'Wolf' star George MacKay spent months 'crawling around and howling' to get into character as a man with 'species dysphoria' https://t.co/M9K13w6lz2
— Entertainment Insider (@EntInsider) December 17, 2021
I do that for free already.
'Wolf' star George MacKay spent months 'crawling around and howling' to get into character as a man with 'species dysphoria' https://t.co/M9K13w6lz2
— Entertainment Insider (@EntInsider) December 17, 2021
I do that for free already.
The worst case for COVID is that we get semiannual mutant escape pandemics which kill about 1% of victims, until we get better vaccines with universal worldwide rollout faster than the infection/mutation loop, OR a wide-spectrum vaxx/antiviral. Could be decades โฆ
— Charlie Stross (@cstross) December 19, 2021
The usual suspects being idiots and wanting to take away more and more. They really get their rocks off on this, don’t they? It’s becoming increasingly clear by the way that Omicron is milder than other variants, though the science isn’t solid yet.
These goofuses are particularly obsessed with making sure no one travels, which is just an odd thing because even during the Middle Ages the Black Plague spread just fine with much less travel going on.
When I say "unrecognizable" I mean travel will larely be curtailed. An entire generation of elderly politicians and oligarchs will have run out of luck and died, gasping, on ventilators. COVID will have destabilized intergenerational relations, politics, and economics.
/5
— Charlie Stross (@cstross) December 19, 2021
By the way, Stross’s back alley epidemiology is not really what’s happening. But that doesn’t matter — all they care about is making sure that you don’t get to do the things you want to do. The pandemic is not the actual reason; it was just a good entrepรดt to that longstanding and deeper wish.
Modern liberals really hate the idea of anyone traveling, don’t they? I think this is another version of their belief in the magic of removing pleasure as the key to stopping Covid and/or climate change. And that’s all wrapped up in “wanting to go somewhere else is racism/colonialism” beliefs.
It’s fascinating but very disgusting to witness.
Many of us made major life choices presuming an implicitly promised degree of mobility and ease of travel that is no longer available and which might not be the norm in the foreseeable future.
We need to look squarely at the question of whether or not we are where we want to be.
— Leah McElrath 🏳️🌈🏴 (@leahmcelrath) December 18, 2021
Ha. No. I am going to travel wherever I want until people like this attempt to stop me. And even then, I am still going to try and resist these types as much as I can, including violently.
The pandemic is just their excuse. If not that, it would’ve been climate change or some other bullshit malarkey. Leah and people like her are just fucking itching to take away pleasures and possibilities from people. They yearn for it in a way that I will never understand and don’t want to understand.
(To be clear, I am triple-vaccinated and I wear my mask when traveling. I also believe climate change is real and will be devastating. I don’t however think this should be used to remove the pleasures of being of being human and having the tech to do what we want.)
Now that’s a headline. The movie got made, but I’d not heard of it until now; does not look good.
This is really amazing. The things you find on this site. https://t.co/z4SHLpvVk2
— Jeet Heer (@HeerJeet) December 19, 2021
Ah. Huh. Not the first time I’ve seen that sentiment, but certainly one of the assclowniest takes on it for sure.
Itโs also where I learned about Millerโs Law, which is kind of foundational for my attempts at user interviewing: "In order to understand what another person is saying, you must assume that it is true, and try to imagine what it could be true of."
— Actually, (@eaton) December 18, 2021
I learned this working helpdesk. Most users have extremely bad models for what a computer does, how their own applications work, and often even for their own daily work processes. Being on helpdesk is about learning so much more than fixing a complex machine — instead, it encompasses deeply learning how the company itself works, what each piece of software does, how the average person uses it, what its failure cases are (in the technical and business sense), and on top of that understanding exactly how the model the user is instantiating to gravely misapprehend all of that is flawed. Often, it is impossible to correct the user’s utterly and multi-tieredly flawed model, but understanding why they think what they do and what they are are attempting to achieve is paramount to any sort of viable and long-lasting fix.
Being on helpdesk, in other words, is not an easy job. Not if you are in any good at it.