-
6 votes
-
For a brief, glorious moment, camera-wielding pigeons spied from above
7 votes -
How pie-throwing became a comedy standard
4 votes -
Die Hard at thirty: How it remains the quintessential American action movie
3 votes -
History of Technology and the MIT Course Catalog
I've been watching the history of M.I.T., STS 050, which repeatedly makes the point that the M.I.T. course catalogue is (mostly) ordered by date of creation, particularly through the first 15 or...
I've been watching the history of M.I.T., STS 050, which repeatedly makes the point that the M.I.T. course catalogue is (mostly) ordered by date of creation, particularly through the first 15 or 16 items.
There are some twists. Materials (3) was originally "Mining and Metallurgy", Brain & Cognitive Science (9 was originally "Psychology". But as an outline of technology, and possible ~tildes topic organisation framework, it is useful.
3 votes -
Where GREP Came From - Computerphile
21 votes -
SPLC Weekend Read: ‘The Rosa Parks of the transgender movement’
10 votes -
My Dad and Henry Ford
8 votes -
Skynet meets The Swarm: How the Berkeley Overmind won the 2010 StarCraft AI competition
3 votes -
Fifty years on, The Band's 'Music From Big Pink' haunts us still
4 votes -
The King and I: Timeless classic or dated relic?
5 votes -
Wild Wild Country: A Netflix documentary about the free love cult that took over an Oregon town in the 80s
9 votes -
Harlan Ellison wrote Star Trek’s greatest episode. He hated it.
14 votes -
How HIV helped form the idea of a "queer community" from the '80s to now
6 votes -
The evolution of YA: Young adult fiction, explained (feat. Lindsay Ellis) | It's lit!
7 votes -
He could've been a colonel: The story of Ollie's Trolley
2 votes -
Politics have always been divisive - A brief discussion on the Journal of Nicholas Cresswell (1774-1777)
2 votes -
David Goldblatt: South Africa's chronicler of life under South Africa's apartheid
3 votes -
How did some of cinema's greatest films end up in an Iowa shed?
14 votes -
Why Beans Were an Ancient Emblem of Death
8 votes -
The eel trader reviving an old Amsterdam tradition
4 votes -
Hiroshima - a 1946 piece exploring how six survivors experienced the atomic bombing and its aftermath
9 votes -
Feeding the gods: Hundreds of skulls reveal massive scale of human sacrifice in Aztec capital
7 votes -
For a child migrant, days feel like a lifetime when you’re imprisoned and alone
21 votes -
1904 Marks for Criticism of High-School English Papers
9 votes -
The fallen of World War II
7 votes -
The identifying terms we use (and the political history behind them)
Today's political climate has all sorts of terms being thrown around with varying meanings and history behind them. There are Liberals (political ideology for FREEDUM), and Liberals (foreign...
Today's political climate has all sorts of terms being thrown around with varying meanings and history behind them. There are Liberals (political ideology for FREEDUM), and Liberals (foreign policy), and Liberals (economic policy), and Liberals ("conservatives"), and Liberals ("centrist, anti-absolute monarchists"), and Liberals ("democrats"), and Liberals (some other field that annoys the shit out of me). There are Progressives, and Conservatives, Nationalists, Socialists, Social Democrats, unreconstructed Monarchists, Reconstructed Monarchists, Anarchists, and I'm sure some other political identity that I've missed.
So, given the rather long list of ways to identify politically, and the just about as long history for those ways to identify politically, I thought we should have a discussion focused exclusively on the political history of the terms we used.
So, the questions:
1. What terms do you commonly use to describe yourself and others in your political environment? 2. What is the relevant history that informs the way you use common political terms to describe yourself and others? 3. Got any links, movies, books, etc., that delve into that history?
This has the potential to get hairy because of how broad it is, so I'm going to try to remind people of some best practices that I use when engaging in meaningful discussion:
- Understand before criticizing. - Be able to frame someone's view in a way that they can agree with themselves before critiquing their view. Questions are your friend, but make sure the questions are focused on better understanding someone's view, not on biasing reactions to a view.
- Assume good faith. - Calling people "trolls" makes me very angry. Don't do it. For any reason. To anyone. If your case is so bulletproof that you'd be willing to call someone out for it here, take it to @Deimos instead. I don't want to read it here.
- I Could Be Wrong - There is nothing wrong with having confidence in your view, but there should be some part of you that recognizes you can be wrong about whatever claim you make. Nothing is 100%. Absolutely Only Sith Deal In Absolutes, etc.
11 votes -
What a Russian smile means - How culture and history make American and Russian smiles different
8 votes -
Punching the clock: An essay on bullshit jobs
7 votes -
X-post r/AskHistorians: "Monday Methods: "The children will go bathing" – on the study of cruelty"
8 votes -
The "Oldest book you own" thread set me off having a look through my bookshelf. I came across a first edition 1912 copy of The Yoga Sutras of PatanJali by Charles Johnston.
5 votes -
Where the ‘no ending a sentence with a preposition’ rule comes from
12 votes -
A program from a thirty-five year old magazine for “BASIC Month” and a chat with its author
4 votes -
The life and times of the Stopwatch Gang
4 votes -
The hidden history of the women who built the computer age
13 votes -
How to make seventeenth century coffee
10 votes -
NASA's Lunar Orbiter pics from 1967/8 were deliberately fuzzed and downsampled to hide US spying capabilities
16 votes -
A visit to Peterborough cathedral
14 votes -
Thoughts on the World Wars
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things...
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things have come close to painting a cohesive picture.
Most of it focuses on hot spots like Verdun, Pearl Harbor, Dunkirk, Normandy, the haulocaust, the atomic bomb, enigma, u-boats, the luftwaffe, Stalingrad... And I can see why. Even on a microcosm level, the conditions of the stories are unimaginable.
The issue I'm having is that I feel like our cultural memory of these events his been eroded over time. We have these impressions of what we think it was like, but not an overarching understanding of the complex series of events throughout the 20th century. We have an overabundance of records, photographs, film, and documentation in general, but maybe it's the overabundance that makes the digestion such an insurmountable undertaking.
What are your experiences with studying this time period? How do you feel about the quality of your understanding? And finally, do you have any recommendations for myself and others?
14 votes -
Remembering an Atari Computer Lab in Hampton, Virginia
3 votes -
Gay rights pioneer James Egan celebrated in Canada's first LGBTQ2 Heritage Minute
5 votes -
Myall Creek Memorial a symbol of reconciliation as descendants of victims and perpetrators gather
2 votes -
Lost John Coltrane recording from 1963 will be released at last
13 votes -
The lost gay episode of Star Trek
5 votes -
Seventy long-lost Japanese video games have been discovered in a 67GB folder of ROMs on a private forum
12 votes -
On the rise and fall of Delicious, the online bookmarking service
Online/digital bookmarking and excerpting is something that really interests me because I think most if not all existing options for it fall very short of the functionality I wish existed, and...
Online/digital bookmarking and excerpting is something that really interests me because I think most if not all existing options for it fall very short of the functionality I wish existed, and that I think could exist.
One of the first online bookmarking services I used was Delicious, and for a few years it was irreplaceable for me. However it languished after it was bought by Yahoo and then resold, and since then I’ve observed its slow and steady decline from afar.
The purpose of this post is twofold:
- I want to know the current state of online bookmarking for you. I’m curious to know if it’s as much of an unmet need in anyone else’s life as it seems to be in mine.
- Were you once a bookmarker and gave up due to the seeming futility of it?
- Have you never been interested in bookmarking and/or don’t see the point of it?
- Are you an active bookmarker, and if so what tools or workflows do you use, and what kinds of content do you bookmark?
- I thought I would share some of the research I did into Delicious’ various design iterations over the years via the Internet Archive. It’s a cool birds-eye survey of how the service’s ethos, goals and design changed over time. Beyond the value it provides as a case study, I think there are greater lessons and insights that can be gained from observing the rise and fall of what was once such a beloved online service.
- del.icio.us | 16 September 2005
- del.icio.us | 20 December 2005
- del.icio.us | 11 October 2006
- Delicious.com | 11 May 2011
- Delicious.com | 27 November 2011
- Delicious.com | 12 May 2012
- Delicious.com | 30 August 2012
- Delicious.com | 14 October 2013
- The period between 2013 and 2016 seems to be one endless loading screen from the archive’s perspective
- Delicious.com | 15 March 2016
- At some point in 2016, they went back to their original domain name – del.icio.us | 14 May 2016
As a sidenote, I also found this explanation of Delicious' approach to tagging to be very interesting: del.icio.us/help/tags | 21 February 2006
I hadn't realized that Delicious was actually the first to introduce the concept of user-controlled tags for bookmarks:
When Delicious was first launched, it was the first use of the term "tag" in the modern sense, and it was the first explicit opportunity where website users were given the ability to add their own tags to their bookmarks so that they could more easily search for them at a later time. This major breakthrough was not much noticed as most thought the application at the time "cool" but obvious. – Source
Edit: I hope it's alright to edit a post this many hours after having submitted it. There were a few important updates that I really wanted to include here.
18 votes - I want to know the current state of online bookmarking for you. I’m curious to know if it’s as much of an unmet need in anyone else’s life as it seems to be in mine.
-
The history of Bethesda Game Studios
6 votes -
With Dew Drop Inn on the market, can its legacy be preserved?
4 votes -
Three myths most Americans believe (Japanese surrender in WW2, Cold War, nuclear bomb threat)
7 votes -
The story of 'Kernkraft 400,' the sports world's favorite dance anthem
6 votes