It seems to be a rather brilliant piece of marketing to put that phrase in the title. It raises curiosity in a way that a generic "make friends" does not. (The "win" is a subtle move also.) Once the readers are drawn…
If you like this stuff, have a look at the Vikings and their logistical problems. https://www.quora.com/While-at-the-sea-what-did-Vikings-do-f...
This ought to help with that. https://thephd.dev/c2y-the-defer-technical-specification-its...
Do we really need to see your every half-baked thought on here though? It's okay not to post or to set a high bar for yourself. Frankly, even without AI, most communities get degraded as they become more popular and the…
In-class essays impossible? Pencil to paper?
[flagged]
*rein in Some things like this are nevertheless generally known to be wrong despite usage
It works great with my kids sometimes. Asking a series of questions about some kid-level science topic for instance. They get to direct it to exactly what they want to know, and you can see they are more actively…
As someone who isn't well versed in this Node ecosystem, why is omitting a standard library a separate project? It sounds like something you'd do as a Node feature, or variant of Node, or some command line switch or env…
Isn't this thing going to be subsidized by taxpayers in the end anyway? California already a dumb communal insurance thing, the "California FAIR Plan" for people who can't get insurance due to high risk. They force…
Yes, the relevant blur here is in your retina, as it tracks a moving screen object, called "sample and hold" blur. 60 fps is not enough when the pixel persists for the full frame duration -- the pixels smear across your…
The brands who have continued to sell this ingredient should be considered untrustworthy. It's basically fraud.
Anyone know of articles that deep dive into "snappiness" or "feel" computer experiences? Everyone knows SSDs made a big difference in user experience. For the CPU, normally if you aren't gaming at high settings or…
Involuntary confinenent?
This paragraph looks wrong. "In 2005, when D.R. Horton sold a record number of homes, it made $1.47 billion. In 2023, when it built roughly half as many, its profit was a little over three times as high, or $4.7…
A topic tagging system could potentialy help people filter stuff. "Hacking" is a mindset that can still be applied in interesting ways to social problems and assumptions. The standard political discourse does not…
It sounds like the pilots and hence the unions have an intent to hide things from the FAA. What's the significance of this report existing and why do they openly promote this "etiquette"? Maybe the FAA should actually…
Looks like pretty hard work compared to land bikes. You never get to coast downhill. I wonder if you can get it to surf on waves.
From first principles, it is normal to ban material. The ages and exact policies are debatable but these articles are entirely one-sided. It appears that most of the handwringing is about politically disagreeing with…
I brought this up because the slate article cites book banning as a reason for decline of reading for enjoyment by age 9. I am arguing it is irrelevant and also essentially false in terms of classroom libraries…
Sure but that was backed off. The law does not, in fact, apply to all books with LGBT content regardless of what they contain. There was a March 2024 legal settlement clarifying many cases that are explicitly not…
That pen.org article focuses on "number of bannings" but mixes together state law (predominantly Florida alone) and individual school district policy choices. It also avoids discussing which age is appropriate for these…
That does not say teachers can't keep a library. At most it says that the titles in said library need to be reviewed/approved by the school. The emphasis on "taking away libraries" appears to be partly politically…
What is the case, they literally are not allowed to have (any) books in the classroom? Can you be specific as to the mechanism here? Do you yourself have any link to any evidence? You (the article) are making the claim.
The defunding thing sounds like a bit of obligatory politics. "In some states, teachers can’t even keep a classroom library because they have to protect themselves from book bans" Yeah this sounds false.
It seems to be a rather brilliant piece of marketing to put that phrase in the title. It raises curiosity in a way that a generic "make friends" does not. (The "win" is a subtle move also.) Once the readers are drawn…
If you like this stuff, have a look at the Vikings and their logistical problems. https://www.quora.com/While-at-the-sea-what-did-Vikings-do-f...
This ought to help with that. https://thephd.dev/c2y-the-defer-technical-specification-its...
Do we really need to see your every half-baked thought on here though? It's okay not to post or to set a high bar for yourself. Frankly, even without AI, most communities get degraded as they become more popular and the…
In-class essays impossible? Pencil to paper?
[flagged]
*rein in Some things like this are nevertheless generally known to be wrong despite usage
It works great with my kids sometimes. Asking a series of questions about some kid-level science topic for instance. They get to direct it to exactly what they want to know, and you can see they are more actively…
As someone who isn't well versed in this Node ecosystem, why is omitting a standard library a separate project? It sounds like something you'd do as a Node feature, or variant of Node, or some command line switch or env…
Isn't this thing going to be subsidized by taxpayers in the end anyway? California already a dumb communal insurance thing, the "California FAIR Plan" for people who can't get insurance due to high risk. They force…
Yes, the relevant blur here is in your retina, as it tracks a moving screen object, called "sample and hold" blur. 60 fps is not enough when the pixel persists for the full frame duration -- the pixels smear across your…
The brands who have continued to sell this ingredient should be considered untrustworthy. It's basically fraud.
Anyone know of articles that deep dive into "snappiness" or "feel" computer experiences? Everyone knows SSDs made a big difference in user experience. For the CPU, normally if you aren't gaming at high settings or…
Involuntary confinenent?
This paragraph looks wrong. "In 2005, when D.R. Horton sold a record number of homes, it made $1.47 billion. In 2023, when it built roughly half as many, its profit was a little over three times as high, or $4.7…
A topic tagging system could potentialy help people filter stuff. "Hacking" is a mindset that can still be applied in interesting ways to social problems and assumptions. The standard political discourse does not…
It sounds like the pilots and hence the unions have an intent to hide things from the FAA. What's the significance of this report existing and why do they openly promote this "etiquette"? Maybe the FAA should actually…
Looks like pretty hard work compared to land bikes. You never get to coast downhill. I wonder if you can get it to surf on waves.
From first principles, it is normal to ban material. The ages and exact policies are debatable but these articles are entirely one-sided. It appears that most of the handwringing is about politically disagreeing with…
I brought this up because the slate article cites book banning as a reason for decline of reading for enjoyment by age 9. I am arguing it is irrelevant and also essentially false in terms of classroom libraries…
Sure but that was backed off. The law does not, in fact, apply to all books with LGBT content regardless of what they contain. There was a March 2024 legal settlement clarifying many cases that are explicitly not…
That pen.org article focuses on "number of bannings" but mixes together state law (predominantly Florida alone) and individual school district policy choices. It also avoids discussing which age is appropriate for these…
That does not say teachers can't keep a library. At most it says that the titles in said library need to be reviewed/approved by the school. The emphasis on "taking away libraries" appears to be partly politically…
What is the case, they literally are not allowed to have (any) books in the classroom? Can you be specific as to the mechanism here? Do you yourself have any link to any evidence? You (the article) are making the claim.
The defunding thing sounds like a bit of obligatory politics. "In some states, teachers can’t even keep a classroom library because they have to protect themselves from book bans" Yeah this sounds false.