Show newer

"Behind every fortune is a crime"
Freight graffiti seen in St. Paul, Minnesota

@Mustbetuesday that's really cool! I studied a bunch of languages in college (in one of my linguistics courses we studied a new language every week) and I've always been interested in stuff like this so I'm excited to give it a try!

@Mustbetuesday oh that sounds really interesting!
A friend recommended me a game with a similar translation theme called Heaven's Vault, where you're an archaeologist and the game's focus is you deciphering an ancient language. I haven't played it yet either but if you're still after the deciphering a new language part maybe you could try that one next!

I got like 40 more so
Cohost has about 20,000 active users
200 notes means approximately 1% of the whole website has interacted with my post
That's crazy

Show thread

so I woke up to a hundred new notes on the post, which added to the 50-some from yesterday equals way way more than I thought it would ever get

Show thread

oops I made a popular post over on cohost
I guess a lot of people are ready to burn down Heaven

@fresnel I still want to hear the well-tuned clavier in weirdo tuning just to hear it but idk. tuning instruments is overrated. a little dissonance do you good. gamelan music is wonderful and so is noise.

:blobeyes:

“Inverse vaccine” shows potential to treat multiple sclerosis and other autoimmune diseases

tl;dr A typical vaccine teaches the human immune system to recognize a virus or bacteria as an enemy that should be attacked. The new “inverse vaccine” does just the opposite: it removes the immune system’s memory of one molecule.

Only in lab settings at the moment but still.

pme.uchicago.edu/news/inverse-

@arielmt I'm so glad you take time and effort to maintain this place for us! Thank you for all that you do!

@severedleg I feel this so much… we've been cleaning the house for the past couple weeks and I am SO DONE with vinegar in the eye

If you have #LongCovid or #MEcfs and are considering filing a long-term disability claim, this white paper by my old lawyer, Barbara Comerford, is a must-read.

Barbara has been helping people win lawsuits against insurers for three decades now.

She took my case against Prudential to federal court & kicked their asses so hard the judge wrote an absolutely scathing ruling against Prudential that set some precedents.

#disability #legal #lawsuits #ERISA

(pdf)
omf.ngo/wp-content/uploads/201

You know people tend to act like it's a sign of low effort to make a mario clone but as someone who has been working on exactly that for a few years now I can assure you that nailing that mario game feel has been one of the biggest challenges of my career

I just learned that my husband has possibly the most cursed WFH technique I've ever heard of:

1. He sets an alarm to go off every 30 minutes.

2. When the alarm goes off he checks his work email, makes calls, fills out forms etc

3. When he has finished whatever task he is doing he IMMEDIATELY falls asleep

4. The next time the alarm goes off he wakes up and repeats this process

It's like pomodoro technique for snorlax

STOP SAVING DAYLIGHT

* CLOCKS WERE NOT SUPPOSED TO BE CHANGED TWICE A YEAR

* YEARS OF 'SAVING' yet NO NET GAIN OF DAYLIGHT

* Sunset keeps getting earlier by a few minutes per day, which is sad but we can adjust to it, but then BAM we are all supposed to change the clocks so that it's suddenly A FULL HOUR EARLIER and it's PITCH DARK AFTER WORK what the hell.

"Hello I would like my saved daylight back please"

They have played us for absolute fools.

i made a time lapse of "junk", an asynchronous multiplayer collaborative tetris game

(animated png)

cohost.org/xkeeper/post/289215

@teaduckie hey, the single-player offline campaign is about as long as a regular Mario game is! and it's pretty good too! So even if you never touch the online you're still getting a game that's a little bigger/longer than 3 or World.

real talk: I've been quietly revolutionizing my life by shifting away from thinking of domestic and bodily upkeep as personal virtues and obligations, and towards concretizing them as things that make me feel better.

Like to take a specific example: folding and putting away my laundry. It's something I'd been habitually not-doing for years, and honestly it's something I still don't do consistently.

If I always tell myself "I should put away my laundry, leaving laundry unfolded is bad", I'm like... never gonna do it. Demonstrably. It's a line of thinking which, for me at least, produces anxiety but no action.

These days what I try to do is say "it's morally fine if I don't fold my laundry. If I *do* fold my laundry now, it means I'll be able to spend less effort trying to find socks before work tomorrow, and I won't be annoyed at the floor space taken up by the hamper of clean clothes." Framed that way it's like cool, I can do the thing because there's obvious, positive results from doing so.

And this applies to like, so many things? Dishes. Getting on the bike. Cooking more, and eating things which make me feel better. Not sleeping so late that I feel tired all day. Fuckin' flossing. It's nice.

Show older
Computer Fairies

Computer Fairies is a Mastodon instance that aims to be as queer, friendly and furry as possible. We welcome all kinds of computer fairies!