Omnificer

joined 2 years ago
[–] Omnificer 31 points 1 week ago (4 children)

It's weird to me that vanilla and chocolate have a similar history and applications but vanilla got designated as plain and boring at some point.

[–] Omnificer 4 points 1 month ago

I'm not able to find it again, so it may be entirely bunk, but I remember reading something about the Japanese during early interactions having a stereotype that Europeans didn't bathe. Obviously this contact was past the medieval stages, but then that makes me ask "Did hygiene become less popular later?"

So, now I'm curious whether this memory is:

A) Pop culture contamination/made up whole cloth, i. e. an author who believed medieval people didn't bathe and extrapolated it to the 1500s.

B) True, and hygiene did become less popular with Europeans (seems unlikely).

C) Born of the fact that people who have been at sea for so long are not a good representation of overall hygiene.

D) Born from a another factor unrelated to hygiene, but perceived as such by the Japanese. Maybe differences in sweating or diet or something.

E) Some combination of the above.

[–] Omnificer 15 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Wait until you see the more recent lore that explains that Gamma radiation comes directly from super hell and there's magic involved. It technically doesn't make what is in the encyclopedia untrue, but it wildly recontextualizes it.

[–] Omnificer 23 points 2 months ago

As weird as the concubines thing is, a lot of people overlook that he said the alternative was that these guys would be food.

I guess I should have figured some of these conservatives were secretly cannibals after all the times they accused others of eating babies.

[–] Omnificer 26 points 2 months ago

Contrary to their name, they are not, in fact, not made of butter.

[–] Omnificer 7 points 2 months ago

I check Standard Ebooks regularly and primarily get my public domain stuff from it. It is slow to get new content, but that's just the price to pay for free volunteer driven content.

The Ebooks are really well formatted and consistent. They've even got copies formatted especially for kobo readers. I don't actually know the difference between epub and kepub myself but it's nice to know it's meant to work with my e-reader.

I know there's some kind of small drama about the more technical aspects or style guides the volunteers are supposed to use, but whatever that is it's never impacted my ability to read the books or caused obvious breaks in the visuals.

[–] Omnificer 30 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I didn't know it was called ISO8601 but I started naturally using it at work. It removes confusion among international colleagues, makes it way easier to sort data, and is also good for version control of docs.

[–] Omnificer 38 points 2 months ago (4 children)

It's like the hood scene in Django Unchained. But even dumber.

[–] Omnificer 1 points 2 months ago

Ah, that makes me feel better. I've probably heard of it before, and just never looked into it.

[–] Omnificer 22 points 3 months ago (8 children)

The implication of this being that I am behind the times, stuck on outdated tech, and didn't even know it is uncomfortable.

[–] Omnificer 14 points 3 months ago

I'm confused, what Democrat politicians or campaign staff coordinated removing those communities from Reddit? And why would Democrats even need to? Those communities broke sitewide rules egregiously and frequently. Considering how long they were allowed to keep going, it seems more likely (though I'm sure not the actual case) that Donald Trump's campaign coordinated with Reddit admins to keep The_Donald open.

[–] Omnificer 22 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (2 children)

That's pretty crazy. Do you have examples of Reddit admins directly working with Democrat campaigns or politicians to remove content? I don't think Hunter Biden's dick pics count, as revenge porn is already illegal.

Edit: For anyone confused as to how my reply relates to the above post, the above used to be a claim that Reddit worked with democrats to remove content, but is now edited to say something completely different.

view more: next ›