how to fake global illumination:
1. for each point on a surface, ask yourself "if I was a tiny bug sitting on the surface of this object, what would the sky look like?"
2. think more about being a bug
3. enjoy thinking about being a bug
4. make a bugsona
5. make friends with other bugs
6. find a function that approximates the average sky colour. this will be a proxy for the hemispherical integral, and add that on top of any specular contribution
r/traa post, may contain sensitive content
Time for cat ears, thigh high socks, chokers, zombie Bois, and lots of black clothes https://redd.it/cyvzqd
i think it should be a normal part of meeting new people to learn their pronouns, just like you learn their names. it’s not something special or monumental, it’s just a part of who you are
Honestly as a mostly 'passing' trans girl, I'm fucking delighted when a cis person double-checks my pronouns regardless of their initial assumptions, it's great and shows that they care at least a little why the fuck would anyone not want that??
My ID says male but I have a girl name, a lot of people get confused and the best situations are the ones where they acknowledge it and make a quick joke about administration being a fuck after asking for my pronouns, not the ones where they say ma'am right off the bat (since that's often boring and can cause issues)
history is not a tale of great men and fantastic ideas, it is the mountain of work of many countless millions of people, countless billions of hours worked in poverty. A civilization is a pyramid laid brick by brick through time and work by the masses.
'scientific advancement was only possible when the lives and work of those scientists and philosophers were themselves sustained by the toilers before them.'
a bug, not a feature.
Genderless* cyberfae & co. at your service
assigned adult by the inexorable passage of time
don't use he/him or she/her pronouns for any of us without express permission
note that if we ever make you uncomfortable in any way please tell us so we know to stop. we're not always good at figuring these things out on our own