If you took all your DNA, straightened it out, and put it end-to-end, you would die.
Contents: 1 live owl. Do not eat.
If you took all your DNA, straightened it out, and put it end-to-end, you would die.
No? The news is that this is an ongoing genocide that’s been happening in high gear for months and more slowly for decades, and it is not actually something new that happened since yesterday.
This pisses me off. It’s open source, you can check yourself. If you can’t understand the code, that’s fine, just ask someone. Don’t jump straight to accusing people of white supremacy with no evidence because you’re bored.
The code is right here.
It searches for a high (today’s score - yesterday’s score), then, if that’s the highest it’s seen, takes that number squared and uses it as the trending score, halving the score every max_score_halflife. If the peak is older than max_score_cooldown, it forgets and lets it trend again.
max_score_halflife and max_score_cooldown are admin-configurable, but the defaults are 4 hours and 2 days, respectively.
Gaza isn’t trending because the number of people tagging it is never substantially higher than were tagging it yesterday.
Mushroom foraging can be safe, but the rules are:
Always learn from a local guide first. It’s not transferable to other regions. Which makes books a bad way to do it, and the internet a horrible way.
You don’t rule out dangerous mushrooms, you identify a specific edible mushroom.
Never trust a little white mushroom.
A bollard isn’t edible, even once.
Google search peaked in 2014 - that’s when it’d let you do “that movie where [horribly vague summary of an incidental scene]” and get you the answer.
But the complete dropoff started in 2019, when they started letting the ad team remove anti-spam features to game their numbers.
I hope they get all the skins working, and it becomes popular on Linux.
It’s also easier area. Cheeks and neck are way flatter than chin.
I’ve been meaning to set up a self-hosted RSS feed aggregator, but the install instructions for FreshRSS were extremely confusing, and then I got busy.
Skinflute.
in my partícular case is I literally don’t care which ones they use. Hm. Not sure what that means.
Some people don’t have internal gender feelings and just go with whatever they were assigned at birth out of convenience. I actually started that way and slowly drifted to feeling like my assigned gender much later in life.
Other times, someone realizing that is the first sign they’re trans. If you ask a group of trans people, that’ll probably be some of their origin stories. But I don’t think it’s actually that common overall (trans people are rare!). So what I’d recommend to you, and the other five people reading this that identify with your statement, is that you all sit down and think about your gender feelings a bit, so the trans one can get on with her life.
But anyway, pronouns options for the “assigned male but I don’t care” crowd are he/him, he/them, they/them, he/him/any, and any. For that last one, in a crowd where people are saying pronouns, you’d just say “any pronouns are fine”. (Long time hexbears know I used to rock the he/him/any.)
Are my pronouns he/him?
Probably. Your pronouns are what you want them to be. If someone says “I saw shapis at the park yesterday, but he looked busy so I didn’t say hi to him,” are he and him what you want in those positions?
(I’m going to assume you’re a he/him for the rest of this, but if you want something else let me know and I’ll edit the post.)
Is that how I should tell people?
Yeah, you’d say “my pronouns are he/him.”
Do you actually tell them as you meet them? Do I have to wait for a certain social cue?
In person, it comes up in group meetings where people are making an effort to be inclusive, typically gender diverse or far left crowds. Someone will mention it, or people will just start doing it. You don’t have to be the first person to start adding pronouns. But if you’re in a crowd with someone you know would appreciate it, it’d be nice to start it on your own (without singling them out).
The most awkward option is that you introduce yourself without pronouns, then it goes around the room and people start; in that case just pipe up and say yours are he/him.
How about online. Should I tell people or have it on my personal profile somewhere?
Having it in your profile online is a good idea. Online it’s way more important, since it also combats “there are no girls on the internet.”
And about respecting other people’s pronouns. How do i figure them out? Is it a big faux pas if I don’t before I know them? Is it a faux pas if I refer to someone I just met and I assumed to be male as he/him?
If someone has a gender presentation you can’t figure out, ask. If you’re pretty sure, guess. It’s a minor faux pas to get it wrong, but it’s within the realm of the inevitable awkwardness of human interaction, just say sorry once, correct yourself, and move on. Think of it as being as rude as accidentally stepping on someone’s foot. (Think about how rude that’d be if you kept doing it though.)
I’ve never seen anyone referring to anyone irl by non conventional pronouns. Is it an actual thing or is it currently being pushed to make the world a more inclusive place?
It is very rare, but they’re out there. People with really unconventional pronouns (I’ve met a fae/faer) are going to understand if you have to slow down when talking about them. Generally they’re chosen by people whose gender identity is nonconventional enough that they’re willing to put up with the hassle to get something that feels more right to them.
I know an Australian who is convinced we’re all weird for thinking their animals are dangerous when we have moose and bears.
Oh no, I really liked cohost. I was was going to get around to signing up for an account any month now.