Skip to main content




Here is part of a CIA map of Libya - I'm using it because it's public domain. It comes from here:

loc.getarchive.net/media/libya

(A Library of Congress site with public domain maps. Can be a handy resource! The Schiaparelli map was from Wikimedia Commons.)

Surt, Sidra - they are forms of the latin name Syrtis, a marsh, and Syrtis Major was a large marshy area along the coast here. So it is a place on Earth like the others. Are all those names from Earth? #maps #Mars

in reply to Phil Stooke

We need a bit of a mind-flip to understand how Schiaparelli developed his naming scheme. We start with a map of Mars - let's use a modern one from the Hubble Space Telescope. But Schiaparelli didn't see Mars like this... #maps #Mars #Hubble
in reply to Phil Stooke

No - Schiaparelli saw Mars like this - with south at the top. Until the dawn of the space age most planetary maps were drawn with south at the top as seen in an inverting astronomical telescope. Only when maps might be used for direct physical exploration did the convention change to avoid potential confusion. Rather than turn our screens upside down, let's do a 'rotate 180 degrees' in Photoshop. Simples! #maps #Mars #Hubble


How do you do, fellow web developers? A growing disconnect.
rakhim.exotext.com/web-develop…

<- programmers increasingly don't know how programs work, or that there is a web that doesn't involve Javascript frameworks.

Apparently.

in reply to lproven

My two favorite interview answers I got a while ago:

- What is the complexity of this algorithm?
- Um, I see no complexity, it's quite straightforward.

And:
- On what protocol level ports are implemented? [asked in the middle of a talk about HTTP]
- Not sure, I think USB?

Those people were not joking, and I'm sure they also weren't dumb, but I still can't get used to the context gap that I have with many people with web development background.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)

lproven reshared this.

in reply to lproven

the worst part of all of this has to be electron apps. I can live with all this, cause even they are just figuring it out. What is a sin though, is electron, I cannot stand it. Esp when there are cross platform UI frameworks and many languages u can write it in. Also the sheer ignorance of optimisation also drives me nuts.


Copy editor desperately needed...

Article refers to people living in a city "75 miles west of Los Angeles"... Uhh.

in reply to Dan Gillmor

given how far north Los Angeles city limits are in the San Fernando valley, I think it's completely valid.

in reply to no_nothing

rick and morty said it best for me:

your boos mean nothing to me; i've seen what make you cheer!


it works well in the realm of politics because now centrists are a-okay with genocide so long as they believe that the other guy is going to genocide harder.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)


Re-enacting Memory: 2019 Victoria Harbour, one of the many preludes to he Grand Tactical at Discovery Harbour.

Happy birthday Andrew Flint!

@histodons @histodon @warof1812





Today is the day. December 21st marks the 30th Anniversary of Marathon released on Classic Mac OS and later on modern Systems! And to Celebrate, A Medley and another Mashup is now on Andres Bravo Alt!
Medley:
youtu.be/zDA4nKENfXU
Landing Mashup:
youtu.be/uiZAWWrADKE
#youtube #m30 #marathongame



Early preview of the new @pixelfed webUI ✨

#pixelfed

reshared this


in reply to Thony Christie

I’m a fan of returning to Lady Day/annunciation, on the old date of the Spring Equinox, 25 March, for the start of the new year. Make accounting medieval again!


« Message de service : la fiction aimerait rappeler à la réalité que c’est son job à elle de délirer à plein tube. Elle prie donc le réel de gagner urgemment en sobriété, et de ne plus mélanger ses pinceaux avec les siens. Merci, bisous, merci. »

reshared this







Having dinner in Sydney’s Chinatown I was feeling slightly self conscious about my obvious Americanness until two young women at the next table began deconstructing the lyrics and then full-throatedly singing Down Under.





Two hundred and seventy-five years ago, Jean-Jacques Rousseau was on his way from Paris to Vincennes when he experienced a powerful revelation. Responding to a literary journal he was reading along the way, he fell to the ground, began to weep, and came to the realization that human beings were essentially good—it was their secular and religious institutions that were wicked and corrupt.

theamericanscholar.org/the-dia…