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minecraft, accessability [1/3] 

An interesting example of people not considering accessability in digital spaces:

On the Hermitcraft server, several hermits made a nether hub to link up various different locations. It has a "lower" area, which has nether portals for the main map, and an "upper" area, which has high-speed ice tracks for travelling to stuff that's very far away. To get between the two areas, you just fly using your wings.

Why are sets always so happy and excited? 

Because they can't contain themselves.

programming theory talk 

@hntooter the accepted answer is misleading if you're not paying attention.

A regular expression cannot detect a valid regular expression.

An Extended regular expression (like the ones most people use nowadays) can detect a non-extended regular expression.

The third answer is the correct one: stackoverflow.com/a/172363

mythic sisyphus's twisting hips

his fists twitch, his grip slips

hissing: "piss"

The sunset was orange and the sun was red as the two ships moved closer. So orange, the flag of parlay could barely be seen against the sky. Yonpler could, if she squinted, see the three black lines and the white diagonal on the orange background.

In some sense, it didn't matter. Yonpler's ship was flying the same orange flag, and no-one would attack someone flying that hue. Only the parley flags were orange; no-one could claim they had made a mistake of identification, sunset or no.

1/2~

I'm trying to find Creative Commons licensed music to put in a video, and I've fallen down the hole of "listen to everything you can find and never actually choose anything"

worldbuilding, conlang (dvakiiri) 

since the dvakiiri have devices that allow their ships to go faster than light, what would they call such things?

radziikon vishkii, of course

radziikon is an abbreviation of "raavai dziin konlii" which roughly translates to "speed greater(-than) light"

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