers or "revived." From their site:
We believe the canon of scientific and clinical literature supports the proposition that our preservation protocol can preserve an individual for hundreds of years in sufficient detail that revival is a theoretical possibility in the long term.
I knew these people were rich, but I never realized or made the connection that they had science fiction money. Assuming that nectome's estimates are accurate, the ultra rich are buying immortality or at least some bastardized form of time travel. They have access to advantages that the majority of people dont know about or are beyond the imagination.
I hate when I read and learn things.
Upon further research, the cost for their brain embalming service is $10,000 which is definitely cheaper than I thought it would be, but is still a gap. How many of us have $10,000 to throw at a service that may or may not work? Also, even if it does work, you have to hope the company doesnt collapse in on itself before the integration technology catches up.
if theres one thing that really pissed me off from my 3 years of architecture i took in high school it's learning about how we used to have all these little techniques to maximize or minimize heat or warmth and now we just merrily abandoned all those to have the same copypaste style buildings everywhere that are often INCREDIBLY unoptimized to the local weather and climate so we can just throw more money at our heating and cooling bills
where i live it is hot as balls approximately 80% of the year. i do not want a massive butt-ugly grey mcmansion with a huge echoey open-concept kitchen-livingroom-foyer-diningroom-staircase that has huge windows so i can have an hvac unit the size of a barge heaving and straining to keep it at a constant 72 the grees. i want a north indian traditional style home with small windows to force the airflow to cool, decorative grates to limit the amount of sunlight, and a COURTYARD with a POND *smashes unspecified large object*
I hate learning about instances of "oh yeah we know how to do that, we just don't".
this is exactly why I love talking about historical passive heating and cooling techniques
oh wow the glass-tower office buildings we constructed when we thought air conditioning and central heating would never have downsides...have downsides?
and we're still building them?
while the Victorian house museum where I work, with thick walls and small windows and big wooden shutters stays ~10 degrees above (winter) or below (summer) the outside temperature for days on end with no help at all?
uh. okay then
(also public transit. the history of public transit in the US is infuriating, because we had it! and then we destroyed it!)
THIS IS SO TRUE
Im reading Supremacy: AI, Chat GPT, and the race that will change the world and at current I'm reading about Sam Altman. Apparently one of the startups he invested in, and got on the waiting list for, is nectome which hopes to preserve bodies so that they can one day be integrated with computers or "revived." From their site:
We believe the canon of scientific and clinical literature supports the proposition that our preservation protocol can preserve an individual for hundreds of years in sufficient detail that revival is a theoretical possibility in the long term.
I knew these people were rich, but I never realized or made the connection that they had science fiction money. Assuming that nectome's estimates are accurate, the ultra rich are buying immortality or at least some bastardized form of time travel. They have access to advantages that the majority of people dont know about or are beyond the imagination.
I hate when I read and learn things.
if you've ever pet more than a few dogs you'd Know what dog residue is
Some pages from the fresh fruits magazine ๐