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shark vs the universe
styofa doing anything

Kiana Khansmith
wallacepolsom

roma★

JVL
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Misplaced Lens Cap
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Product Placement

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ojovivo
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@parainfa
the internet is a cauldron that you speak your wishes into and then watch on in horror as they come bubbling to the surface
Ok so this was too wild for me to see and not know the context so i just looked up the article and apparently there was a nuclear site in brazil that shifted its location in 1985, abandoning its old one, but the court ordered private security to be held over the abandoned site while the outcome of lawsuits were pending after there were litigations about the contents of the area
And on the one day that one of the security guards didnt show up to work, two scavangers looted the abandoned nuclear site and took a bunch of radioactive shit (including a capsule of Cesium Chloride and a Radiotherapy device core) -which they would have no idea were as dangerous as they were until later in the day when they both started displaying symptoms of radiation; vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, external burns where the capsule had been exposed to.
After breaking the radioactive core open, one of the looters noticed the contents appeared as a “glowing blue” powder-like substance. He proceeded to sell it to a local scrapyard, and the owner of said yard invited every person he could to come witness the mysterious powder.
By this time, multiple of one of the looter’s fingers, and the other’s forearm had needed amputation due to the effects of direct exposure, and after 2 weeks of the radiactive goods’ theft, 6 locations had been contaminated and 112,000 people were examined for radiation exposure, about 1,000 of these people identified as having recieved “more than a year’s worth of background radiation”
All because this security guard played hooky and took his family to see Herbie Goes Bananas.
Photos by しろうとスミ@SirouTouge
everyone do yourself a favor and watch the original japanese 1990′s moomin intro
these lyrics singlehandedly cured all the chemical imbalances in my brain
@fangbreaker
seems that Chrome has around 60-65% market share, so it’s not totally dominating the market yet but it’s worrying that we’re basically reliant on Apple and Microsoft to hold the line.
Does Firefox not count for anything?
about 10% and falling, but perhaps that can change, I just don’t see how.
Chrome edging towards 70% on desktop, Microsoft has thrown in the towel, Safari obviously rules iOS, Firefox exists only as insurance for Chrome.
Please, please I’m begging you, use firefox.
PLEASE install firefox as a mobile browser and then run adblock on your mobile browser it’s so good I promise.
Look.
Look.
I know I’m a total grind about open source stuff but browsers are the PERFECT place to learn to love open source software and for so long FireFox was a major part of the browser market and sometimes if you want to see what kind of fuckery google is up to it helps to see the kinds of things they block in firefox and just
There’s an organization that makes free, excellent, safe software that doesn’t collect and market your data but for some reason two thirds of the world uses a google product and most of the leftover population uses apple and just
I promise, firefox is so good - the extensions are incredible look - I can use lightbeam to see what sites I use and how they connect to other sites (bottom right should give you an idea how much time I spend on tumblr)
or I can look at ublock origin and see that it’s blocked over 2 million requests since I installed it or I can run the facebook container extension and stop facebook from tracking me and you know what I bet you can do a lot of that on chrome too but you’re doing that while chrome itself is tracking you and gobbling up your activity for google and
firefox is so fuckin great and it’s such a great ambassador for other open source projects please be a big old fuckin nerd with me and use firefox and run a bunch of funky extensions and customize the fuck out of your web experience.
Wanna be a hacker? Firefox.
Wanna use instagram on desktop? Firefox.
Wanna be a killer researcher? Firefox.
Wanna properly credit artists? Firefox.
Wanna read a whole shitload of books? Firefox.
Wanna make video responses to shitlord youtubers?
Wanna shoot cat lasers at bugs?
Wanna use youtube as a music streaming service?
FIREFOX.
I just love firefox okay.
Now all of those “Firefox is terrible” memes seem really sinister to me.
Also part of the reason that Firefox *seems* terrible these days is because it’s a small enough part of the market share that people don’t bother to accomodate for Firefox. THAT ONLY WORKS IF VERY FEW PEOPLE USE IT.
Even though Opera and Brave and such are non-google browsers they’re still based on the Chromium engine and Microsoft Edge is moving to the Chromium engine which means that almost the entire rest of the internet is based on chromium so if Google decides it’s not going to support a fork that has scripts that make it easier to block trackers they’re going to be able to prevent a lot of other browsers from blocking trackers.
It’s actually a really, really big issue, similar to the outsized influence that Microsoft had in the late 90s.
Firefox is a GREAT browser but google intentionally throttles and breaks their products on firefox (I’ve personally had problems doing basic things like “cutting” and “pasting” on Youtube and Google Sheets and i’ve had problems sending files through google drive while using firefox) but ALSO pushes standards that are incompatible with firefox, which disincentivizes doing web development that supports both browsers.
Firefox is one of a very few things standing in the way of a Chrome/Chromium monopoly and the fact that so few people know that is disconcerting.
For those doubting this, you can see the behaviour of Google’s reduction in functionality particularly easily on Youtube. First, understand that it’s very easy for a website to tell what browser you’re using - this is thanks to something called the User Agent header. You can theoretically set your browser to send a fake one, but most don’t.
Now, let’s test. Step one: Open a YouTube video. I chose this one in 4K because I had it open in a tab anyway. For the sake of a fair test, I cleared my browser cache so that there was no data for the video stored anywhere to fuck with the results (and did again between tests, though Chrome and Firefox shouldn’t share a cache, so that wasn’t really necessary).
Here’s the “Stats For Nerds” on Chrome:
And here’s Firefox:
Quick note - the difference in the viewport data is because I had Chrome open on my second monitor, which has a lower resolution, and Firefox on my main one. I re-ran the test when I noticed typing this up, it didn’t affect the results.
The main thing you can see here is that Google gives MUCH more bandwidth to Chrome users. This means less buffering. Additionally - while I couldn’t get it to happen - I’ve noticed that Google serves all Firefox videos using the VP9 codec. On Chrome, it (occasionally - like I said, I couldn’t get it to do it right now) uses the more advanced AV1 codec for some videos, despite both browsers supporting it.
You’ll also notice some screen tearing on Firefox as well. Hacker News speculated a while back that Google straight up serves a different, less optimised player to Firefox but I don’t know if that was ever corroborated. There’s been accusations of it before though.
But me? I’m a total computer dummy. I just want to want videos on YouTube properly and use it facilitate my life. I tried using duckduckgo and it similar problems. It was just slower to use duck on chrome. I switched back because I was wasting so much time just sitting around when it would have already loaded on Google.
It’d be nice if you computer Smarties gave me a better solution with literal ‘steps to..’ guide as well. Please and thank you.
Okay
Step One - Install Firefox
Step Two - Install the following add-ons (this will help with both speed and security); you install the add-ons by following the links I’m providing while you are in the Firefox browser and clicking the large blue “add to firefox” button.
uBlock Origin
PrivacyBadger
HTTPS Everywhere
Facebook Container
PLEASE NOTE: while youtube may run slightly slower on Firefox if you set FF up with the above extensions you won’t get youtube ads. This is a huge, HUGE positive tradeoff.
Step Three - set duckduckgo as your default browser
in the upper right hand corner of your Firefox browser is an icon that’s three horizontal bars, click that
about halfway down that list is a gear icon that says “options”, click that
on the options page the third link is a magnifying glass that says “search”, click that
The second section on the search page is “default search engine” - click on the dropdown menu and select DuckDuckGo
The fourth section on the search page is “one-click search engines” - this adds the option to choose a different engine to search with when you type into your search bar; underneath the search suggestions there will be a little menu offering you options once you add some one-click search engines. Select the search engines to add. I have Google and Wikipedia set as one-click options for when I’m not finding something quickly or easily on DDG.
It’s very likely that youtube will just keep running somewhat slow on Firefox but for the average viewer it’s probably not enough to make a difference (and what difference it DOES make is more than made up for by not having to watch ads). If you’re used to posting on youtube from chrome it’s worthwhile to keep using chrome to run youtube while you’re posting videos. (remember there’s no rule that says you can’t have multiple browsers or can’t use multiple browsers)
firefox is bad, mozilla is an evil company thats just not as big as apple or microsoft or google,
really just use chromium, google chrome is an open source project that google added some stuff to and made their own, chromium is just chrome without googles evilness
the only end to the terror is free and open software
David Lynch, “The Angriest Dog in the World”
my favorite tidbit about Kung Fu Panda is that China saw it and was like "how the fuck did we not think of this before"
China: we love kung fu and we love pandas
America: *makes a film about a panda who learns kung fu*
China: WHAT THE FUCK
Dutch King shares funny video with Dutch Prime Minister during Trump speech at UN
The Lighthouse (2019) // It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia - Mac & Dennis Move to The Suburbs (2016)
Life doesn’t end at 23. 30 isn’t old. Fetishising youth as the ultimate desirable characteristic in a person is actively harmful to both young and old people. Some of us lost our teenage years to abuse and recovery, and can only begin living when we’re at a different life stage. Literally knock it off, the lot of you.
salute
New demand for very old farm tractors specifically because they're low tech
Farmers are increasingly sick of high-tech tractors that are expensive to buy and usually impossible to fix yourself due to their integrated digital technology. According to the Minnesota Star Tribune, “Tractors manufactured in the late 1970s and 1980s are some of the hottest items in farm auctions across the Midwest these days.” To be sure, the farmers buying these old machines aren’t luddites. In fact, they often customize and retrofit them with contemporary tech like GPS for automatic steering. From the Star Tribune:
https://boingboing.net/2020/01/06/new-demand-for-very-old-farm-t.html
In Pontevedra, the usual soundtrack of a Spanish city has been replaced by the tweeting of birds and the chatter of humans
“Listen,” says the mayor, opening the windows of his office. From the street below rises the sound of human voices. “Before I became mayor 14,000 cars passed along this street every day. More cars passed through the city in a day than there are people living here.”
Miguel Anxo Fernández Lores has been mayor of the Galician city since 1999. His philosophy is simple: owning a car doesn’t give you the right to occupy the public space.
“How can it be that the elderly or children aren’t able to use the street because of cars?” asks César Mosquera, the city’s head of infrastructures. “How can it be that private property – the car – occupies the public space?”
a metro-style map of pontevedra shows typical walking times.
“They stopped cars crossing the city and got rid of street parking, as people looking for a place to park is what causes the most congestion. They closed all surface car parks in the city centre and opened underground ones and others on the periphery, with 1,686 free places. They got rid of traffic lights in favour of roundabouts, extended the car-free zone from the old city to the 18th-century area, and used traffic calming in the outer zones to bring the speed limit down to 30km/h.
The benefits are numerous. On the same streets where 30 people died in traffic accidents from 1996 to 2006, only three died in the subsequent 10 years, and none since 2009. CO2 emissions are down 70%, nearly three-quarters of what were car journeys are now made on foot or by bicycle, and, while other towns in the region are shrinking, central Pontevedra has gained 12,000 new inhabitants. Also, withholding planning permission for big shopping centres has meant that small businesses – which elsewhere have been unable to withstand Spain’s prolonged economic crisis – have managed to stay afloat.
flickr/rodolforamallo
“The city is the perfect size for pedestrianisation,” says local architect Rogelio Carballo Soler. “You can cross the entire city in 25 minutes. There are things you could criticise, but there’s nothing that would make you reject this model.”
read more: guardian, 18.09.18.
A lot of people are rightfully asking in the comments/reblogs if this part of the city is still accessible to people with mobility limitations, since walking/biking isn’t something everyone can do. Like, I LOVE the idea of no cars. I do not love the idea of no public transportation at all.
“ Since 1999 Pontevedra has seen intense urban renewal and cultural revival, positively influencing the local economy. In the 21st century the city of Pontevedra has undergone both a cultural renaissance and an urban transformation, taking in the pedestrianisation of the city centre, extension of cycle lanes, recovery of the historical and natural heritage, rehabilitation of buildings and public spaces, and an increase in green areas and pedestrian walkways. Unlike the other six large cities of Galicia, which have lost inhabitants to neighboring municipalities, Pontevedra’s population is currently increasing. It has become one of the most accessible cities for disabled people, receiving a national prize for this in 2006, along with the European “Intermodes” award in 2013, the UN Habitat Award in 2014 and the Award of the Center of Active Design in New York in 2015. Pontevedra’s model for responsible mobility is currently seen as an international reference.[9][10][11][12]
…
“Pontevedra is well connected by road and rail. It sits on the A Coruña-Tui railway and motorway corridor. Pontevedra is located between the Galician capital Santiago de Compostela (58 km to the north) and the largest Galician municipality, Vigo (30 km to the south). Pontevedra city itself does not have an airport in its municipality but the city is relatively close to the airports of Lavacolla to the north (in the municipality of Santiago de Compostela) and Peinador to the south (in the municipalities of Redondela, Mos and Vigo). A good network of roads and motorways efficiently connects Pontevedra with the other Galician cities, and also with Portugal (55 km to the south), and inland (100 km to the eastern city of Ourense). Regular bus lines link Pontevedra with other Galician cities and towns, as well as with Madrid, Porto and Lisbon (among others).
The AVE high-speed train (in Spanish Tren de alta velocidad, or TAV) reaches Pontevedra and the city is a stop in the “Atlantic Line”, running from the northern Galician city of A Coruña to Lisbon (Portugal).[22][23][24] Likewise, Pontevedra will benefit from the high-speed train connecting Galicia and central Spain. That Galician connection will be fully operational in 2018.[25]Despite the fact that Pontevedra was once the main Galician port, at present the tiny Pontevedra harbour is only used for recreational purposes, not for cargo or passenger transportation. Neighbouring Marín is a major military and commercial harbour 7 km away.”
Wikipedia which is really quite interesting.
Here’s what their official government page says, via google translate from Galician into English:
“Accessibility
The integrating city.
That was one of the main goals of urban reform, which is practically achieved throughout the public space of Pontevedra. Starting from a global approach, accessibility to facilitate an independent life for everyone was a fundamental axis of the whole transformation.If the barrier-free work is for those who find it more difficult to walk (wheelchair users, older people, moms and dads with baby strollers, etc.), it also works for everyone else, who runs between ramps and stairs. they often use ramps.
Testing the works
In the first phase of urban reform, when the technicians were still not very familiar with the features of these works, it was the members of the Friendship association who tested the result before receiving it as fit. Thus, unique ramps and platforms, which make life easier for so many people, have a very resolute resolution.
Illuminated
In addition to the configuration of the street or square, public lighting is of primary importance, especially when thinking of the elderly or those with some type of visual difficulty. The lighting has been enhanced throughout the city, both in strictly pedestrian and mixed-use spaces. At some points, light intensities on pedestrian crossings have been enhanced.
Accessible trails
The city is the epicenter of several trails accessible to anyone who has or wants to use a few wheels to get around. All departing from the capital, except for the Gafos River, are wheeled. Both the Mirador and the Alameda parks as well as the Senda do Lérez and those that make up the Xunqueira de Alba water complex can be covered from start to finish in good accessibility conditions. Likewise, all the coastal walk between the city and the river (axis Buenos Aires - Uruguay - Corbaceiras - Av. De Marín) can be crossed without any impediment.”
Back to the Guardian article:
“ The benefits are numerous. On the same streets where 30 people died in traffic accidents from 1996 to 2006, only three died in the subsequent 10 years, and none since 2009. CO2 emissions are down 70%, nearly three-quarters of what were car journeys are now made on foot or by bicycle, and, while other towns in the region are shrinking, central Pontevedra has gained 12,000 new inhabitants. Also, withholding planning permission for big shopping centres has meant that small businesses – which elsewhere have been unable to withstand Spain’s prolonged economic crisis – have managed to stay afloat. “
A look at how future cities could function largely without cars.