anyway yeah, my main blog is the static site on my own domain, Brilliant Gedou. I have backups of all my tumblr blogs, so I should probably do some regexing and port them over to BG for safekeeping

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@theartofmadeline
Acquired Stardust

oozey mess
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Not today Justin

blake kathryn

JVL

titsay
taylor price
Claire Keane

★

izzy's playlists!
sheepfilms

⁂

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

roma★
Show & Tell
AnasAbdin
seen from Romania

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@twinkle-night
anyway yeah, my main blog is the static site on my own domain, Brilliant Gedou. I have backups of all my tumblr blogs, so I should probably do some regexing and port them over to BG for safekeeping
Feeding grapes to dogs is a no go (the exact cause of pathology is unknown, but acute renal failure may develop in as little as 48 hours after ingestion).
your fave is problematic: jonathan joestar edition
( Facebook / Twitter / Instagram / RedBubble / Buy Me A Coffee )
Do you think Naomi Novik ever looks at AO3
sees some incest mpreg
and whispers to herself “I never wanted this.”
No. :)
the funniest vampire bullshit will forever be some vampire lamenting having to kill while theyre actively killing and monologuing like “truly, I am the most hated creature in god’s narrowed eye, the new modern prometheus, my purpose an eternal question, my existence a curse. is there a single person, even a fleeting thought, that has ever spent a moment beneath the same moon as I while feeling this unique pain? Pity me, world, for no one now is as miserable as I”
and the dude literally bleeding to death in the vampire’s arms, they never get a line, but if they did, it would probably be “okay now hold up if this is a contest about who’s having the worse fucking night,”
original url http://www.geocities.com/tnaop33/
last modified 2000-06-10 18:17:19
every so often I still think about this post, and about the website operator back in the year of our LORD 2000 whose complaint about Pokemon was actually that the monsters were naked, for some reason
no offence but when is star trek fashion going to become the new trend. when am i going to be able to wear a barely-there miniskirt that only just reaches my upper thigh and a tastefully ripped shirt in a pussy popping shade of command gold. when will i be able to exercise in the glittery holochromatic silver jumpsuit of my dreams. who’s going to take one for the team and design the collection that boldly goes where no fashion designer has gone before.
some suggestions:
dance instructor into soft bondage
exquisitely agonizing 90s-futuristic jumpsuits
everything from the way to eden but especially this, which to be honest isn’t far off from some stuff i’ve seen at h&m
dominatrix meets tina turner in thunderdome meets ritual combat
recent widow who owns a lot of exotic, illegal birds
the metallic stretch fabric says fun, the full-body harness says danger, the headband says aerobics instructor
twink
new ask meme: tell me which one of these iconic outfits you think i’d look best in
@sttngfashion
dont you just love capitalism..
Black Mirror predicted this we are all goona die
my god but I get mad when someone flippantly dismisses important scientific progress because you can make it sound dumb by framing it the right way.
For a start, of course a lot of science sounds dumb. Science is all in the slogging through the minutiae, the failures, the tedious process of filling in the blank spaces on the map because it ain’t ’t glamorous, but if someone doesn’t do it, no one gets to know for sure what’s there.
Someone’s gotta spend their career measuring fly genitalia under a microscope. Frankly, I’m grateful to the person who is tackling that tedium, because if they didn’t, I might have to, and I don’t wanna.
But let’s talk about why we should care about this particular science and spend money on it. (And I’ll even answer without even glancing at the article.)
Off the top of my head?
-advances in robotics
-advances in miniature robotics
-advances in flight technology
-advantages in simulating and understanding the mechanics and programming of small intelligences
-ability to grow crops in places uninhabitable by insects (space? cold/hot? places where honeybees are non-native and detrimental to the ecosystem?)
-ability to improve productivity density of crops and feed more people
-less strain on bees, who do poorly when forced to pollinate monocultures of low nutrition plants
-ability to run tightly controlled experiments on pollination, on the effects of bees on plant physiology, on ecosystem dynamics, etc
-fucking robot bees, my friend
-hahaha think how confused those flowers must be
Also worth keeping in mind? People love, love, love framing science in condescending and silly sounding terms as an excuse to cut funding to vital programs. *Especially* if it’s also associated with something (gasp) ‘inappropriate’, like sex or ladyparts. This is why research for a lot of women’s issues, lgbtq+ issues, minorities’ issues, and vulnerable groups in general’s issues tends to lag so far behind the times. This is why some groups are pushing so hard to cut funding for climate change research these days.
Anything that’s acquired governmental funding has been through and intensely competitive, months-to-years long screening by EXPERTS IN THE FIELD who have a very good idea what research is likely to be most beneficial to that field and fill a needed gap.
Trust me. The paperwork haunts my nightmares.
So, we had a joke in my lab: “Nice work, college boy.” It was the phrase for any project that you could spend years and years working on and end up with results that could be summed up on a single, pretty slide with an apparently obvious graph. The phrase was taken from something a grower said at a talk my advisor gave as a graduate student: “So you proved that plants grow better when they’re watered? Nice work, college boy.”
But like, the thing is? There’s always more details than that. And a lot of times it’s important that somebody questions our assumptions.
A labmate of mine doing very similar research demonstrated that our assumptions about the effect of water stress on plant fitness have been wrong for years because *nobody had thought to separate out the different WAYS a plant can be water stressed.* (Continuously, in bursts, etc.). And it turns out these ways have *drastically different effects* with drastically different measures required for response to them to keep from losing lots of money and resources in agriculture.
Nice work, college boy. :p
Point the second: surprise! Anna Haldewang is an industrial design student. She developed this in her product design class. And, as far as I can tell, she has had no particular funding at all for this project, much less billions of dollars.
‘grats, Anna, you FUCKING ROCK.
ps: On a lighter note, summarizing research to make it sound stupid is both easy AND fun. Check out @lolmythesis – I HIGHLY RECOMMEND. :33
@curlicuecal
I’d also like to chime in that a chunk of my family are apple farmers, and one thing I learned visiting them is that you can’t always let bees pollinate. With certain apple varieties, people have to go out with little paintbrushes to pollinate them by hand, because if they cross-pollinate with the wrong variety the apples won’t come out the same. Beebots could potentially be a huge time-saver at that task, because depending on how the algorithms work, you could just tell them “Don’t go into the Gala field next door” and let them do the job more efficiently than you without having to worry about getting weird mutant apples.
Also holy shit all science is not interchangeable. Nobody got up one morning and said “instead of saving the bees I’m going to build a bee robot.”
The only problem with those robots is a marketing one. Make ‘em anthropomorphic, like pixies, and people would be all over that shit and want them as pets.
I feel morally obligated to remind everyone, when I see discourse like this, that there are vested interests in destroying the public’s faith in
Evidence-based statements
Publicly-funded science
Critical examination of the media
Affection and investment for the natural world
And this is something I’ve been explaining for years.
And next thing you know it’s 2017 and everyone is surprised that the CDC has been told not to use the words “vulnerable” or “evidence-based” when writing their budgets. And the people running the world are able to deny the effects of climate change while the waters rise. This is how you get hurricanes while people tell you there aren’t any hurricanes. And how conspiracy theories are more attractive than the truth.
We got here on purpose because we wanted to be here. Because cynicism seemed cooler than wonder. Because of course the world is broken so why bother?
Because we didn’t want to be like those wide-eyed nerds and their silly robot bees.
I think I may have rebligged the root post before without particularly examining how counter to my values it is. Though, I do truly hope that scientific research can fix the woes of ailing bees before we have to implement any robot army based solutions.
every time i see this im reminded of the “shrimp on a treadmill” thing that people were lambasted for being a “waste of taxpayer money”. DESPITE the fact that it was like a few thousand dollars MAX and done by a student in university (with a grant provided BY THE UNIVERSITY) to study how the negative water quality in the gulf of mexico caused by the bp spill would affect oxygen processing in shrimp.
which is a SIGNIFICANT part of the fishing industry down there and how some folks literally make their living. it also ties into ecology and conservation since you don’t want to overfish shrimp populations that arent going able to bounce back from it. you also dont want to start resorting to fishing methods that will do more harm to to the environment to try to get bigger hauls to hit basic demand if theres nothing there to catch.
my own research was mostly done out of pocket w a few hundred dollars grant despite the fact that it involved potentially an entirely new mode of sensory input as of yet undiscovered by science that had LOADS of potential applications in biology and robotics. but boil it down to “put a scorpion in a maze in the dark to see if it bumps into walls” on paper and people just kinda roll your eyes at you. hell, i even built my own lab apparatuses and paid for the materials with money from my food budget. (bulk dry spaghetti saved my life)
anytime you see a “lol this science was a waste of money” it’s almost always blatant propaganda to encourage the cutting back of research and the justification of budget cuts. dig a little deeper into “dumb studies” and there’s usually some very nifty applications or hypotheses being tested that have real world applications concerning problems that exist RIGHT NOW.
not to say you shouldnt think critically about WHY something is being studied, but the studies you usually have to look out for are the ones privately funded by groups looking to push an agenda (ones from christian “family” groups on homosexuality/lgbt issues, stuff from people with connections to big oil/etc who do studies on global warming, or on the other end of the political spectrum something from pro-marijuana lobbyist about how marijuana will cure -insertailmenthere-). there could still be good raw data in these studies, assuming it hasnt been altered or data sets excluded, but it will be presented in such a way to make their point so you have to keep that in mind (as well as their methodology and things that could have been intentionally or unintentionally skewing the data, but that goes for any study)
“anytime you see a “lol this science was a waste of money” it’s almost always blatant propaganda”
OP turns out to be a Russian propagandist
nice call
It really is though. Shoot do we even get into how much pseudoscience comes up, or how some of the science, even when it’s helping the working poor is framed in just the right way to get them to go against their own interest, even from other parts of academia.
So in Japan the *xfiles theme plays* meme is an actual thing, so on the news, whenever something creepy or mysterious happens they play the xfiles theme and trust me you haven’t lived until you’ve seen on the news an Olympic athlete putting a ping pong ball in his mouth replayed three times in slow motion while the xfiles theme plays.
After an anime ends its run, it’s common for live-action TV to license its incidental music -- generic slice-of-life BGM is fairly versatile, so it works just as well for talk shows, for example. Depending on the arrangements with royalty collection society JASRAC, a given show’s music might be usable by pretty much anything on the same network.
There was a Usenet thread circa 1997 about hearing Neon Genesis Evangelion’s music on soap operas and news broadcasts.
them: SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST MEANS HUMANS MUST BE INDIVIDUALLY SELF-SUFFICIENT AND COMPLETELY INDEPENDENT
biologist:
Like literally the only reason we didn’t go extinct is because we are aggressively social creatures who community organized and helped each other when faced with disasters that drove other species over the brink.
(Like we’re so aggressively social that we looked at APEX PREDATORS and went ‘they look soft! Friend????’)
(The answer was yes because wolves are also aggressively social and they adopted the strange tall not-wolves just as eagerly.)
humans @ wolves: holy shit these things are so cute i wonder if they’ll let us pet them?
wolves @ humans: holy shit these things are so cute i wonder if they’ll pet us?
Just in case people want source, here you go: humans are compelled to help each other in disaster situation, humans feel an innate urge to help others. We will help strangers too, not just family, and it has been tested.
Also we’ve always taken care of our elderly and disabled. When life was literally “hunt and gather every day to live”, we saw value in taking care of those with disabilities.
If you’re familiar with the SF author David Brin, this is something of a recurrent theme in his writing -- that working together and helping each other is the basic nature of humanity, and that “every man for himself” macho survivalist notions are more likely to destroy us than save us. (It’s not hard to read some of Brin’s work as a direct response to Heinlein, architect of such whoppers as “specialization is for insects”.)
A while back, I was reading Doraemon again (why? who knows?) and noticed something very interesting.
The gadget of the day in one chapter (vol. 8, “カネバチはよく働く”, circa 1975) is a fleet of tiny bee-like robots, which Doraemon sends out to gather moneys that people have dropped. This adds up quickly, and Nobita suggests that it could soon make them tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or even millions of yen.
Astute readers will recognize that this is the modus operandi for Shigechi’s Stand, “Harvest”, in JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure -- which even looks like a bee.
Shigechi, of course, is smarter than Nobita and tries to bring each individual coin to a police box, thus extracting official confirmation that he can keep small change for himself. Nobita, meanwhile, waits until he has already amassed a huge amount of money; the police tell him to take it all back to its rightful owners (angering the bees).
The takeaway from this is that almost any Doraemon gadget can be adapted to a JoJo Stand, with very minimal changes.
please look up the canberra centennial sky whale. its a $35,000 hot air balloon commissioned for the city’s hundredth birthday and it looks like a whale with eight massive dangling titties
it flew over the whole city
massive flying eight tiddy birthday whale
That blue balloon to the left seems equally as surprised as we do
“Australian Capital Territory Chief Minister Katy Gallagher [...] believed that it would challenge the perception of Canberra as a boring city.”
Well, she’s not wrong.
I saw this and thought of @fleamontpotter.
OP HOW CAN YOU NOT ADD THE BEST PART OF THIS TWEET THREAD
For anyone who wants to see more of this sort of thing, check out All Yesterdays: Unique and Speculative View of Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Animals (Conway et al., 2013, WorldCat link). In fact, the swan and baboon pictures above (both by C.M. Kosemen) are from that very book! The latter is there captioned “Venomous Baboons” and accompanied by text about how baboon fossils could be misinterpreted to include venomous fangs, which is just great.
For my money, though, the best is John Conway's manatee:
I’d like to claim that a budding sense of financial responsibility is the reason I haven’t splurged on the latest Steam sale, but in reality:
Also:
gee garrick, how come your linux lets you have TWO problems
Love your random Sonic Adventure screenshots. Is it possible to remove individual objects from cutscenes? If so would you consider taking the following 3 shots from the post-Emerald Coast scene: 1) Tails saying "You gotta check out my latest power supply!"; 2) Tails holding the emerald (with emerald removed); 3) Sonic's "WHOA!" face (with either just "WHOA!" or no subtitle). Reckon it has potential as a template for people to 'shop in random bizarre things as Tails' latest power supply. XD
Sure, knock yourself out!
Extras: https://imgur.com/a/cFdpf
esper girls are in a town and solve mysteries
Hey guys, I submitted a thing for Yuri Game Jam. It’s not finished, but as a teaser, it might be of interest to some folks.
(this part is only pretty gay; considerably more yuri will be in the final game!)
Special thanks to Doctus for keeping me from giving up. She’s also working on a game (and it looks way cooler than mine), so keep an eye out!
Portugal passes the world's first reasonable DRM law
Last June, Portugal enacted Law No. 36/2017 which bans putting DRM on public domain media or government works, and allows the public to break DRM that interferes with their rights in copyright, including private copying, accessibility adaptation, archiving, reporting and commentary and more.
Regrettably, the law doesn’t go so far as to authorize the creation of tools to break DRM that has been improperly used, so the public is forced to hunt around online for semi-legal tools with anonymous authors of unknown quality.
That said, this is the first remotely balanced DRM law I’ve heard of since the passage of the DMCA in 1998, which bans breaking DRM under any circumstances, and has gotten in the way of accessibility, competition, fair use, first sale, archiving, security research and innovation.
https://boingboing.net/2017/10/23/law-no-36-2017.html