The absolute gall of this question. A required question, mind you.
I will likely not be getting called in for an interview, but it was totally worth it.
I was curious about how rows of pixels map to diamond subpixel arrangements (like on the iPhone). So, after some research with my macro lens, I made a simulator!
https://rickyromero.com/tmp/diamond.html
You can use your mouse to draw on the left side and it will translate it to subpixels on the right. Use R, G, B, etc. on your keyboard to change colors. Or drag a 40x40 image onto the page!
ah, i'm so tempted to make a deliberately “bad” machine translator between germanic languages that understands compound word formation patterns and has a huge dictionary of cognates
@hikari 1) machine translate to chinese 2) dictionary lookup of each individual character’s most literal meaning 3) compound in target language
The fediverse is de-centralised, but it still needs to be hosted behind something, in this post I investigate where the most of the instances are, and working around caching proxies to get a better idea of how resilient to hosting disasters the ecosystem is.
https://blog.benjojo.co.uk/post/who-hosts-the-fediverse-instances
what i'm saying is: download the things you love. download even the things you like, that you find any significance in at all. hoard data. disk space scarcity is more or less no longer real if you have even a small amount of money to spend. anything that is not saved will be lost
the invention of print let us mass-produce works, creating so many copies of them that they had a fighting chance of surviving against entropy and enduring for the next generation.
the internet is the death of this, because now we can “travel” too easily
https://social.noyu.me/@hikari/statuses/01HKWK0RHA1MY2KC0C8DP940P9
the internet makes knowledge so easily accessible that it can simply be forgotten. works get put online and no copies are produced, because why produce copies of something when you can get one instantly at any time? until of course the site goes down. the great forgetting machine
there's something uncomfortable in how the internet is such a centralising force despite being decentralised.
the clearest example of this to me is how one specific website, https://web.archive.org/, is as important as the whole of the rest of the web put together
Trans woman, bisexual, someone's fiancée, forever a programmer, poly, and former total mess