-
12 votes
-
Philosophical/cognitive works on the concept of "pattern"?
I'm interested in patterns and culture. I think it's a fascinating topic from many perspectives. Mathematically there are many tools for pattern analysis and formation, but at the same time...
I'm interested in patterns and culture. I think it's a fascinating topic from many perspectives. Mathematically there are many tools for pattern analysis and formation, but at the same time philosophically our minds try to make things fit into patterns generally (maybe because it requires more energy to remember a whole thing than a set of rules that describe the thing). A mathematical example of cases where order arises from pure disorder (or maximum entropy) would be Ramsey theory.
I'd like to discuss the cultural influence on our pattern analysis/synthesis, but also explore a bit what is a pattern, whether everything is a pattern or nothing is a pattern, whether patterns are interesting in themselves or not, etc.
I was wondering if anyone has recommendations for readings in this area, or if anyone has an opinion on it. I know of many works regarding a single pattern (for example the different theories of linguistics, the different theories of music, the different theories of cooking... you get the idea) but I've never seen a meta-perspective on why are we so interested on patterns and whether our approach actually makes sense.
Thanks!
9 votes -
Who speaks Indonesian, ‘the envy of multilingual world’?
5 votes -
Faster check-in as Shanghai airport starts using facial recognition
4 votes -
Heritage tick for Federation Square jeopardises Apple store plans
5 votes -
'Dirty tricks': Fake email sent to Wentworth voters claims Kerryn Phelps has HIV
3 votes -
Twitter makes datasets available containing accounts, tweets, and media from accounts associated with influence campaigns from the IRA and Iran
8 votes -
A man's love of squirrel meat might have given him a horrifying, fatal brain disease
9 votes -
What's a game you like that was overlooked?
Personally, Spec Ops: The Line is one of my favorite games, but ask someone about it and they probably don't know what it is. Is there a game like this for you?
25 votes -
A personal library too big to get through in a lifetime “isn’t a sign of failure or ignorance,” but rather “a badge of honor.”
11 votes -
Thanks to Sears, the musicians who gave America the blues had an ax to grind
6 votes -
The weird world of secret menus
7 votes -
The internet apologizes …Even those who designed our digital world are aghast at what they created. A breakdown of what went wrong — from the architects who built it.
32 votes -
Canada becomes second country to legalise recreational marijuana
25 votes -
Fake Friends Spinoff 1: "Repeat Stuff" and Empathetic Satire
4 votes -
Beatriz Nunes - Andorinhas (2018)
5 votes -
"Diving Duck Blues" x Taj Mahal & Keb' Mo' (2017)
8 votes -
Right-wing group Patriot Prayer was camped on rooftop with weapons ahead of major Portland rally
27 votes -
The Beauty of Programming
14 votes -
The new American dream home is one you never have to leave
9 votes -
How a subprime auto lender consumed Detroit with debt and turned its courthouse into a collections agency
7 votes -
Help me understand why suicide is so taboo?
Even just joking about it people get their panties in a bunch. Like, who's to disapprove of someone doing what THEY want with their OWN life? We can all co-exist when it comes to other big life...
Even just joking about it people get their panties in a bunch. Like, who's to disapprove of someone doing what THEY want with their OWN life?
We can all co-exist when it comes to other big life decisions like unhealthy eating, smoking, drinking, careers, marriage, kids, etc but god forbid someone mentioning suicide. Because that's fucked up.
I just don't understand the audacity of someone to sit there and tell me "you can't talk like that" when ever I am feeling that way. Maybe the person could offer help? Or maybe instead of assuming I'm being a manipulative asshole take a second to think "hey, this person might actually kill them-self".
I AM NOT SUICIDALE! I was and maybe somedays I am again but I am in the process of recovery and finding things that give life meaning. It just peeves me when somethings so unexpected it just gets shoved in the "we don't talk about that" category or "seek professional help" category. Like bitch 1) I think it's time we talk about it and 2) I've been seeking professional help for 2 years now.
What if a person wants more info on possible ways to kill themselves? So what? Yeah but think about the loved ones! Well lets talk about that too! I think communication is key. Like, me saying I want to die to my parents and them being like "hey that's cool. We love you and support you in your decision to end your own life" would be absolutely fucking amazing. But noooooo.... say anything like that and it's all "go to the mental hospital" or "no I don't want you to die" like what? Are you telling me what to do with my life?
I personally think sanctioned suicide should be legal. I legit think there should be centers you can check yourself into to get put down. There, I said it. I mean, if you believe in heaven why wouldn't you kill yourself and also if you don't believe in heaven why wouldn't you kill yourself? LOL.
I am just merely asking why is it taboo?
/rant
Sorry if this isn't the right place to post. Seriously hoping for actual discussion here vs on reddit you just get a lot of people commenting help line numbers like can we just TALK ABOUT IT?
28 votes -
Big Bird puppeteer Caroll Spinney is retiring from "Sesame Street" after nearly fifty years
9 votes -
Teen rides around the world in record attempt until someone in Townsville steals his bike
9 votes -
Weekly game discussion 1: Call of Duty: Black Ops 4
Description: Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 features thrilling grounded multiplayer combat, three full zombies adventures at launch, and a massive battle royale experience. Note: I couldn't find a...
Description:
Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 features thrilling grounded multiplayer combat, three full zombies adventures at launch, and a massive battle royale experience.
Note: I couldn't find a proper description anywhere so I just grabbed the text from battle.net
Links:
11 votes -
'For the Pacific it's always about cash': Australian Environment Minister in diplomatic incident over climate change
3 votes -
Planned Star Trek TV shows will differ in style, with breaks in between to avoid burnout
6 votes -
Archaeologists have just unearthed an inscription in Pompeii that suggests the Ancient Roman city might have been destroyed a full two months later than previously thought
10 votes -
A senior Australian doctor offering medical care to refugees on Nauru was detained by police yesterday and deported from the island this afternoon
7 votes -
In search of the dark mode holy grail
I've been thinking a lot about dark mode lately, now that macOS and Windows 10 both officially offer some implementation of it. I think dark modes make a compelling case for eye strain prevention,...
I've been thinking a lot about dark mode lately, now that macOS and Windows 10 both officially offer some implementation of it. I think dark modes make a compelling case for eye strain prevention, but the dealbreaker for me is revealed when switching between apps and one of them isn't dark. That jarring flash of bright light completely ruins whatever gentleness the dark environment provided in the first place. So despite my curiosity I've kept everything in light mode for years, tempered by f.lux to keep myself sane after sundown.
Anyway, now that there's official OS support I'm reconsidering. I think there's a growing pro-dark movement that was just waiting for that formal recognition. Today the programs I use most all offer dark modes so I'm taking an experimental plunge. My goal: 90% elimination of white flashes while in my normal workflow.
The biggest obstacle is, not surprisingly, the web. There are some beautiful dark browser themes available but that really only affects the UI elements around the page, not the page itself. I want to darken the web too. I have a few thoughts about this:
- Plugins like this one try to automate a dark mode for every site you visit. This is hit-or-miss, resulting in ugly color combinations, sometimes unreadable text. Some methods just invert the page colors, which can lead to all sort of other visual wonkiness. I haven't found a plugin like this that isn't fiddly and annoying.
- This plugin looks interesting. From what I can tell, it uses some kind of server-side heuristics to determine the optimal way to darken every page you visit. I haven't actually tried it because I'm concerned about the privacy/security implications of sending all my web activity to this unknown third party. Or what kind of performance hit that would involve. Also, they bury this information on their site, but this is a paid service with an annual subscription.
- I'm aware of Stylish and its huge library of user-maintained custom site styles. This seemed like a good approach, except that following a recent acquisition, the new owners of Stylish betrayed their users' trust in a very shady way so I'm afraid to go near it now. If there's a credible alternative with a decent style library I'd love to know about it. Especially if there's a way to automate style application so I don't have to manually activate it for every site I visit.
- Tangentially, the W3C is having an interesting conversation about adding CSS media query support for recognizing user dark-mode preferences. This could absolutely be the future of the web(!!), but I suspect it won't because it puts the responsibility on designers to basically double the amount of work they have to do. Speaking as someone in that field, I would not want to have to add this to my already-long list of design considerations.
Are there any other good web darkening methods I've overlooked? How do you deal with the white flash problem? Should I just give up and go back to black-on-white? Interested in any and all thoughts on the matter.
24 votes -
Sears, the store that changed America, declares bankruptcy
23 votes -
China Miéville
deleted
10 votes -
Conquering the high concept
4 votes -
The bang on the head that knocked English out of me
14 votes -
As Trump Demonizes Immigrants, These US Farmers Aren't Having it
10 votes -
Premier of Québec, François Legault, says crucifix 'not religious symbol'
11 votes -
The man who dodged the Dogecoin
10 votes -
MongoDB switches its open-source license from AGPLv3 to the newly created "Server Side Public License"
10 votes -
By the light of the Moon: Turing recreates scene of iconic lunar landing
4 votes -
A genocide incited on Facebook, with posts from Myanmar’s military
8 votes -
The Kansas City Chiefs’ defense is worse than their offense is great
6 votes -
Make threads Kindle / print friendly
I wished to set aside some threads to read on my Kindle. I use the Kindle Chrome extension for that, but on Tildes it only captures the main topic, not the comments. I tried saving the page...
I wished to set aside some threads to read on my Kindle. I use the Kindle Chrome extension for that, but on Tildes it only captures the main topic, not the comments. I tried saving the page locally but the Kindle app still didn't work. My only option on Chrome seems to be printing to PDF, but that's a subpar solution. I was able to convert the offline page to mobi using Calibre, though, but this is not very practical and the result was not that good.
maybe I should have written conversion friendly, because printing to paper/PDF is working fine
12 votes -
Artifact - Draft mode gameplay - Drafting a deck with Richard Garfield
6 votes -
Comparison between several messenger systems
9 votes -
Study of Puerto Rico rainforest shows massive, climate-driven decline in population of insects and insect-eating animals
9 votes -
Ten books that defined the 1910s
10 votes -
How Manhattan became a rich ghost town
14 votes -
Learning English from the ground up
There was a recent thread on ~talk about which linguistics habits people find annoying, and much to my horror, I have most of those which were mentioned. After thinking about it a little more, I...
There was a recent thread on ~talk about which linguistics habits people find annoying, and much to my horror, I have most of those which were mentioned. After thinking about it a little more, I realized that a lot of these habits were picked up from the media I consume and the people I interact with. I also feel that this problem is exacerbated by my poor knowledge of English grammar.
While I was taught grammar at an elementary level in school, I didn't quite grok it back then, and mostly relied on my instinct, as to what "sounded" right. I have since forgotten most of what I had learnt, and my instinct is failing me - my grammar is atrocious, my punctuation is terrible and I only have auto-correct to thank for my spelling.
I understand that English, like other languages, is constantly evolving. What is wrong now might be right tomorrow. However, I believe that this is no excuse for my shortcomings as there is merit speaking and writing in accordance with what is considered correct in the present day.
I would like to learn English from "first principles", and would greatly appreciate if some users could suggest some books/resources which could help me (bonus points for resources pertaining to British English). Any other suggestions would also be great.
Thanks, and have a nice day.
24 votes -
Instagram Has a Massive Harassment Problem
24 votes -
'Do Not Track' the Privacy Tool Used by Millions of People, Doesn't Do Anything
20 votes