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why is showing superior to telling? prove it to me. you can't invent a rule that isn't broken by a genuine classic. you have to take it on a case by case basis and at that point "show don't tell" is a worthless hermeneutic. if the exposition doesn't work, you should be perfectly capable of explaining why without pinning your whole analysis on a false dichotomy

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that's it. i've had it. no one's allowed to use "show don't tell" in a video essay anymore

one of funniest things in swedish political history is how, after the election in 2014, a new government was formed by a somewhat unpopular agreement between left-wing and centrist parties, and the obvious acronym for the name of the agreement was the swedish word for “die!”

Being A/B tested against feels like being gas lit. I quite frankly hate it.

actually you can. here on the fediverse the elon word filter doesn't apply

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you can't say san francisco any more. you have to say san frannontransco

Today, I'm in the quarterfinals of the #BigMathOff. My entry is the math behind this surprising calculator trick AND showing that this trick has a second trick up its sleeve. Check it out, and vote on your favorite entry between now and 8:00 AM BST. aperiodical.com/2024/07/the-bi

@mcc Google Chrome, or even degoogled Chromium, is NOT "a more privacy-conscious browser". It's 1000x worse. Yes this is (yet another) betrayal by Mozilla management clowns, but in browsers like in politics, "X betrayed us" doesn't justify "so we should turn to Y who was 1000x worse to begin with".

So this, from Firefox, is fucking toxic: mstdn.social/@Lokjo/1127724969

You might be aware Chrome— a browser made by an ad company— has been trying to claw back the limitations recently placed on ad networks by the death of third-party cookies, and added new features that gather and report data directly to ad networks. You'd know this because Chrome displayed a popup.

If you're a Firefox user, what you probably don't know is Firefox added this feature and *has already turned it on without asking you*

Anyway, I guess that's a lot of typing. The TLDR is:

- There is now a feature labeled "Privacy-preserving ad measurement" near the bottom of your Firefox Privacy settings. I recommend turning it off, or switching to a more privacy-conscious browser such as Google Chrome.

- I have filed two bugs on Firefox about this, which I am choosing not to link to dissuade brigading. If I have not been banned from the bug tracker by next week I will file another bug about the ChatGPT integration in nightly

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‪i am a well-known hater of Microsoft GS Wavetable Synth. that software doesn't deserve to bear the GS name.‬

‪SCVA more than deserves it, on the other hand. if you're interested in one of the fullest expressions of the 90's home computer music production dream, please check it out‬

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‪it's still a beast though. 1600 melodic instruments, 63 drumkits, 64 insert effects, and it has different “maps” that let you use varyingly faithful versions of sounds from previous Sound Canvas modules, from the SC-55 to the SC-88 Pro. it even has the SC-55's MT-32 bank‬

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Roland are discontinuing “Sound Canvas VA” on September 1 😢

https://rolandcloud.com/news/Sound-Canvas-VA-is-being-discontinued

you should buy a lifetime license for this VST while you still can, I guess. it's $69.

the announcement implies they might eventually replace it with something else, I hope that's true

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