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6 votes
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Hong Kong protestors using Mesh messaging app China can't block: Usage up 3685%
23 votes -
Denmark's central bank roundly rejected finance industry entreaties to ease the burden of the world's longest negative interest-rate experiment
8 votes -
Mikhail Shufutinsky - Trietje Sientiabria (The Third Of September)
4 votes -
Greta Thunberg has spoken about her Asperger's syndrome diagnosis after she was criticised over the condition
11 votes -
To Fix the Climate, Tell Better Stories: The missing climate change narrative
6 votes -
Pat Metheny Group - Have You Heard (1989)
8 votes -
What's your favorite obscure and/or archaic sports rule?
Today I just learned about the uncaught third strike rule in baseball: On an uncaught third strike with (1) no runner on first base, or (2) with a runner on first base and two outs, the batter...
Today I just learned about the uncaught third strike rule in baseball:
On an uncaught third strike with (1) no runner on first base, or (2) with a runner on first base and two outs, the batter immediately becomes a runner. The strike is called, but the umpire does not call the batter out. The umpire may also signal that there is "no catch" of the pitch. The batter may then attempt to reach first base and must be tagged or forced out.
Honorary mention to the defensive possession after a touchdown in American football. I can't find it in the rulebook right now, but the essential concept is that, after a score, the team that was scored on actually has a choice on whether to receive the ball and start the next possession on offense (which is normally what happens), or whether to kick off the ball and defend (considering that the team that just scored on you gets the ball back to do it again, I don't see how this could ever be a good idea in today's game).
8 votes -
Movie Monday Free Talk
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any movies that you'd like to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here! Spoilers are okay, just give fair warning...
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any movies that you'd like to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here!
Spoilers are okay, just give fair warning so people who care about them can participate too.
13 votes -
Digitizing objects from Smithsonian's enormous collection
3 votes -
What online services do you use to host and share photos?
Services like Facebook, Instagram, Google Photos, iCloud Photo Sharing, Flickr, SmugMug, 500px, and more are available for hosting and sharing photos online. I'm curious what service, or set of...
Services like Facebook, Instagram, Google Photos, iCloud Photo Sharing, Flickr, SmugMug, 500px, and more are available for hosting and sharing photos online. I'm curious what service, or set of services, you you use and how you decided. Do you cross post between them, and if so what strategy do you use?
I'm currently spread a bit and without much cross-posting between Facebook, Instagram, and Flickr. Not a strong conscious decision, though I've been wanting to do a bit more photography and would like to figure out a better strategy.
I think some key points to consider are cost (free vs pro, ease of upgrade/downgrade), storage space and restrictions (total space, max individual size, filetypes, enforced resizing/compression), ease and control of sharing publicly or privately, network audience and reach, and creative rights (who owns what rights on the content)
This Terms of Service; Didn't Read site can be helpful for at least determining what the general rights on these services are with some broad judgement.
14 votes -
The knuckleball isn’t dead yet
7 votes -
The hot mess of Hawai‘i’s renewable power push
12 votes -
Typesetting Markdown Blog: What Next?
Some of you have read the Typesetting Markdown blog series (https://dave.autonoma.ca/blog/). The plan was to finish the last two parts with Annotated Text (basically markup for Markdown) and...
Some of you have read the Typesetting Markdown blog series (https://dave.autonoma.ca/blog/). The plan was to finish the last two parts with Annotated Text (basically markup for Markdown) and Figure Drawing (MetaPost); however, people have asked for a post on Markdown to EPUB, others have asked for high-quality PDF theme templates using ConTeXt, and some have requested rendering Markdown into HTML.
Within the realm of Markdown, digital documentation, typesetting with ConTeXt, R, externalized interpolated strings, and bash scripting, what would interest you for the next post in the series?
(Please flip through the blog series to see the topics that have been covered.)
3 votes -
Biohackers are pirating a cheap version of a million-dollar gene therapy
7 votes -
Ganesh Chaturthi 2019: Ten lesser-known short stories of Bal Ganesha you need to know
6 votes -
Hanoi's street boys and runaways are easy prey for exploitation
6 votes -
Hong Kong protests: Defiant university students, school pupils and residents go on strike, piling pressure on government to meet demands
6 votes -
Harry Potter books removed from St. Edward Catholic School due to 'curses and spells'
7 votes -
Amateurs identify classified US spy satellite based on Tweet
11 votes -
SpaceX refused to move their Starlink satellite when they were alerted to the risk of collision with European Space Agency's Aeolus satellite
16 votes -
Less… is more? Apple’s inconsistent ellipsis icons inspire user confusion
8 votes -
Traxx Presents 80s Streetbeat Protodance
4 votes -
size test
Blah blah blah sup test blah sub test blah small test
1 vote -
The Book of Prince: Prince had grand plans for his autobiography, but only a few months to live
6 votes -
The size and shape of raindrops
3 votes -
Local coffee/tea cultures?
@cadadr's Turkey AMA coffee commentary got me curious about what coffee consumption and cultures look like among Tilders. If your principal national beverage is tea instead of coffee, feel free to...
@cadadr's Turkey AMA coffee commentary got me curious about what coffee consumption and cultures look like among Tilders.
If your principal national beverage is tea instead of coffee, feel free to comment on why you think that might have arisen.
I spent a bit of time chasing one of @cadadr's mentions about tasseomancy, and it's fascinating, so please describe if your coffee culture has any comparable rituals.
I grew up with my mother's Montreal Canadian coffee-drinking standards: starting around age 8 or so, a half-cup of stovetop percolated coffee with a half-cup of milk added, eventually graduating to full cups of strong black coffee by my teenage years. For most of my life, the commonest means of consuming coffee was via the Bunn restaurant coffee maker - a drip coffee maker with an electric burner that held the brew scalding hot, near-burnt.
The commonest U.S. home coffee preparation still uses a drip coffee maker. "Pod" coffee makers that use prefilled cartridges and a pressure boiler (lower pressure than espresso, but similar) are increasingly popular.
Practically all coffee in the U.S. is made from imported beans, with robust global supply chains. There's minimal boutique coffee production in the states of Hawaii and California, but the territory of Puerto Rico grows coffee for local use and premium export. Coffee is taxed at the same rates as other food products, and no import duties are levied, so it's incredibly cheap - usually $5 - 10 per 450g.
In the U.S., at least, there are now widespread corporate coffee shop chains - Starbucks, Peet's, Caribou, and others, which produce very standardized, uniform coffee, in pressure-expressed, brewed, and cold-process variations. They're often prepared with flavored syrups, and typically have dairy added, either as plain or steam-heated and frothed milk. Average cost for the fancier variations is around 5 USD, though a cup of plain brewed coffee is usually $1.50 - $2.00.
Even tiny villages have neighborhood coffee shops that serve plain brewed coffee and espresso drinks, teas, baked goods, and simple sandwiches. Local coffee roasters are relatively common, too. The coffee shops may feature their products, or the roaster may have its own cafe'. Most of the larger bookstores also serve coffee, teas, and espresso drinks in their own cafe's.
We usually drink our coffee relatively strong, around 10 - 15g of ground coffee per 200 ml of water for brewing, and dark roasts are preferred over mild ones.
Most U.S. cities support thriving international food and beverage cultures, so we get to try coffee variations from around the world. My personal favorites (aside from the obvious Italian espresso culture) are Turkish-style with cardamom, Ethiopian, and Cuban colada.
There isn't much of a national tea tradition here, though there's a common practice of herbal tisane use for health purposes.
I've visited around 43 of the 50 U.S. states and haven't noticed really distinctive regional variations, except for New Orleans chicory-flavored and New Mexico piñon-flavored coffee. My spouse adds chicory to coffee at home, and piñon coffee is delicious. We'll treat ourselves to shipments a couple of times a year. Hawaiian Kona variety beans are boutique-premium and there's some fakes, so we don't go out of our way to get it when fair-trade Ethiopian or Guatemalan varieties are better and cheaper. I try very hard not to think of the carbon footprint of any of this...
18 votes -
India's Chandrayaan-2 mission ready for historic landing on the Moon
10 votes -
New research shows vast majority of Hong Kong protesters support more radical tactics
12 votes -
Pet dogs in Ancient Rome | How They Did It
7 votes -
Portishead - Roads (1994)
7 votes -
Good Hair Day – How black Finns are taking on racism
5 votes -
Drawing with sound (Oscilloscope music)
9 votes -
LGBTQ individuals, how's life?
I'm curious how many of us there are on here. This was asked awhile ago but I'm curious how things might have changed since then. Some ideas for discussion: When did you realize you weren't...
I'm curious how many of us there are on here. This was asked awhile ago but I'm curious how things might have changed since then. Some ideas for discussion:
- When did you realize you weren't cis/straight/etc?
- Are you out or still in the closet?
- How's the social situation where you live? (Are you accepted?)
- In a relationship? If so, how did you meet?
- Anything on your mind? (Doesn't have to be related to your identity/orientation.)
28 votes -
Boy Bye - BROCKHAMPTON (2019)
9 votes -
Turkey information thread: AmA you're curious about Turkey
@gergir mentioned the idea, and I thought, why not give it a try? I'm a young adult from Turkey, lived up until now in Istanbul. Whether specific to that city or not, and whether about life,...
@gergir mentioned the idea, and I thought, why not give it a try?
I'm a young adult from Turkey, lived up until now in Istanbul. Whether specific to that city or not, and whether about life, tourist attractions, politics, culture, etc., just AmA.
If you have anything you don't want to publicly ask, I'l love to help if you PM me your question.
32 votes -
In praise of Hook, a flawed classic
5 votes -
QuickJS: A new JS interpreter/compiler by Fabrice Bellard
11 votes -
Privacy Tools
19 votes -
Junji Ito's Uzumaki horror manga gets TV anime by Production IG
5 votes -
The Outer Worlds | Come to Halcyon trailer
9 votes -
Usage share of desktop internet browsers 1996–2019
20 votes -
Wilmot's Warehouse - Launch Trailer
5 votes -
Steam Key Giveaway Thread, September 2019 Edition
It's been a while since the last Steam key giveaway thread, so let's have another one! Post any extras you have (or are willing to buy for others if you're feeling super generous), and let's...
It's been a while since the last Steam key giveaway thread, so let's have another one! Post any extras you have (or are willing to buy for others if you're feeling super generous), and let's share!
I won't set thread-wide rules (e.g. first come first serve, one per person, random draw after a certain amount of time, etc.) and instead let will let each individual poster set the parameters for how they want to distribute.
35 votes -
Preparing for Hurricane Dorian: Storm trackers and other survival tools
5 votes -
Wolof: A language of West Africa
5 votes -
The Egg
23 votes -
Archaeologists have confirmed a father-son duo discovered an Iron Age dwelling using metal detectors in Sievi, Finland
7 votes -
Five Nordic film festivals have joined forces to sign the 50/50 by 2020 gender equality pledge
6 votes -
The Leisure Society - Fight for Everyone (2013)
3 votes