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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/)FO
Posts
24
Comments
272
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Not that in particular, but design often comes down to the function f(keywords the branding people like) = very same-looking things. Yay trends.

    A lot of fashion companies wanted to be "simple. bold. modern but ready for the future." Now all their logo fonts are basically the same. It's also why everyone loves Futura.

    With websites, brand people pick the keywords "calm, professional, modern, reliable" and end up with blue so much that it's the most common website color. So I'm not surprised that the web designers in question picked something "friendly" and "modern" like some font you'd imagine would go well as white text on a matte or charcoal background.

    Same reason why I see so much Comfortaa on slideshows (alphabetically near the start of the font list, and f(modern, smart) = title font)

  • And not to hang up on superficial stereotypes but metal is sophisticated too -- a lot of the voicing/structure/styling is so classical-and-jazz that, with instrument switches, it can be indistinguishable. Don't get me started on trying to claw my way through metal time signatures

    Case in point: Dmitri Shostakovich - String Quartet 8 (guitar version)

  • Oh my God I LOVE FONTS

    Spartan is a bit wide for me (see that w?) but Lato with a good colorscheme is always sexy

    Another thing: if you're familiar with fonts you can have a weird pseudo-Sherlock funtime guessing how something was made.

    points This book is using Georgia instead of Times New Roman. See how the 9 is low? But the page numbers are Times New Roman because the 9 isn't low. Was paging in the author's control?

    and

    font with the light blue shading thing. This club recruitment poster was made in Microsoft Word.

    About serif disdain... what about LaTeX's serif? :}

  • I'm not sure I understand the question

    If you're looking for a "something is two opposites at once until met" then that's anywhere any unsureness exists. Lesson plans are decent and lacking until taught to students. Visual art is pretty and dismal until witnessed by another beholder. Speeches are rousing and dogshit til spoken at the mic.

    If you're looking for a "something that's explained oversimplifiedly then a lot of people say they get it (and are wrong)" then that's like a subset of all misconceptions.

    • Monads in programming. Lots of people say they "get it" after a simplified explanation, but actually don't get it (judging by blog posts that recite a simplified explanation, but actually don't get it).
    • Tariffs. Lots of people learn middle school mercantilism (zero sum wealth) then guess that the economy is still import export balance, and that if we make people exporting to us more expensive then we get more of the zero sum pie. (Obviously wrong, and a basic macroeconomic lesson on consumer welfare in a system with a world price is useful)
    • A lot of physics terms tbh. "I get momentum, that's when it's hard to stop when you're fast." Often they mean something closer to inertia. "I get the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. It's when seeing something changes it!" It's closer to uncertainty in the measurement of tiny things because of the physical implication of what we measure it using. (e.g. by reading a photon off of something, we know we're kinda inaccurate cuz the photon was discharged)
  • Yeah... it's hard.

    The status quo, even if its dredged from a lake, is so comfortably uncomfortable. You resolve to change, but do futilities. You resolve to change, but your leg is caught and you return by week two (aka the New Years' Resolutions number).

    And to leap out and be instantly different is to play as something that doesn't have the safe façade of being a system gear. Then you're an oxbow lake, rather than in the river, and you wonder if everyone else is "floating by" already while you erode the soil that kept you streamlined down the main.

    And then comes the "Should I have stayed? Was I being arrogant, spoilt enough to give up what I had?"

    Idk what the moral of my comment is. I don't want to say "I'll discover it in a few years" either (,,>ࡇ<,,). Hopefully the mystery box is truer to my self than the alternative

  • The grind culture is such an alluring chopping block. A meat grinder... some people go in, apply for a thousand internships, work three jobs, but not all of them go out. Is it a weak vs. strong separator? Am I weak?

    I hope not. I'm just an archer, not a tank, I'd like to think.

    I'm sorry your dad still has to work, and about their injuries.

  • Word. All of these efficiencies and inefficiencies... humanness is distinct from it

    It's hard to come to terms with sometimes. Looking at a staff with 3 bars, or a short riff, then thinking man, did I review my finances for the month? But the time isn't wasted. The pastime isn't a reward. It's as important as the work.

    But you don't have to be a monk to balance again :)

  • Premises:

    1. My family watches the news for [weather] and [ye local murder].
    2. My friend says: his dad says: "the news lies."
    3. Parents are trustworthy, and cops can't lie to the news.

    Conclusion:

    They lie about the WEATHER!?

  • Thank you for this. This comment is just a little push but now I see -- I've already forgotten how long I'd gone without writing a note onto a staff. How long I've spent on just "things that will pay me or pay off."

    I will do this immediately.