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2 yr. ago

  • You can either use a typical barista/restaurant style whipped cream can or you can pick up a cracker from a head shop. The whipped cream container is a bit less grippy on the balloon than a proper cracker, but you don't have to worry about your hands getting too cold. The gas is compressed so it comes out very cold.

    Hitting them from a balloon is a lot more pleasant than hitting them from a whipped cream compressor, and balloons are absolutely necessary for a cracker or a tank. A tank without a balloon would likely freeze your lungs and kill you. It also facilitates putting an absurd amount of gas into two or three balloons and going through them a bit faster. It doesn't stay in your system long, so you kind of have to work at it to get a decent dose all at once.

    The nitrous itself is actually fairly benign, but you have to make sure you take air in with it or you can get light headed and maybe pass out. But that'd happen with any concentrated non-oxygen gas being inhaled in large quantities. So always sit down, and pace yourself.

    Doing way too much way too often can lead to this weird wrinkly hand condition apparently, but I've never met anyone who's even come close to doing that much that regularly. Most people I know who've gotten into it either buy a few balloons at shows or pick up a box of carts once in a blue moon. It's incredibly addictive for a very very short time and then really not remotely. Probably why it isn't restricted in the US at all. I've seen it sold at concerts in front of cops many times. And there's definitely no hiding it. You can hear a tank from easily a quarter mile away.

  • Yeah I've heard people refer to 'wahs' too, but that makes me think more of the sort of baseline state of that sound/feeling, not the bit where it sort of pushes over the edge.

  • Nitrous tends to produce some sort of ambient auditory hallucinations, often in a way that directly corresponds to feelings of physical euphoria. A sort of rippling-breathing almost echoing effect is common, but often a hallmark of a really good hit is a sort of ringing sound that tends to be accompanied by a particularly pleasurable and relieving feeling. It's really addicting in the short term, but most people are kind of over it after a couple hours.

    You can definitely lose track of how much you're spending in that time, though. Many do.

  • Took me a second to realize this isn't about elephants.

  • I thought it was implied that they were triple balloons.

  • Is... Is this a boomery economic reality denial meme with a wizard? Oh no not 3 dollar toast.

  • Look, just one more. And then another after that. And like two more because I had a ringer and I want to keep it going.

  • Why do you expect the Russian space program to be using new equipment after the antique show of an invasion in Ukraine?

  • The only good thing that's been done in Florida this year. I'd love it if public spaces were a little more accessible for people with allergies.

  • Actually, it has nothing to do with human creators at all. It means that AI can't hold a copyright. But the person who wrote the article would have to actually be able to comprehend court documents to understand that, so here we are.

  • Talk about an inaccurate headline. The conclusion here isn't that AI art can't be copyrighted, it's that AI cannot be a copyright holder. But it's AI, so we can't actually expect anyone to pull their head out of their ass and give it enough thought to write an article that isn't garbage.

    Instead we have yet another thread about this case in which no one actually has any idea what the ruling was. Very informative.

  • Right, but this is fundamentally at odds with the 'Linux for everyone', 'Linux for gaming', and 'Linux can replace Windows for most use cases' rhetoric.

    If you enjoy Linux for its own sake and you like fiddling around with it and learning its ins and outs, it's fantastic. But if you just want the OS to get out of the way so you can get back to what your were doing, it leaves some room for improvement.

    We can't have both, and that's fine. There's also an argument to be made for people getting used to dealing with a command line because it's something of a prerequisite for getting away from increasingly shady corporate overreach. But that doesn't help me when the solution to getting my extra mouse buttons and precision mode is to create a well documented bug report for Solaar and then wait. I just want my push to talk to work, you know?

    That gap is definitely shrinking as time goes on, but it's still an obstacle and it'll always be part of the conversation around GNU until it's no longer a concern for one reason or another.

  • What Nebula really needs is some content that isn't just people talking about stuff. I can appreciate a video essay now and then, but it's the whole platform. I have a subscription right now, really only because of Philosophytube, but I can't really find anything I'm that interested in watching.

    It really needs some like sketch comedy, tech reviews, dumb little videos of people out doing stuff, or like, cats sitting on roombas. Cater to something other than wanting to listen to people blather their opinions all day.

  • Massachusetts is literally the most significant state. It's a forest with health care. We're basically elves.

  • Honestly I can't get Wiltshire out of my head. Rhotal rs? What? They sound like they're from New England until they say something that makes my brain twist. I love it.

  • Why do so many Europeans seem to think the whole country is Texas?

  • I've begun blocking their communities in my accounts and I plan to defederate from them when i get home. Fuck em. Place is infested with exploding heads anyway.

  • Literally money. More specifically, the financial need under a capitalist system for businesses to constantly grow and increase profits, and to focus on shareholder profits over making a good product. Most businesses on any sort of large scale today aren't in it to do a good job at making whatever it is they make, they're in it to make money. Their actual 'business' is just an incidental stop on the way to making more money.

    You see this literally everywhere. Remember Odwalla? They made these great, super-thick bottled smoothy-like juices. Easily the healthiest thing you could find to drink in most of the places they were sold. Then Coca-Cola bought them out, changed the name to Naked Juice, and watered them all down. What we have now, as a result, is a pale imitation of what we once had.

    Why? Because Odwalla was profitable, so it was profitable for Coca-cola to buy up a competitor for shelf space. But once they were bought up, there's no incentive to deliver the same quality of product. They have no remaining competition, so they can release a shittier version and we'll basically just suck it up because it's still healthier than soda.

    Our reward for worshiping currency is for everything ever made out of love of a craft or an art to be exploited and turned into a shittier version of itself.

    The solution, to my reckoning, is to start making things you love because you love to make them and to refuse to sell out when they come knocking.

  • Haven't seen it yet. In other news, clicking that link caused Jerboa to get trapped in its browser. xD