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i just spent like ten minutes writing this description of how computers work in the style of "hard fantasy"
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long (1500 characters): Computers are literally magic 

microscopic sigils etched into ritually purified crystals to give them the ability to think, linked together with carefully designed patterns made of highly specific materials to other thinking crystals, with a panel of liquified crystal--or, in the case of the emerging μLED panels, millions of tiny crystal balls--used to present information to the mage operating it, and other crystals with different microscopic sigils that let them see instead, that the mage uses to tell the artifice what it should be doing, in conjunction with more of the carefully designed patterns that have deliberate gaps in them, gaps which the mage can close and open as another method of telling the construct what to do. These constructs can also link to ley lines that span the globe, allowing rapid communication with other like constructs--and large sigils made of miles of precisely positioned and sized copper wire can make additional, miniature ley lines through which the devices can both draw power and link to the main communication leylines. Sorcerers are currently experimenting with longer and longer range communication without the use of leylines, sending information through the aether using specialized arrangements of copper and purpose-made magic-infused stone that can transfer information, though not objects, between the physical world and the aetherous otherworld where information can move without leylines to be transferred back to the world of physicality using another identical magic-infused stone

oh also figure out how to set up this steam link thing, and maybe hook up the atari 2600 (also brought from our parents' house)
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well, we're mostly moved in now. just have to get a media cabinet to put all the video games in since they don't fit on the bookshelf anymore (we had our parents bring some books of ours that were at their house and now the shelves are full)
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the molduga battle music is really good
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we seem to be some combination of what McCulloch calls "Old Internet People" and "Full Internet People" which is kind of interesting as our existence online doesn't really line up with the time frames she gives for either of those
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the Hearth :ms_agender_flag: boosted

just watched a video from matt parker's youtube and wow, it feels weird to see that he has exactly the same cheap lamp that we do
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we chose a really bad time to move to oregon
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why do people seem to be talking about Dune

it feels weird because we literally just finished reading the book again, it was a good long book for a car trip
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we are.

not moved in, but moved in *enough* that we have internet and stuff
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i wonder how many instances there have been of multiple people playing the exact same game of chess, making the exact same moves

there are clearly some, since there are things like the fool's mate that's over really quickly and consist of abusing knowledge of the tactics new players learn
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the Hearth :ms_agender_flag: boosted

Thinking about cyborg and synthetic character designs got me wondering how I'd feel about a synthetic body compared to a biological one.
Some character ideas fell out of that, so I spent a few hours sketching some of them.

mathematics, death (historical) 

what is it with famous, amazing mathematicians and dying way too young

think where the field of mathematics could be right now if Srinivasa Ramanujan had lived to be even just 60 (he died at 32)

or if Évariste Galois hadn't died in a duel at the age of 19
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the Hearth :ms_agender_flag: boosted

David Graeber "On the Invention of Money", anthropology 

"Anthropologists gradually fanned out into the world and began directly observing how economies where money was not used (or anyway, not used for everyday transactions) actually worked.

What they discovered was an at first bewildering variety of arrangements, ranging from competitive gift-giving to communal stockpiling to places where economic relations centered on neighbors trying to guess each other’s dreams. What they never found was any place, anywhere, where economic relations between members of community took the form economists predicted: “I’ll give you twenty chickens for that cow.”

Hence in the definitive anthropological work on the subject, Cambridge anthropology professor Caroline Humphrey concludes, “No example of a barter economy, pure and simple, has ever been described, let alone the emergence from it of money; all available ethnography suggests that there never has been such a thing”"

theanarchistlibrary.org/librar

what, @monorail changed her display name? what is happening
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I see that boop @Yarideki@the.monsterpit.net and yes you are a very good sergaltaurs
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