It's quite an upgrade from the "default apache directory listing" look I was going by for the past....2.5 years.
In the truest manner of coder-furry, I had to reinvent the wheels and bake my own art gallery from scratch.
But now it's done, and I think it looks really nice!
RT @InertialObservr@twitter.com
Illusion of The Year 2019 Winner
It's based on a simple Lissajous curve, but uses clever shading/highlighting to create a 'double-axis' illusion
: https://twitter.com/InertialObservr/status/1206066397454852098
anyways my point is i feel like furry convention badges should be mandatory at any and all events larger than six people
it's a four lane mobius interchange now. I don't know why I'm doing this, or why I'm enjoying it so much. The chaos is beautiful
self driving cars, pedestrian dread, death mention
@Naux I will only feel vaguely safe if the companies making these algorithms are *existentially* terrified of fucking up. Not just an insurance budget for slaps on the wrist (which is more than they need now!)
And that doesn’t seem likely enough to put my mind at ease.
so historically ninjas were just like, black ops samurai. guys who specialized in surveillance, spying, and assassinations. they'd either wear samurai armor or commoner clothes to blend in and carry out their actions. (there's even evidence of them doing things like sharpening coins into shuriken for assassinations). but after the fact (as in decades--centuries) in japanese theatre in kabuki in particular there were ninja characters who'd appear. what they did was have the ninjas in all black--the uniform of japanese stagehands. the audiences are trained to just completely ignore the stagehands even if they were like actively moving scenery during a scene. so for the ninjas to appear in all black and then start talking, would have been as if they materialized out of thin air and been a very powerful special effect. this continued on into japanese film with the costumes
strike terminology
@it_wasnt_arson alright. the toot was specifically about inaccurate usages of “scab”, though.
strike terminology
@it_wasnt_arson No it doesn’t, it makes them a *customer*. Choosing to be employed as a strikebreaker represents vastly more intent than passing by.
The term has a well-defined meaning.
re: strike terminology
@SoniEx2 I normally try not to fall down language-prescriptivist rabbit holes, but this one’s a really useful term. I think it’s harmful to dilute it out of existence for the sake of style points.
An ace leafy seadragon tooting about.
Retoots lots of dumb stuff.
Interactions welcome.
Pronouns: they/he.