There are strawberries all over the readme so I reck you're right.
These pop-sci and pop-history articles do things like this a lot. Sometimes it feels like the days of reliable scientific journalism are behind us.
Oh. It's Minecraft.
Really liked the end of the poem. Honestly could have done without my own name in there, since it was a little jarring, and dispelled the dreamlike quality of the poem.
So you're the reason I had to put numbers in my username, eh?
So you admit that technology is inherently harmful to human beings' cognitive development?
You might not be too far off. Someone should start a league of free-web Avengers to blast the internet wide open again.
On the other hand, requiring recordings could reduce the number of applications you get sent, at least as long as their are requirements specific to your application that would prevent applicants from mass-submitting…
There was a blog post I read on HN that was about how existing large publications who were threatened by the internet (think big magazines) began to churn out low-quality content that will allow their sites to dominate…
Well, some people do think their Wi-Fi routers can hurt them ... maybe we should make tinfoil hats for the cephalopods.
I have no clue what a Quine clock is, but I think it would be easier to read if the diagonal stroke on the front of the 1s only extended to the second row of characters from the top, instead of the third. I noticed this…
I completely agree with this. Have you ever noticed how very tall but narrow buildings (i.e. skyscrapers) are never as physically imposing as bulky, monolithic buildings that are as nearly as wide as they are tall?
> Is this lesser known voice artist now doomed to find a job in a different sector? The lesser-known voice actor is dooming themselves to find a job in a different sector by contributing to the development of technology…
Indiana Jokes
Anybody who likes this kind of architecture should check out the series of paintings "Visions from Another World" by Jean-Pierre Ugarte.
That seems to be the majority opinion, at least in my experience, but I've always really liked it. Maybe because it reminds me of so many science fiction settings. I do think blending the buildings with plants goes a…
I'm also in my early twenties, and also (at least in certain ways) quite ambitious. I liked this.
That's an interesting thought. I think a lot of people who are upset about this are not truly upset at the type of partnership being described in the article, but rather adjacent programs that might be developed further…
There are strawberries all over the readme so I reck you're right.
These pop-sci and pop-history articles do things like this a lot. Sometimes it feels like the days of reliable scientific journalism are behind us.
Oh. It's Minecraft.
Really liked the end of the poem. Honestly could have done without my own name in there, since it was a little jarring, and dispelled the dreamlike quality of the poem.
So you're the reason I had to put numbers in my username, eh?
So you admit that technology is inherently harmful to human beings' cognitive development?
You might not be too far off. Someone should start a league of free-web Avengers to blast the internet wide open again.
On the other hand, requiring recordings could reduce the number of applications you get sent, at least as long as their are requirements specific to your application that would prevent applicants from mass-submitting…
There was a blog post I read on HN that was about how existing large publications who were threatened by the internet (think big magazines) began to churn out low-quality content that will allow their sites to dominate…
Well, some people do think their Wi-Fi routers can hurt them ... maybe we should make tinfoil hats for the cephalopods.
I have no clue what a Quine clock is, but I think it would be easier to read if the diagonal stroke on the front of the 1s only extended to the second row of characters from the top, instead of the third. I noticed this…
I completely agree with this. Have you ever noticed how very tall but narrow buildings (i.e. skyscrapers) are never as physically imposing as bulky, monolithic buildings that are as nearly as wide as they are tall?
> Is this lesser known voice artist now doomed to find a job in a different sector? The lesser-known voice actor is dooming themselves to find a job in a different sector by contributing to the development of technology…
Indiana Jokes
Anybody who likes this kind of architecture should check out the series of paintings "Visions from Another World" by Jean-Pierre Ugarte.
That seems to be the majority opinion, at least in my experience, but I've always really liked it. Maybe because it reminds me of so many science fiction settings. I do think blending the buildings with plants goes a…
I'm also in my early twenties, and also (at least in certain ways) quite ambitious. I liked this.
That's an interesting thought. I think a lot of people who are upset about this are not truly upset at the type of partnership being described in the article, but rather adjacent programs that might be developed further…