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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BR
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2 yr. ago

  • I've read a few different people sound off on Neal Stephenson in this thread, complaining specifically about how he goes on and on. I friggin LOVE reading him, and it's because of how he plays with language. His sentences are so wild, and so fun for me to read. They're not driving the plot--they're just cool thoughts written in interesting ways that reliably catch me off guard. Maybe it's because English isn't my first language, but for whatever reason I just love reading the ridiculous ways he has of saying sometimes very mundane things.

  • You have very strict and specific criteria! I feel like there's just not that much good writing out there, and that I really have to search for it. Of course by "good" I mean in the subjective sense, good to me. There are very well-received books that I didn't enjoy at all, and some pretty awful light reading that I can't stop thinking about, Reviews and ratings really mean very little to me, so I mostly ignore them. That's especially true on Goodreads and BookWyrm where people seem to want to tell you that the book they liked wasn't THAT great.

    I just read the blurb, and if it sounds interesting I'll check it out from the library. It's almost always available as an ebook or an audiobook, and even if I have to place a hold I can read a sample. I usually know within the first few pages if I like the style, and if I'm willing to continue. I drop many, many book, and I'm not worried about missing out on anything.

    If one of my friends recommends a book I usually give it a shot, but I'm not afraid to drop those either. There are a couple of people whose recs always work out (thank you Cristina!), and those I just jump into right away, but that's only literally two people. Most of my friends don't really read in order to discuss what they're reading, and some don't even read at all 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • If you already knew how to use a computer--which is what I was referring to, then learning how to use the Internet was not that difficult. It's the parents of those management people that had no idea. But anyone who went to school in the 80s and 90s was getting actual computer classes in school, elementary through high school. I'm a high school teacher now, and one of the things I have to do teach my 9th graders is how to use their school-issued laptops, because they don't have computer classes the way they used to. Everyone seems to think that these kids are all computer whizzes but really all they're familiar with is how to barely use a smartphone. If I were to ask them to save a file to their hard drive maybe 2 or 3 kids in a class of 20 would know what I meant.

  • I cringed when one creator mentioned giving up on her degree to focus on youtube. I mean, sure she's making bank right now. But who knows how long that'll last.

    Unlike their YT career, that degree course will probably be there in five years. It'll be more expensive, but it's not gone forever or anything like that. For some opportunities you really have to strike while the iron is hot. For the record, I'm a HS teacher and I've had the "so you want to be a YouTuber for a living" conversation with countless students over the years, including with my own child. But for someone who's starting to get some traction, and wants to take time off of school to see where it leads them, I think it's an understandable move.

  • "Ideally I don't think homework should be learning new subjects or really hard at all it should be a cake walk of whatever was learned during that day."

    As professional educators, that's what many of us intend. In my case, many kids just don't really practice the new stuff in class, so when they get home they think it's new. I fixed that issue a few years ago, but it's crazy what a hard time some kids have with pretty basic self-regulation. I don't blame anyone in particular, it's just tough.

  • I think you might have misunderstood me. I'm not arguing that we're not understand one right now. I'm just saying that it happens quite frequently, in geologic time. Definitely not trying to minimize the how harmful of an impact we're having.

  • Mass exctincrions aren't "around the corner," they're just a part of life on Earth. They've happened several times before, and they will probably continue to happen. It's not a coming thing--it's the reason mammals rule the Earth right now, and why almost all life uses oxygen.