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Free Jack Ketch
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# ? Sep 6, 2019 00:39 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 15:04 |
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# ? Sep 7, 2019 03:11 |
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Soricidus posted:sadly the guillotine is a french idea, and if there's one thing the english working class hate even more than being oppressed by inbred posh aristocratic horsefaced fuckheads, The Halifax Gibbet was in use 200 years before the Guillotine, and is pretty similar in design,as was the Scottish Maiden. And the actual Guillotine prototype was built by a German. In other words, it should be celebrated as a symbol of Pan-european solidarity over the okay yeah that won't work either, see your point
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# ? Sep 7, 2019 09:26 |
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Strom Cuzewon posted:The Halifax Gibbet was in use 200 years before the Guillotine, and is pretty similar in design,as was the Scottish Maiden. And the actual Guillotine prototype was built by a German. It's still there, but the axe is bolted to the top and is almost certainly blunted too. Anyway, content:
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# ? Sep 7, 2019 17:23 |
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# ? Sep 7, 2019 18:23 |
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TinTower posted:Bring back the gibbet instead. Blood eagle.
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# ? Sep 9, 2019 08:54 |
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# ? Sep 9, 2019 15:13 |
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TinTower posted:It's still there, but the axe is bolted to the top and is almost certainly blunted too.
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# ? Sep 9, 2019 20:33 |
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Loving how the unarmed citizen still gets armed in the face.
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# ? Sep 9, 2019 20:50 |
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# ? Sep 9, 2019 20:54 |
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# ? Sep 9, 2019 21:42 |
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. From here: https://alexdanco.com/2019/09/07/positional-scarcity/
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# ? Sep 13, 2019 13:28 |
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Passed by a workshop on zoöps today.
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# ? Sep 13, 2019 16:31 |
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Paladinus posted:Passed by a workshop on zoöps today. DLC for Control looking good
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# ? Sep 13, 2019 17:01 |
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Paladinus posted:Passed by a workshop on zoöps today.
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# ? Sep 13, 2019 18:17 |
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Surprisingly the article is kind of an interesting model, though it definitely feels like "ah, look at these clever ways to obtain rent despite having an abundance" unironic liberal but what if we monetized the rot.
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# ? Sep 13, 2019 20:57 |
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foobardog posted:Surprisingly the article is kind of an interesting model, though it definitely feels like "ah, look at these clever ways to obtain rent despite having an abundance" unironic liberal but what if we monetized the rot. Yeah I think he has a lot of good points, he's obviously clever, but that diagram is something special. Paladinus posted:Passed by a workshop on zoöps today. Holy poo poo the amount of terminology. I guess it's "non-humans" because we can't call them animals? Presumably because humans are also animals? I guess #8 is what we'd call a breeding programme? What the hell is a zoönomic instrument, then, is that a person or a thing? https://www.libarynth.com/zoop [quote] It is the name of a variety of the legal format of the co-operation in which humans as well as certain collective bodies of non-humans can be owner-employees. [quote] Wait, so non-humans can be owner-employees, then surely they're not talking about animals but something else? Edit: Oh wait they're referring to the New Zealand thing where a river or a forest can be a legal entity. Wow. Then what the hell is #8? Where did you run into this, it's some of the weirdest stuff I've seen in a long time. Hippie Hedgehog has a new favorite as of 21:28 on Sep 13, 2019 |
# ? Sep 13, 2019 21:16 |
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Hippie Hedgehog posted:Yeah I think he has a lot of good points, he's obviously clever, but that diagram is something special. It was the Neuhaus exhibition in Rotterdam's Nieuwe Instituut. It was mainly about modern critique of the Bauhaus philosophy, but also had those weird workshops. One of the examples of zoöperation they had was some study on patterns of behaviour of urban pigeons with GPS trackers that helped with, uh, they didn't really explain how or what was accomplished with it, I don't think, but the idea was that there should be an organisation representing those pigeons, signing their employment contracts, overseeing how their personal information is stored and processed, etc., and then collecting money on their behalf and spending it on seeds or whatever. Maybe pigeons also start paying fines for making GBS threads on statues? But it doesn't have to be a collective of animals either, even trees or algae can participate in zoöps. It's some pretty out there stuff combining hippie worldview with distopian cyberpunk capitalism, but I think it's good that people are exploring cooky ideas like that, because ultimately it helps with adoption of more reasonable ecological policies. Paladinus has a new favorite as of 00:55 on Sep 14, 2019 |
# ? Sep 14, 2019 00:49 |
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So it’s a plan to replace HR with pigeons? I’m sold
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 06:11 |
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Paladinus posted:Passed by a workshop on zoöps today. bröther may I have some zoöps?
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 09:53 |
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Stoatbringer posted:bröther may I have some zoöps? Being from a Dutch conference, it is more likely it's the Dutch use of the symbols. Dutch has diphthongs using two vowels and indicates long vowels by doubling them (after certain consonants), and uses ¨ to break that rule. So zoöps is pronounced to rhyme with co-ops instead of as a long o (it would not rhyme with coops in Dutch if spelled as zoops as a long o-sound is different, but it is the same idea). That is different from Scandinavian languages or German, which uses dots to make new vowel sounds. Scandinavian languages mostly made old diphtongs into new vowels either using ¨ (i.e., oe becomes ö in Sewedish) or altogether new letters (oe becomes ø in Danish). Danish indicates short vowels by doubling consonants around them. This is all, of course, different from metal dots, where they are just there to look cool. klafbang has a new favorite as of 10:11 on Sep 14, 2019 |
# ? Sep 14, 2019 10:05 |
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That’s how The New Yorker uses diæreses.
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 10:14 |
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Yeah that diphtongue should have tipped me off that this was from somewhere in the Netherlands. I actually didn't look into what zoöp even was, I just immediately assumed it was some new weird programming or business thing.
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 10:40 |
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It appears that zoop is basically this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_BNjJutK_4A&t=90s
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 12:22 |
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Fathis Munk posted:Yeah that diphtongue should have tipped me off that this was from somewhere in the Netherlands.
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 13:29 |
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https://twitter.com/biogeobiochem/status/1172547837046820864
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 16:03 |
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I eat zoöp with a zpoön
HerStuddMuffin has a new favorite as of 16:19 on Sep 14, 2019 |
# ? Sep 14, 2019 16:15 |
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"OK class, I'm going to need you to purposely make bad charts so I can get internet points. Your final grade depends on it."
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 17:00 |
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kazil posted:"OK class, I'm going to need you to purposely make bad charts so I can get internet points. Your final grade depends on it." Well “make a bad chart with real data and explain what is bad about it” seems like a good exercise if you somehow try to make it something you’d see on the news (and it was probably extra activity)
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 17:54 |
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ZZZorcerer posted:Well “make a bad chart with real data and explain what is bad about it” seems like a good exercise if you somehow try to make it something you’d see on the news (and it was probably extra activity) Sure, but all the charts were just "funny caption + comic sans + blingee + pink," not "misrepresent data" or "completely wrong chart type."
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 18:12 |
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klafbang posted:Sure, but all the charts were just "funny caption + comic sans + blingee + pink," not "misrepresent data" or "completely wrong chart type." The one about the earthquakes was pretty good. "Earthquake magnitudes are continuous, but you'd never know that from this chart"
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 19:01 |
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It's entertaining to see and would've been fun as hell as a short project after learning about data presentation and legibility, it can still get you to think about making real charts even as a less serious activity.
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 19:35 |
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klafbang posted:Sure, but all the charts were just "funny caption + comic sans + blingee + pink," not "misrepresent data" or "completely wrong chart type." Yeah, they’re pretty low effort ‘bad’ bad charts. (But I like the idea, give people some data and make them do presentations trying to show absurd points via bad practices)
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 21:31 |
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Oh, I don't hate the assignment, I'm just disappointed that is the best university students can do (or the teacher is an idiot). The winner, while it could use a scale, a legend and perhaps ordering the colors by the color spectrum, while ugly is pretty clear (I'm guessing it's uniform colors of good and bad guys in Star Wars). I did enjoy representing gender as a continuous number between 1 and 2. Also, the chart with chicken weights was pretty good, but not due to the lolsorandom title as pointed out by the teacher, but due to using wrong plots (and possibly misrepresenting data - what is the bar height).
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 22:00 |
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The assignment should have been "take some data that clearly shows a conclusion, then make it show the opposite conclusion." The goal shouldn't be to inflict poison upon the eyes, but to mislead in the way that bad charts (even ones with good graphic design) often do. That would be more educational, and more interesting.
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 22:26 |
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Or even just hide the conclusion; more charts are useless than actively misleading.
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# ? Sep 14, 2019 22:40 |
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I had a bad computing class in high school that taught us incredibly dull things to do with visual basic. A bunch of us did the exercise of the day in two minutes and spend the rest of the time making programs that did the stupidest thing possible, and i believe we learned more about programming from making windows fly around the screen and swear at you than we actually did from the lesson My point is that the students had fun by making computer code do silly things and that's good actually. They explored the boundaries of software, and they got to actually experience enjoying themselves in a programming context. The gags aren't necessarily sophisticated but neither were the puns my lecturers made about maths and they still served a purpose in breaking up the tedium
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# ? Sep 15, 2019 01:08 |
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# ? Sep 18, 2019 04:12 |
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I don't see the ring, but I feel it I almost want to have the entire idea of pie charts of any type scrubbed from Earth.
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# ? Sep 18, 2019 05:48 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 15:04 |
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# ? Sep 18, 2019 05:55 |