-
5 votes
-
Why Australia swings between two flawed parties
5 votes -
Coronary atherosclerosis in indigenous South American Tsimane: A cross-sectional cohort study
6 votes -
Cornershop - Brimful Of Asha, Norman Cook Mix (Tjinder Singh) (2012)
3 votes -
What a Denver suburb can teach the West about water
5 votes -
Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange has been sentenced to fifty weeks in jail for breaching his bail conditions, still faces possible extradition to US
8 votes -
What creative projects are you working on? (May 2019 edition)
we now return to you a regular schedule since now it's on sync with the months. here you can share/provide updates on some of the projects that you're working on. they can be of any kind--digital,...
we now return to you a regular schedule since now it's on sync with the months. here you can share/provide updates on some of the projects that you're working on. they can be of any kind--digital, physical, work related, passion project, whatever. pretty straightforward, i think.
november thread • february thread • march thread • april thread
27 votes -
The race to develop the moon
8 votes -
What song do you want to hear on your deathbed?
Howdy. Yes, my goth/emo bullshit is spreading into new sub...tildes? (If that's what they're called. I've been on hiatus long enough to forget the name.) I've been curious about something I've...
Howdy.
Yes, my goth/emo bullshit is spreading into new sub...tildes? (If that's what they're called. I've been on hiatus long enough to forget the name.)
I've been curious about something I've called "heavenrest" music recently. A song so soft, so perfect, you could listen to it on your way out of life itself.
One of the few examples I have is the song "Seagulls" from the indie rock band Saturday Sun (linked below.)
My question to you.
You're on your way out. You've said your goodbyes (perhaps) and made your peace. What plays in the background?
11 votes -
What companies do you feel comfortable with supporting?
Lately, I've been reviewing companies I interact with a lot, and thinking about whether I feel comfortable supporting them as a business. This is mostly based on whether they are a good, ethical...
Lately, I've been reviewing companies I interact with a lot, and thinking about whether I feel comfortable supporting them as a business. This is mostly based on whether they are a good, ethical company who cares about the consumer. I'm interested what companies you think fit this criteria. I'm not going to lie, I originally intended this question to be about Valve, but decided to make it more open ended. So to start the conversation, do you think Valve fits this?
23 votes -
Can you beat The Rockman [Mega Man] 8 Ball-Only Challenge? | VG Myths
2 votes -
Getting diagnosed with ADHD at 25 changed everything
12 votes -
Funk Fiction - Ascent (from the Epitasis soundtrack) (2019)
6 votes -
The hyper-specialist shops of Berlin
8 votes -
Out of the cradle - a high quality, short, cgi film series about human prehistory
6 votes -
In car-choked Brussels, the pedestrians are winning
6 votes -
How do you say "you're welcome" or "no problem" with reaction emojis?
Someone pings you in slack or github (or discord or on a forum post or wherever) asking for something. Perhaps some advice or a code review. After you help them out, they say "Thanks!". In normal...
Someone pings you in slack or github (or discord or on a forum post or wherever) asking for something. Perhaps some advice or a code review. After you help them out, they say "Thanks!". In normal conversation, I would respond with a "You're welcome" or "no problem" or something.
The problem I have is that while I want to be polite and acknowledge their thank you message, I don't want to generate notifications or otherwise distract people. Responding with a github comment will notify and probably email any involved persons. Slack and discord it depends on the channel, but many channels have low enough traffic that I will check every time theres a new message in that channel (and I'm sure I'm not the only one monitoring those channels).
Its not really a big deal and no one is going to get angry about it - but it can distract people or ruin their flow while working and I want to avoid that. In my mind, a reaction emoji is perfect for this. It acknowledges the comment or message if someone looks, but doesn't send notifications or light up the channel name.
...but which reaction should I use? I've never seen a "you're welcome" emoji. I've been typically using a thumbs up (
:+1:), but that can look as if someone is seconding the thanks rather than me trying to acknowledge it.Is there a better way to say "you're welcome" or "no problem" in this situation? Is there a better reaction emoji on github/slack/discord/your communication platform of choice? Should I stop worrying about possibly savings other people an email or small distraction and just say "np" or something?
10 votes -
I’m a North Carolina public school teacher. Here’s why I’m walking out today.
6 votes -
The saga of "Star Citizen," a video game that raised $300 million—but may never be ready to play
19 votes -
This lake now has legal rights, just like you
3 votes -
Conservatives want Catholic bishops to denounce pope as heretic
22 votes -
Epic buys Rocket League developer Psyonix, strongly hints it will stop selling the game on Steam
62 votes -
Food Photographer of the Year 2019: "Cauldron Noodles" takes top prize
9 votes -
Caster Semenya loses landmark legal case against IAAF over testosterone levels
8 votes -
Twiddle - Jamflowman (2007)
4 votes -
Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson sacked over Huawei leak
5 votes -
Veronica Mars | Season 4 official teaser
4 votes -
House calls can lead to dramatically better health outcomes among the elderly
5 votes -
'Visual chaos': A photographer's view of Cyclone Kenneth
4 votes -
Borderlands 3 | Worldwide gameplay reveal
9 votes -
This Week in Election Night, 2020 (Week 6)
week six comes slightly early, because i have way too many links and i actually started writing this yesterday because it's just over a page and fuck writing all this in one day, lol. the...
week six comes slightly early, because i have way too many links and i actually started writing this yesterday because it's just over a page and fuck writing all this in one day, lol. the [LONGFORM] tag continues and finally returns, offering up two pieces to us today.
the usual note: common sense should be able to generally dictate what does and does not get posted in this thread. if it's big news or feels like big news, probably make it its own post instead of lobbing it in here. like the other weekly threads, this one is going to try to focus on things that are still discussion worthy, but wouldn't necessarily make good/unique/non-repetitive discussion starters as their own posts.
Week 1 thread • Week 2 thread • Week 3 thread • Week 4 thread • Week 5 thread
News
General Stuff
-
from FiveThirtyEight: What The Potential 2020 Candidates Are Doing And Saying, Vol. 16. a pretty quiet week for most of the candidates. most of the highlights came after the end-date for this volume and will be reflected in next week's.
-
from NBC News: Can a woman beat Trump? Some Democrats wonder if it's worth the risk. even though it's pretty inane, this topic is probably going to be a recurring theme, because voter preferences are some of the absolute weirdest, most unfathomably illogical shit possible. electability is a large part of why this is probably going to be a theme: clinton might have poisoned the well for all of this year's "first" candidates by fucking up in 2016, and that might make voters hesitant to pull the lever for another one. but again, who the fuck knows. voter preferences have an uncanny tendency to make zero sense.
-
from the Guardian: Black female voters to Democrats: 'You won't win the White House without us'. another recurring topic is going to be the black female vote, which is consistently the most democratic bloc possible. in really any place where there's a significant minority vote, democrats have to turn these voters out significantly, and obviously presidential primaries and elections aren't exceptions to that rule. most of the candidates don't seem to be doing the best job of winning them over yet.
-
from Reuters: Democratic presidential candidates seek union support at workers' forum. union voters could be significant in the democratic path to the presidency, and so you're seeing a lot of democrats try and angle themselves as union candidates also. which one will win out here? i have no fucking clue.
-
from NPR: The Democratic Field Is Set: 8 Questions About What Comes Next. NPR offers up a series of questions about the trajectory of the primary, which will probably aid us in the coming months:
- How far does name identification go?
- It's there for Biden now, but can he prove himself?
- Can Bernie Sanders expand beyond his loyal base?
- Does Pete Buttigieg continue his momentum?
- Does Elizabeth Warren find her lane?
- Does Beto O'Rourke get edged out or does he find his way in?
- Can Kamala Harris supercharge her candidacy – and fend off Biden in South Carolina?
- Can others have a breakout moment?
Joe Biden
-
from the Atlantic: Unlike His Rivals, Biden Sees Trump as an Aberration. we begin this week with how biden is framing his candidacy. one of the cruxes of biden's campaign is that trump doesn't reflect a change of values in the american public or even in the republican party, necessarily. in his view, the status quo hasn't really changed, and if we return to electing people like biden then trumpism will effectively cease. whether you buy that, i leave up to you.
-
from Vox: The health care industry is betting on Joe Biden in its war against Medicare-for-all. another thing about biden is that he has very decisively positioned himself against medicare-for-all, which mostly reflects his status as an establishment candidate. this, as it happens, is super great if you're a lobbyist for the healthcare industry, which is unsurprisingly and firmly in biden's camp in this election.
-
from Buzzfeed News: Joe Biden Backs A Public Option — Not Medicare For All — As He Argues For Electability. as far as biden is concerned though, this is mostly a matter of electability. among his other points of policy: "[a] on noncompete clauses ... a $15 minimum wage and ... a more simplified process for issuing professional licenses."
-
from the Guardian: 'Battle for America's soul': Biden comes out swinging at first 2020 event. beyond that, biden also has this for policy: "reversing Trump’s tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations" and "enacting the so-called “Buffett Rule” – which would apply a minimum tax rate of 30% on individuals making more than $1m". he's supposed to unveil more of this in the near future.
-
from Slate: 10 Questions Joe Biden Needs to Answer About His Views on Race. Slate offers up 10 questions that they feel joe biden is obligated to give us better answers on, thanks in no small part to his incredibly long history of being a dumb politician who might now be on the wrong side of the political traintracks.
Bernie Sanders
- from Buzzfeed News: Bernie Sanders Is Getting A Shadow Organizing Campaign In The Midwest. bernie sanders has had a quiet week in the media, relatively speaking. one of the only notes from this week about him came in the form of people realizing that yes, our revolution does actually exist and yes, it does actually do things. the sanders campaign is probably going to need things like this to win this year.
Beto O'Rourke
-
from the Guardian: Beto O'Rourke is coming to California. Can the trip redeem his campaign?. beto has been busy in california the past few days trying to drum up support, which is easier said than done because he's on the wrong side of a wave now. he's been quietly slipping in the polls for the past little while, to a point where he's now usually sixth or so in the order. will stumping in california help with this at all? probably not, but he's gotta do it at some point.
-
from NBC News: Beto O'Rourke releases $5 trillion plan to combat climate crisis. on the policy front, he's finally getting around to expanding on what he's running on. his climate change plan is fairly extensive:
The plan begins with proposed executive actions, including rejoining the Paris climate agreement on day one of an O’Rourke administration and moving quickly to raise efficiency standards for buildings, cars and appliances. Longer term executive actions include setting a net-zero emissions carbon budget for federal lands by 2030 and adding more national parks and monuments to protect land and seascapes.
The meat of the O’Rourke plan is a promise to send Congress, as his first piece of legislation, a bill that would mobilize $5 trillion over the next 10 years to upgrade infrastructure and spur innovation — including more than a trillion dollars in tax incentives to reduce emissions, and $250 billion dedicated directly to research and development.- from Buzzfeed News: Beto O’Rourke Is The Latest Democrat To Make Climate Change Central To His Campaign. Buzzfeed News helpfully fills in some of the other details, such as this:
His plan, starting day one in the White House, would include spending a record $5 trillion on climate action over ten years and mandating the US reduce its emissions to net zero by 2050. (This means the nation, by midcentury, would no longer be emitting more climate pollution into the atmosphere than it was pulling out of it through trees and other ways.)
Elizabeth Warren
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from POLITICO: Warren puts Bernie on defense. POLITICO pitches the interesting take that warren is putting sanders on defense by pushing a shit ton of policy. this seems... dubious? at best, given that warren is polling at literally half of what sanders does, sanders has greatly outraised her, and in general the two just have not interacted especially significantly at any point in the campaign so far. but a take is a take.
-
from Truthout: [LONGFORM] Elizabeth Warren’s Student Debt Plan: An Outsized Economic Boon for People of Color. truthout provides an analysis of elizabeth warren's student debt plan, suggesting that it would be the best for people of color. this is interesting, because...
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from Slate: Elizabeth Warren’s Student Loan Forgiveness Plan Mostly Helps the Middle Class, Think Tank Finds. one of the big takeways most other sources have had is that it would be a boon for the middle class instead. figure that one out.
Pete Buttigieg
- from the Atlantic: Authenticity Just Means Faking It Well. this article is more about authenticity than it is about buttigieg, but its catalyst is buttigieg so i'm placing it in this section. what constitutes "authenticity"? who the fuck knows, honestly, but buttigieg is apparently it in a way that resonates with voters.
Opinion/Ideology-driven
-
from Truthout: [LONGFORM] None of the 2020 Frontrunners Go Far Enough on Climate. Truthout opines that realistically, absolutely none of the current frontrunner candidates have a compelling platform on climate change that will work. this might change now that o'rourke has actually unveiled a comprehensive plan, but in general outside of inslee (who is running as The Climate Change Candidate), so far climate change hasn't really played much of a role in the primary.
-
from the Guardian: Joe Biden is the Hillary Clinton of 2020 – and it won't end well this time either. this take opines that biden is basically this cycle's hillary clinton and that biden basically does not get it. perhaps the best distilling of this argument is in this paragraph:
Biden’s answer to Trump isn’t systemic change that will make America a more equitable place. He’s not offering progressive policies like Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren. His is the vaguest and most centrist of battle cries: let’s go back to, you know, “all those good things”. Let’s go back to a time where racism was a little more polite and white people could pretend America was a post-racial society. Let’s fight for the soul of America by pretending that Trump is the problem, not just a symptom of the problem. Let’s pretend that Charlottesville was a direct result of Trump – an aberration – and not a product of a racism that has always existed in America. Let’s rewind the clock a few years to when everything was just fine and dandy.
- from the Guardian: Bernie Sanders v the Democratic establishment: what the battle is really about. this piece takes an interesting alternative frame on the major split that seems to divide sanders from the rest of the democratic party. in essence, it is this:
The Shakir-Tanden debate about money in politics at Cap is also the larger debate Sanders is sparking in the Democratic party. Joe Biden opened his presidential bid by allowing a Comcast executive to host a fundraiser for him at his home in Pennsylvania. Sanders, on the other hand, has written off such fundraisers and is insisting on relying on small donor funders, not corporate executives or lobbyists.
anyways, feel free to as always contribute other interesting articles you stumble across, or comment on some of the ones up there.
EDIT: minor grammatical stuff
7 votes -
-
The things we do to ship desktop software
11 votes -
An Election Held Hostage? - 1991
4 votes -
How Brazil and South Africa became the world's most populist countries
7 votes -
Hand to God
Father God I've got a favor to ask of you. . It is said you can justify the hell I knew. . So now I raise my tired eyes to the morning blue. . God above, I've got a favor to ask of you. . If I...
Father God
I've got a favor
to ask of you.
.
It is said
you can justify
the hell I knew.
.
So now I raise
my tired eyes
to the morning blue.
.
God above,
I've got a favor
to ask of you.
.
If I don't wake up
dead in the morning
could you stand by me
if just for a moment
give pause to the pain
put a break to the moaning
while I'm stuck in this mind
and I just can't control it.
.
If you're gonna drag me out
of my bed in the morning
then I ask I wake in
a place I feel at home and
I can pour a little brown, light
a green, and get to hoping
that I'll find good work,
good love, and consoling.
.
Ya Allah
Ana mish aerif
Ana riyeh feyn.
.
My head
is clouded, dark
and the sky is grey.
.
I've found
I hate the sun,
and dance in the rain.
.
And at night,
I close my eyes,
dream of the grave.
.
If you're gonna drag me out
of my bed in the morning
then I ask I wake in
a place I feel at home and
I can pour a little brown, light
a green, and get to hoping
that I'll find good work,
good love, and consoling.
8 votes -
Nine APIs for the geekiest of programmers
7 votes -
Your questions about food and climate change, answered
6 votes -
Neuroscience now points to rejection causing physical pain: how do we treat and address social exclusion?
5 votes -
Any large-scale art installations you'd recommend?
Howdy folks. Had a recent interest in large-scale art projects, and I'm not sure where to start looking to find more. Anything that by nature has to exist outside of a museum. I'm looking for big...
Howdy folks.
Had a recent interest in large-scale art projects, and I'm not sure where to start looking to find more.
Anything that by nature has to exist outside of a museum. I'm looking for big displays. Whether it be large scale performance art, buildings erected at the will of an artist, or things like the Dumb Starbucks event that took place out in Los Angeles.
Installments that took any measure of great coordination, investment, or raw personal effort.
I feel like I'm doing a right shit job of describing this - but maybe you get the idea. If anyone has links to news articles, blog posts, or whatever about these kinds of art please drop a comment!
9 votes -
A new survey finds that green turtles numbers are increasing in the Pacific
8 votes -
Does your city have civil defense/fire/air raid sirens or similar systems?
Heya, fellow Tildees! Given how my city (Celle in northern-ish Germany) just did the monthly test of them, I wonder how widespread they are in the rest of the world and what they're used for. Here...
Heya, fellow Tildees!
Given how my city (Celle in northern-ish Germany) just did the monthly test of them, I wonder how widespread they are in the rest of the world and what they're used for. Here the system's used for alerting firefighters, though they all have pagers or similar by now.
Also I'd assume there are more modern solutions to quickly warn the population. Tell us all about it!14 votes -
Librem announces Librem One
18 votes -
Game of Thrones cinematographer: It’s not me, it’s your TV settings
13 votes -
Movie scenes recreated with 'sexiest' New Zealand accent
7 votes -
Preventing harassment and increasing group participation through social norms in 2,190 online science discussions
11 votes -
Which subscriptions do you consider to be worth their cost?
Aside from this wonderful website, what are things that have enough value to you that you're willing to pay for them not just once, but repeatedly over time?
41 votes -
SpaceX’s unnerving silence on an explosive incident
12 votes -
What have you been watching/reading this week? (Anime/Manga)
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was...
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was cool, something that was bad, ask for recommendations, or anything else you can think of.
If you want to, feel free to find the thing you're talking about and link to its pages on Anilist, MAL, or any other database you use!
10 votes -
Tony awards nominations 2019: 'Hadestown' and 'Ain't Too Proud' lead the count
7 votes -
Mueller wrote a letter in late March complaining to Attorney General Barr that his memo to Congress “did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance” of Mueller's work
34 votes