so i AM fleshing out some of my characterizations on a document because i can, and im realizing its kind of looking like this.
dean: [30 bullet points of both deep and surface analysis]
cas: [same]
sam: *crickets*
seen from Türkiye
seen from Poland
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye
seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
so i AM fleshing out some of my characterizations on a document because i can, and im realizing its kind of looking like this.
dean: [30 bullet points of both deep and surface analysis]
cas: [same]
sam: *crickets*
i have these very specific canon divergent versions of tfw in my head. will i ever spit them out into words? probably not. am i having a good time? hell yes brother
mmmmmm we all know cas loves the bees and there used to be a fanon where he’d keep bees but ever since cain idk how ppl feel abt that anymore. dgmw i love the idea of beekeeper cas...any thoughts theydies and gays?
What I think of Typey type
In the last couple of days, I’ve been trying out Typey type. For those who don’t know, it’s a website to practice steno (machine shorthand). So far, I haven’t managed to write faster than on qwerty, but I wanted to share what I like and don't like about it so far. I managed to steno 50 WPM some times, but they were rare enough that I’m not really counting those, but even if I did write 50 WPM on average, it’d just be the speed I type at on qwerty, so I’m still faster on qwerty than on steno. I seem to steno at about 30 WPM. It's basically a typing practice where you start with simple words, and then you get to write other words as you go to through the different lessons which deal with different rules, though the rules aren't explained in detail on the site itself, but there are other places where one can learn about them. You could of course also figure them out by intuition, since the site does show how to write each word the first time you run into it as long as it's in the "discover" mode. And it shouldn't show new words in the other modes (it's possible to get them by changing lessons while in practice mode though).
Screenshot of the results of a drill: it says finished and shows a speed of 29 WPM and an accuracy of 83.9 percent. Below it says "faster than hunt and peck typists and has buttons for taking another lesson or restarting the current one. In the right side, partially cut text shows words I misstroked: one such word is readable: I wrote "stops" instead of "tops".
In case you're wondering, you do have to correct mistakes when you make them, but they may appear on the list of misstrokes anyway.
Here are some things I like about the site:
It teaches rules almost one by one, and at the end it has some texts to practice.
It tells me what I'm faster than (faster than handwriting, than Morse code, and so on) so I want to get faster and see what you get compared to next.
It tells me what I did wrong (though sometimes I make mistakes it doesn't detect, or see a mistake in one word as being in the next word).
It let's me use my own briefs (if I want to write "you can" as WH-BG, I can do so, and it's counted as correct as long as I have it in my dictionary).
It can give me hints, which almost always work.
I get statistics so I can see which words I've bes practiced more.
And here are some things I didn't like that much:
If I get some extra letters at the end of a word, it thinks those letters are a mistake in the next word. Also, once I've written a word correctly it won't let me delete that word, which can get in the way of multi-word briefs.
It doesn't happen often, but you can get word boundary issues in drills, as it picks random words and there is a chance it'll give you a pair like "pick nick" (I don't think I got that one, but I did get something along those lines, and Plover thought I was writing a two-syllable word.
The text field isn't automatically focused, so I have to click on it every time I want to start a drill or practice or anything. Even when I've just pressed "restart lesson, it still has me click in the text field before I can actually start writing.
Its hints seem to be for a specific version of Plover, which has one strokes for "sur" and "corp" mapped to what my version uses for "Sur" and "Corp.", so in order to avoid issues with capitalization I had to add some entries to my personal dictionary. I could probably just have written those words letter-by-letter.
All in all, I'd say it's a pretty nice way to learn and practice steno, though it's obviously best used together with other resources and other ways to practice. It has a few things that could be improved, but it's pretty new, so it hasn't had much time to get rid of those issues. And it's got enough lessons that it would have taken quite a while if I had had to go through all of them before I write this. So maybe I'll write what I think after I get through all of them. But for the next week, I think I'll write about several issues related to bilingualism, so it won't about until I finish writing about those. And it won't be until I've had the time to actually get through all 100 lessons. Maybe Typey type can make some improvements in the meantime.
its officially paused
time for the fucked up shit to hapen
I can't post anything personal on here anymore and that's pretty upsetting.