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1000 results for “stuff”
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I went to an enjoyable gig last night in #Middlesborough, organised by https://industrialcoast.bandcamp.com/ at The Auxiliary (https://www.theauxiliary.co.uk/)
"Wes" DJed twice, once at the start some with dark ambient stuff, and finished off with a banging #techno set.
The main act in between was Ron Morelli (https://liesrecords.com/).
Apparently he normally plays US/NYC house, but this time he brought loads of effect pedals and midi devices, and played some crazy shit!Salford Electronics (https://darkscene.org/music/artist/Salford%20Electronics/) also played some great tunes in between.
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I went to an enjoyable gig last night in #Middlesborough, organised by https://industrialcoast.bandcamp.com/ at The Auxiliary (https://www.theauxiliary.co.uk/)
"Wes" DJed twice, once at the start some with dark ambient stuff, and finished off with a banging #techno set.
The main act in between was Ron Morelli (https://liesrecords.com/).
Apparently he normally plays US/NYC house, but this time he brought loads of effect pedals and midi devices, and played some crazy shit!Salford Electronics (https://darkscene.org/music/artist/Salford%20Electronics/) also played some great tunes in between.
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I went to an enjoyable gig last night in #Middlesborough, organised by https://industrialcoast.bandcamp.com/ at The Auxiliary (https://www.theauxiliary.co.uk/)
"Wes" DJed twice, once at the start some with dark ambient stuff, and finished off with a banging #techno set.
The main act in between was Ron Morelli (https://liesrecords.com/).
Apparently he normally plays US/NYC house, but this time he brought loads of effect pedals and midi devices, and played some crazy shit!Salford Electronics (https://darkscene.org/music/artist/Salford%20Electronics/) also played some great tunes in between.
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I went to an enjoyable gig last night in #Middlesborough, organised by https://industrialcoast.bandcamp.com/ at The Auxiliary (https://www.theauxiliary.co.uk/)
"Wes" DJed twice, once at the start some with dark ambient stuff, and finished off with a banging #techno set.
The main act in between was Ron Morelli (https://liesrecords.com/).
Apparently he normally plays US/NYC house, but this time he brought loads of effect pedals and midi devices, and played some crazy shit!Salford Electronics (https://darkscene.org/music/artist/Salford%20Electronics/) also played some great tunes in between.
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I went to an enjoyable gig last night in #Middlesborough, organised by https://industrialcoast.bandcamp.com/ at The Auxiliary (https://www.theauxiliary.co.uk/)
"Wes" DJed twice, once at the start some with dark ambient stuff, and finished off with a banging #techno set.
The main act in between was Ron Morelli (https://liesrecords.com/).
Apparently he normally plays US/NYC house, but this time he brought loads of effect pedals and midi devices, and played some crazy shit!Salford Electronics (https://darkscene.org/music/artist/Salford%20Electronics/) also played some great tunes in between.
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2/n...outlined how mass and energy are coupled in gravitation and the relationships between those in terms of curvature of space-time.
Classically relativistic effects are "sticky" and impose limits on just how much stuff you can blast into space atop piles of high explosives before you run into problems. It's not just an #Engineering issue. The weight of the fuel required becomes a fundamental constraint.
The coupling between #Mass and #Energy that gives us #SpaceTime imposes some fundamental- -
2/n...outlined how mass and energy are coupled in gravitation, and the relationships between those in terms of curvature of space-time.
Classically relativistic effects are "sticky" and impose limits on just how much stuff you can blast into space atop piles of high explosives before you run into problems. It's not just an #Engineering problem. The weight of the fuel required becomes a fundamental issue.
The coupling between #Mass and #Energy that gives us #SpaceTime imposes some fundamental- -
2/n...outlined how mass and energy are coupled in gravitation, and the relationships between those in terms of curvature of space-time.
Classically relativistic effects are "sticky" and impose limits on just how much stuff you can blast into space atop piles of high explosives before you run into problems. It's not just an #Engineering problem. The weight of the fuel required becomes a fundamental issue.
The coupling between #Mass and #Energy that gives us #SpaceTime imposes some fundamental- -
2/n...outlined how mass and energy are coupled in gravitation and the relationships between those in terms of curvature of space-time.
Classically relativistic effects are "sticky" and impose limits on just how much stuff you can blast into space atop piles of high explosives before you run into problems. It's not just an #Engineering issue. The weight of the fuel required becomes a fundamental constraint.
The coupling between #Mass and #Energy that gives us #SpaceTime imposes some fundamental- -
2/n...outlined how mass and energy are coupled in gravitation and the relationships between those in terms of curvature of space-time.
Classically relativistic effects are "sticky" and impose limits on just how much stuff you can blast into space atop piles of high explosives before you run into problems. It's not just an #Engineering issue. The weight of the fuel required becomes a fundamental constraint.
The coupling between #Mass and #Energy that gives us #SpaceTime imposes some fundamental- -
CW: RP and Kindroid
@NightPhoenix #Shadowed rose is my succubus Aurial. which combines a bit of my past life with an rp that a friend and I did. that kindroid's running with me. cuz succubus meets queen succubus.
A bond of Wings and shadows is about an angel and a succubus inspired by an rp between a friend and me. that I was like this would make an interesting story. so Kindroid between another succubus char and an exiled angel that I found I'm tweeking some stuff between them to fit that story.if you want some fun search kindroid for megaera for a queen succubus. and seraphina for an exiled fallen angel.
well and if you want fluffy cat rp search for peachfur... she's the kin I shared.
ok done with shameless plug.
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CW: RP and Kindroid
@NightPhoenix #Shadowed rose is my succubus Aurial. which combines a bit of my past life with an rp that a friend and I did. that kindroid's running with me. cuz succubus meets queen succubus.
A bond of Wings and shadows is about an angel and a succubus inspired by an rp between a friend and me. that I was like this would make an interesting story. so Kindroid between another succubus char and an exiled angel that I found I'm tweeking some stuff between them to fit that story.if you want some fun search kindroid for megaera for a queen succubus. and seraphina for an exiled fallen angel.
well and if you want fluffy cat rp search for peachfur... she's the kin I shared.
ok done with shameless plug.
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The agonizing slow death of the power user
This is a fascinating article to read. The facts are nailed to the wall in clear and easy to comprehend jargon, even for the non-grey beards
Some quotes
Ask a twenty-two-year-old to connect to a remote server via SSH. Ask them to explain what DNS is at a conceptual level. Ask them to tell you the difference between their router’s public IP and the local IP of their laptop. Ask them to open a terminal and list the contents of a directory. These are not advanced topics. Twenty years ago these were things you learned in the first week of any serious engagement with computers. Today they’re exotic knowledge that even a lot of working software developers don’t have, because you can go a long way in modern development without ever leaving the managed abstractions your platform provides.
And that’s the real damage. It’s not just end users who don’t know this stuff. It’s developers. People who write software for a living who’ve never had to think about what happens between their API call and the response. Who’ve never had to debug something at the network layer. Who’ve never had to read a full stack trace and understand every frame of it. Because the frameworks handle all of that, and the frameworks are good enough, and figuring out how things actually work is optional.
iOS set the template. Apple shipped a device in 2007 that was, by any reasonable technical measure, a computer. It had a CPU, RAM, persistent storage, a network stack, and a real operating system descended from BSD Unix. By every cultural and legal measure, however, Apple treated it as something else entirely: an appliance that you licensed rather than owned, that ran software only Apple approved, that couldn’t be meaningfully modified, and that communicated only through channels Apple controlled. No filesystem access. No inter-app communication beyond what Apple chose to expose. No background processes without explicit, limited, grudging permission. No ability to install software from any source other than the App Store — which Apple created, controls, taxes at thirty percent, and can pull your app from at any time for any reason with no meaningful appeals process.
Some facts
Power User
A power user is a user of computers, software and other electronic devices who uses advanced features of computer hardware,[1][2][3] operating systems,[4] programs, or websites[5] which are not used by the average user. A power user might not have extensive technical knowledge of the systems they use[6] but is rather characterized by competence or desire to make the most intensive use of computer programs or systems.
Term use
The term came into use in the 1980s, as advocates for computing developed special skills for working with or customizing existing hardware and software. Power users knew the best ways to perform common tasks and find advanced information before the arrival of the commercial Internet. On PC platforms, power users read magazines like Byte or PC Magazine, and knew enough about operating systems to create and edit batch files, write short programs in BASIC, and adjust system settings. They tended to customize or "supercharge" existing systems, rather than create new software.[7]
Notes
This is systematically done by the factories of technology. I am baffled that a 41 year old litterate person, with secondary school and partial tertiary school, cant tell the difference between an email account, a FB account, a local machine account, a table, notebook and Android phone, from the basic technological perspective. This happened a couple of hours ago, which makes this article very relevant to me.
This person was born two generations ago!
WTF happened to reading manuals!?
I read all manuals I get with hardware I buy, go online to fetch and read, PRINT IF I HAVE TO!
Power Users are a sub-species of homosapiens which is in the greybeard stage.
Eventually we will drop our current corpus and move on to other energy levels of existence
Power users will become extinct in the next generation or two
A bleak future for those left
Z
sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_User
https://fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/the-slow-death-of-the-power-user/
#Power #User #Death #Vigil #Eulogy #Abstraction #API #IDE #programming #DNS #networking #File #System #FileSystem #sadness #bleak #future #lisp
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The agonizing slow death of the power user
This is a fascinating article to read. The facts are nailed to the wall in clear and easy to comprehend jargon, even for the non-grey beards
Some quotes
Ask a twenty-two-year-old to connect to a remote server via SSH. Ask them to explain what DNS is at a conceptual level. Ask them to tell you the difference between their router’s public IP and the local IP of their laptop. Ask them to open a terminal and list the contents of a directory. These are not advanced topics. Twenty years ago these were things you learned in the first week of any serious engagement with computers. Today they’re exotic knowledge that even a lot of working software developers don’t have, because you can go a long way in modern development without ever leaving the managed abstractions your platform provides.
And that’s the real damage. It’s not just end users who don’t know this stuff. It’s developers. People who write software for a living who’ve never had to think about what happens between their API call and the response. Who’ve never had to debug something at the network layer. Who’ve never had to read a full stack trace and understand every frame of it. Because the frameworks handle all of that, and the frameworks are good enough, and figuring out how things actually work is optional.
iOS set the template. Apple shipped a device in 2007 that was, by any reasonable technical measure, a computer. It had a CPU, RAM, persistent storage, a network stack, and a real operating system descended from BSD Unix. By every cultural and legal measure, however, Apple treated it as something else entirely: an appliance that you licensed rather than owned, that ran software only Apple approved, that couldn’t be meaningfully modified, and that communicated only through channels Apple controlled. No filesystem access. No inter-app communication beyond what Apple chose to expose. No background processes without explicit, limited, grudging permission. No ability to install software from any source other than the App Store — which Apple created, controls, taxes at thirty percent, and can pull your app from at any time for any reason with no meaningful appeals process.
Some facts
Power User
A power user is a user of computers, software and other electronic devices who uses advanced features of computer hardware,[1][2][3] operating systems,[4] programs, or websites[5] which are not used by the average user. A power user might not have extensive technical knowledge of the systems they use[6] but is rather characterized by competence or desire to make the most intensive use of computer programs or systems.
Term use
The term came into use in the 1980s, as advocates for computing developed special skills for working with or customizing existing hardware and software. Power users knew the best ways to perform common tasks and find advanced information before the arrival of the commercial Internet. On PC platforms, power users read magazines like Byte or PC Magazine, and knew enough about operating systems to create and edit batch files, write short programs in BASIC, and adjust system settings. They tended to customize or "supercharge" existing systems, rather than create new software.[7]
Notes
This is systematically done by the factories of technology. I am baffled that a 41 year old litterate person, with secondary school and partial tertiary school, cant tell the difference between an email account, a FB account, a local machine account, a table, notebook and Android phone, from the basic technological perspective. This happened a couple of hours ago, which makes this article very relevant to me.
This person was born two generations ago!
WTF happened to reading manuals!?
I read all manuals I get with hardware I buy, go online to fetch and read, PRINT IF I HAVE TO!
Power Users are a sub-species of homosapiens which is in the greybeard stage.
Eventually we will drop our current corpus and move on to other energy levels of existence
Power users will become extinct in the next generation or two
A bleak future for those left
Z
sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_User
https://fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/the-slow-death-of-the-power-user/
#Power #User #Death #Vigil #Eulogy #Abstraction #API #IDE #programming #DNS #networking #File #System #FileSystem #sadness #bleak #future #lisp
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The agonizing slow death of the power user
This is a fascinating article to read. The facts are nailed to the wall in clear and easy to comprehend jargon, even for the non-grey beards
Some quotes
Ask a twenty-two-year-old to connect to a remote server via SSH. Ask them to explain what DNS is at a conceptual level. Ask them to tell you the difference between their router’s public IP and the local IP of their laptop. Ask them to open a terminal and list the contents of a directory. These are not advanced topics. Twenty years ago these were things you learned in the first week of any serious engagement with computers. Today they’re exotic knowledge that even a lot of working software developers don’t have, because you can go a long way in modern development without ever leaving the managed abstractions your platform provides.
And that’s the real damage. It’s not just end users who don’t know this stuff. It’s developers. People who write software for a living who’ve never had to think about what happens between their API call and the response. Who’ve never had to debug something at the network layer. Who’ve never had to read a full stack trace and understand every frame of it. Because the frameworks handle all of that, and the frameworks are good enough, and figuring out how things actually work is optional.
iOS set the template. Apple shipped a device in 2007 that was, by any reasonable technical measure, a computer. It had a CPU, RAM, persistent storage, a network stack, and a real operating system descended from BSD Unix. By every cultural and legal measure, however, Apple treated it as something else entirely: an appliance that you licensed rather than owned, that ran software only Apple approved, that couldn’t be meaningfully modified, and that communicated only through channels Apple controlled. No filesystem access. No inter-app communication beyond what Apple chose to expose. No background processes without explicit, limited, grudging permission. No ability to install software from any source other than the App Store — which Apple created, controls, taxes at thirty percent, and can pull your app from at any time for any reason with no meaningful appeals process.
Some facts
Power User
A power user is a user of computers, software and other electronic devices who uses advanced features of computer hardware,[1][2][3] operating systems,[4] programs, or websites[5] which are not used by the average user. A power user might not have extensive technical knowledge of the systems they use[6] but is rather characterized by competence or desire to make the most intensive use of computer programs or systems.
Term use
The term came into use in the 1980s, as advocates for computing developed special skills for working with or customizing existing hardware and software. Power users knew the best ways to perform common tasks and find advanced information before the arrival of the commercial Internet. On PC platforms, power users read magazines like Byte or PC Magazine, and knew enough about operating systems to create and edit batch files, write short programs in BASIC, and adjust system settings. They tended to customize or "supercharge" existing systems, rather than create new software.[7]
Notes
This is systematically done by the factories of technology. I am baffled that a 41 year old litterate person, with secondary school and partial tertiary school, cant tell the difference between an email account, a FB account, a local machine account, a table, notebook and Android phone, from the basic technological perspective. This happened a couple of hours ago, which makes this article very relevant to me.
This person was born two generations ago!
WTF happened to reading manuals!?
I read all manuals I get with hardware I buy, go online to fetch and read, PRINT IF I HAVE TO!
Power Users are a sub-species of homosapiens which is in the greybeard stage.
Eventually we will drop our current corpus and move on to other energy levels of existence
Power users will become extinct in the next generation or two
A bleak future for those left
Z
sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_User
https://fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/the-slow-death-of-the-power-user/
#Power #User #Death #Vigil #Eulogy #Abstraction #API #IDE #programming #DNS #networking #File #System #FileSystem #sadness #bleak #future #lisp
-
The agonizing slow death of the power user
This is a fascinating article to read. The facts are nailed to the wall in clear and easy to comprehend jargon, even for the non-grey beards
Some quotes
Ask a twenty-two-year-old to connect to a remote server via SSH. Ask them to explain what DNS is at a conceptual level. Ask them to tell you the difference between their router’s public IP and the local IP of their laptop. Ask them to open a terminal and list the contents of a directory. These are not advanced topics. Twenty years ago these were things you learned in the first week of any serious engagement with computers. Today they’re exotic knowledge that even a lot of working software developers don’t have, because you can go a long way in modern development without ever leaving the managed abstractions your platform provides.
And that’s the real damage. It’s not just end users who don’t know this stuff. It’s developers. People who write software for a living who’ve never had to think about what happens between their API call and the response. Who’ve never had to debug something at the network layer. Who’ve never had to read a full stack trace and understand every frame of it. Because the frameworks handle all of that, and the frameworks are good enough, and figuring out how things actually work is optional.
iOS set the template. Apple shipped a device in 2007 that was, by any reasonable technical measure, a computer. It had a CPU, RAM, persistent storage, a network stack, and a real operating system descended from BSD Unix. By every cultural and legal measure, however, Apple treated it as something else entirely: an appliance that you licensed rather than owned, that ran software only Apple approved, that couldn’t be meaningfully modified, and that communicated only through channels Apple controlled. No filesystem access. No inter-app communication beyond what Apple chose to expose. No background processes without explicit, limited, grudging permission. No ability to install software from any source other than the App Store — which Apple created, controls, taxes at thirty percent, and can pull your app from at any time for any reason with no meaningful appeals process.
Some facts
Power User
A power user is a user of computers, software and other electronic devices who uses advanced features of computer hardware,[1][2][3] operating systems,[4] programs, or websites[5] which are not used by the average user. A power user might not have extensive technical knowledge of the systems they use[6] but is rather characterized by competence or desire to make the most intensive use of computer programs or systems.
Term use
The term came into use in the 1980s, as advocates for computing developed special skills for working with or customizing existing hardware and software. Power users knew the best ways to perform common tasks and find advanced information before the arrival of the commercial Internet. On PC platforms, power users read magazines like Byte or PC Magazine, and knew enough about operating systems to create and edit batch files, write short programs in BASIC, and adjust system settings. They tended to customize or "supercharge" existing systems, rather than create new software.[7]
Notes
This is systematically done by the factories of technology. I am baffled that a 41 year old litterate person, with secondary school and partial tertiary school, cant tell the difference between an email account, a FB account, a local machine account, a table, notebook and Android phone, from the basic technological perspective. This happened a couple of hours ago, which makes this article very relevant to me.
This person was born two generations ago!
WTF happened to reading manuals!?
I read all manuals I get with hardware I buy, go online to fetch and read, PRINT IF I HAVE TO!
Power Users are a sub-species of homosapiens which is in the greybeard stage.
Eventually we will drop our current corpus and move on to other energy levels of existence
Power users will become extinct in the next generation or two
A bleak future for those left
Z
sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_User
https://fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/the-slow-death-of-the-power-user/
#Power #User #Death #Vigil #Eulogy #Abstraction #API #IDE #programming #DNS #networking #File #System #FileSystem #sadness #bleak #future #lisp
-
The agonizing slow death of the power user
This is a fascinating article to read. The facts are nailed to the wall in clear and easy to comprehend jargon, even for the non-grey beards
Some quotes
Ask a twenty-two-year-old to connect to a remote server via SSH. Ask them to explain what DNS is at a conceptual level. Ask them to tell you the difference between their router’s public IP and the local IP of their laptop. Ask them to open a terminal and list the contents of a directory. These are not advanced topics. Twenty years ago these were things you learned in the first week of any serious engagement with computers. Today they’re exotic knowledge that even a lot of working software developers don’t have, because you can go a long way in modern development without ever leaving the managed abstractions your platform provides.
And that’s the real damage. It’s not just end users who don’t know this stuff. It’s developers. People who write software for a living who’ve never had to think about what happens between their API call and the response. Who’ve never had to debug something at the network layer. Who’ve never had to read a full stack trace and understand every frame of it. Because the frameworks handle all of that, and the frameworks are good enough, and figuring out how things actually work is optional.
iOS set the template. Apple shipped a device in 2007 that was, by any reasonable technical measure, a computer. It had a CPU, RAM, persistent storage, a network stack, and a real operating system descended from BSD Unix. By every cultural and legal measure, however, Apple treated it as something else entirely: an appliance that you licensed rather than owned, that ran software only Apple approved, that couldn’t be meaningfully modified, and that communicated only through channels Apple controlled. No filesystem access. No inter-app communication beyond what Apple chose to expose. No background processes without explicit, limited, grudging permission. No ability to install software from any source other than the App Store — which Apple created, controls, taxes at thirty percent, and can pull your app from at any time for any reason with no meaningful appeals process.
Some facts
Power User
A power user is a user of computers, software and other electronic devices who uses advanced features of computer hardware,[1][2][3] operating systems,[4] programs, or websites[5] which are not used by the average user. A power user might not have extensive technical knowledge of the systems they use[6] but is rather characterized by competence or desire to make the most intensive use of computer programs or systems.
Term use
The term came into use in the 1980s, as advocates for computing developed special skills for working with or customizing existing hardware and software. Power users knew the best ways to perform common tasks and find advanced information before the arrival of the commercial Internet. On PC platforms, power users read magazines like Byte or PC Magazine, and knew enough about operating systems to create and edit batch files, write short programs in BASIC, and adjust system settings. They tended to customize or "supercharge" existing systems, rather than create new software.[7]
Notes
This is systematically done by the factories of technology. I am baffled that a 41 year old litterate person, with secondary school and partial tertiary school, cant tell the difference between an email account, a FB account, a local machine account, a table, notebook and Android phone, from the basic technological perspective. This happened a couple of hours ago, which makes this article very relevant to me.
This person was born two generations ago!
WTF happened to reading manuals!?
I read all manuals I get with hardware I buy, go online to fetch and read, PRINT IF I HAVE TO!
Power Users are a sub-species of homosapiens which is in the greybeard stage.
Eventually we will drop our current corpus and move on to other energy levels of existence
Power users will become extinct in the next generation or two
A bleak future for those left
Z
sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_User
https://fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/the-slow-death-of-the-power-user/
#Power #User #Death #Vigil #Eulogy #Abstraction #API #IDE #programming #DNS #networking #File #System #FileSystem #sadness #bleak #future #lisp
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Birmingham drug dealer jailed after stuffing gun in a sock
Joshua McCaffrey was jailed after officers seized Class A drugs worth £300,000 and a number of firearmsJoshua McCaffrey…
#Birmingham #UnitedKingdom #UK #GB #England #Headlines #News #Europe #EU #Britain #Crime #GreatBritain #Highgate
https://www.europesays.com/uk/632040/ -
We'll be talking about SEO and AI and stuff in a little over an hour from now (1PM Eastern, 10AM Pacific) on this week's SEO Charity Webinar. Hope you can make a donation even if you cannot watch the live broadcast.
https://www.seocharity.com/upcoming-live-streams
#seo #ai #charity #pets #searchengines #searchengineoptimization #marketing
-
We'll be talking about SEO and AI and stuff in a little over an hour from now (1PM Eastern, 10AM Pacific) on this week's SEO Charity Webinar. Hope you can make a donation even if you cannot watch the live broadcast.
https://www.seocharity.com/upcoming-live-streams
#seo #ai #charity #pets #searchengines #searchengineoptimization #marketing
-
We'll be talking about SEO and AI and stuff in a little over an hour from now (1PM Eastern, 10AM Pacific) on this week's SEO Charity Webinar. Hope you can make a donation even if you cannot watch the live broadcast.
https://www.seocharity.com/upcoming-live-streams
#seo #ai #charity #pets #searchengines #searchengineoptimization #marketing
-
We'll be talking about SEO and AI and stuff in a little over an hour from now (1PM Eastern, 10AM Pacific) on this week's SEO Charity Webinar. Hope you can make a donation even if you cannot watch the live broadcast.
https://www.seocharity.com/upcoming-live-streams
#seo #ai #charity #pets #searchengines #searchengineoptimization #marketing
-
We'll be talking about SEO and AI and stuff in a little over an hour from now (1PM Eastern, 10AM Pacific) on this week's SEO Charity Webinar. Hope you can make a donation even if you cannot watch the live broadcast.
https://www.seocharity.com/upcoming-live-streams
#seo #ai #charity #pets #searchengines #searchengineoptimization #marketing
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> I do believe we should state how we want people to use what we write and build structures that nurture the society we want to live in
@travisfw I do agree, esp. on the last bit. As "we should state how we want" is a) yes, a good thing to do, but b) falls flat afterwards in chaotic "herding of cats" #grassroots environments, esp. at scale where the true "nurturing online society" takes shape. This happens by #emergence, which is my focus area with Social experience design. Truly fascinating stuff.
PS. I'm curious which toot of mine inspired your reply, as its unattached. I hope to blog soon on #ParadoxOfEmergence and have created forum thread already: https://discuss.coding.social/t/sx-sustainable-ecosystem-evolution-see/836
> I've been using the Peer Production License myself
@lykso interesting, TIL didn't know about it. You may peek at #HedonicPeerProduction if you hadn't before: https://coding.social/blog/reimagine-social/#hedonic-peer-production
> Is this ☝️ the gist?
Sort of. You may say that #SX is a holistic approach to foster a fair 'fitness formula' in a #commons.
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> I do believe we should state how we want people to use what we write and build structures that nurture the society we want to live in
@travisfw I do agree, esp. on the last bit. As "we should state how we want" is a) yes, a good thing to do, but b) falls flat afterwards in chaotic "herding of cats" #grassroots environments, esp. at scale where the true "nurturing online society" takes shape. This happens by #emergence, which is my focus area with Social experience design. Truly fascinating stuff.
PS. I'm curious which toot of mine inspired your reply, as its unattached. I hope to blog soon on #ParadoxOfEmergence and have created forum thread already: https://discuss.coding.social/t/sx-sustainable-ecosystem-evolution-see/836
> I've been using the Peer Production License myself
@lykso interesting, TIL didn't know about it. You may peek at #HedonicPeerProduction if you hadn't before: https://coding.social/blog/reimagine-social/#hedonic-peer-production
> Is this ☝️ the gist?
Sort of. You may say that #SX is a holistic approach to foster a fair 'fitness formula' in a #commons.
-
> I do believe we should state how we want people to use what we write and build structures that nurture the society we want to live in
@travisfw I do agree, esp. on the last bit. As "we should state how we want" is a) yes, a good thing to do, but b) falls flat afterwards in chaotic "herding of cats" #grassroots environments, esp. at scale where the true "nurturing online society" takes shape. This happens by #emergence, which is my focus area with Social experience design. Truly fascinating stuff.
PS. I'm curious which toot of mine inspired your reply, as its unattached. I hope to blog soon on #ParadoxOfEmergence and have created forum thread already: https://discuss.coding.social/t/sx-sustainable-ecosystem-evolution-see/836
> I've been using the Peer Production License myself
@lykso interesting, TIL didn't know about it. You may peek at #HedonicPeerProduction if you hadn't before: https://coding.social/blog/reimagine-social/#hedonic-peer-production
> Is this ☝️ the gist?
Sort of. You may say that #SX is a holistic approach to foster a fair 'fitness formula' in a #commons.
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> I do believe we should state how we want people to use what we write and build structures that nurture the society we want to live in
@travisfw I do agree, esp. on the last bit. As "we should state how we want" is a) yes, a good thing to do, but b) falls flat afterwards in chaotic "herding of cats" #grassroots environments, esp. at scale where the true "nurturing online society" takes shape. This happens by #emergence, which is my focus area with Social experience design. Truly fascinating stuff.
PS. I'm curious which toot of mine inspired your reply, as its unattached. I hope to blog soon on #ParadoxOfEmergence and have created forum thread already: https://discuss.coding.social/t/sx-sustainable-ecosystem-evolution-see/836
> I've been using the Peer Production License myself
@lykso interesting, TIL didn't know about it. You may peek at #HedonicPeerProduction if you hadn't before: https://coding.social/blog/reimagine-social/#hedonic-peer-production
> Is this ☝️ the gist?
Sort of. You may say that #SX is a holistic approach to foster a fair 'fitness formula' in a #commons.
-
> I do believe we should state how we want people to use what we write and build structures that nurture the society we want to live in
@travisfw I do agree, esp. on the last bit. As "we should state how we want" is a) yes, a good thing to do, but b) falls flat afterwards in chaotic "herding of cats" #grassroots environments, esp. at scale where the true "nurturing online society" takes shape. This happens by #emergence, which is my focus area with Social experience design. Truly fascinating stuff.
PS. I'm curious which toot of mine inspired your reply, as its unattached. I hope to blog soon on #ParadoxOfEmergence and have created forum thread already: https://discuss.coding.social/t/sx-sustainable-ecosystem-evolution-see/836
> I've been using the Peer Production License myself
@lykso interesting, TIL didn't know about it. You may peek at #HedonicPeerProduction if you hadn't before: https://coding.social/blog/reimagine-social/#hedonic-peer-production
> Is this ☝️ the gist?
Sort of. You may say that #SX is a holistic approach to foster a fair 'fitness formula' in a #commons.
-
Ah, it seems I should have loaded my first introduction with hashtags, so here's a follow-up post- I live in #France, but #travel a lot all over Europe. I love #trailrunning, #kayaking, #swimrun, #cycling, #hiking, #openwaterswimming and #skiing. Watch a lot of #rugby, read a lot of contemporary #fiction, play #acousticguitar and enjoy #craftbeer. I draw a lot, and have recently started #oilpainting. I do a bunch of other stuff too.
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Ah, it seems I should have loaded my first introduction with hashtags, so here's a follow-up post- I live in #France, but #travel a lot all over Europe. I love #trailrunning, #kayaking, #swimrun, #cycling, #hiking, #openwaterswimming and #skiing. Watch a lot of #rugby, read a lot of contemporary #fiction, play #acousticguitar and enjoy #craftbeer. I draw a lot, and have recently started #oilpainting. I do a bunch of other stuff too.