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999
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3 yr. ago

  • It blew my mind to learn how valuable some city bikes are. Worth much more than my car.

  • That's an interesting take. I'll guess we'll see.

  • I'm curious as to what circumstances could unfold in which Canada would be asking to join the USA in the next 100 years, let alone in "a few" years.

  • You're right. I edited my post to make the words more accurately capture my intention. Thanks for the vibe check. I was out of line.

  • If you don't feel like you need to move your feet when you accidentally drop it (to avoid a toe smack) , it's too small.

  • The fact that 3.5" floppies were self-sealing to make handling irrelevant (put your greasy fingers on any surface you fucking want) is another obvious advantage.

    There are more. Before putting something on blast, really run it through forwards and backwards. You might be surprised at how many pros/cons fall out of a genuine consideration.

    Sorry for the wording of my original post... it WAS needlessly adversarial.

  • I mean, there was that one guy where the mob cut off his entire body

  • That's an interesting thought, I hadn't ever considered that it might become this "wandering" point in space based on context. Maybe having a "fixed" conception at all is just a byproduct of mostly relying on eyes and ears which are pretty fixed. If you're relying on touch, which is available over a much larger and flexible area, your brain maybe just abandons any notion of you existing at a fixed point in your own body.

    We gotta find a deaf and blind person.

  • I haven't had the chance to ask someone blind from birth (or blind at all), but I strongly suspect you're right. I'd guess it'd be right between the ears.

    In my bizarre life, I was basically blind in one eye for about a year when I was in my mid 20s. There was a perceptible and jarring difference in my perception of self, towards (but not directly to) my good eye. It didn't happen right away, happened about a week in. This makes me wonder if even someone blind after birth would actually maintain the same sense of center vs someone blind at birth.

    Blind and deaf at birth for me is the real head scratcher. Part of wonders if it would be somewhere on thier dominant hand, or maybe closer to thier center of mass?

  • I could be wrong, but I don't think awareness that the brain being "where memories are stored" is innate. I think that's something we are told. If I'm recalling correctly, a surprising amount of what we perceive as cognition is offloaded to other distributed parts of our nervous system, so it's maybe not even quite as true as we think it is.

    And even if it were, through informal polling over the years, when pressed, almost everyone I've ever talked to conceptualizes the exact center of thier "self" to be around the bridge of thier nose. Nobody I've talked to described the pinpoint location as being the position of thier frontal lobe.

    I'm the fucking furthest thing from an authority, though. If you had to pinpoint the exact "point" of your consciousness, where would you describe it to be? I'm curious how far offset it is from your center of vision.

  • Not exactly related, but I think the typical conception of self being centered around the head at all is maybe just because that's where our eyes and ears are. Curious how deaf and blind people conceptualize the physical location of thier consciousness

  • Oh, I couldn't tell you what the 2 things are. I don't have a keen eye. I'm just waiting for someone who does.

  • A keen eye would pick up 2 subtle but clever additional references in the background and related to the specifications of those particular drives.

  • In university my entire dorm floor was in on insisting to my ex that it wasn't "Big Bird", but instead "Big Bert" (as opposed to regular sized bert)

    It came up for the 100th time at a party, and I was like "go ahead, look it up" and was able to get in an edit JUST before the page load. "Big Bird (Or "Big Burt" for Canadian rebroadcast)"

    It lasted for maybe 20 seconds, but it was all we needed.

  • 60-90 cents a liter was such a short time frame that I imagine I could guess your age with pretty reasonable accuracy

  • I was a big fan of those.

    Safeway was like "Geeze, we can't afford to sell Bicks pickles anymore due to the teriffs" and I was just "sweet, thanks for making it super easy to know exactly what thing I'll never buy again for the rest of my fucking life"

  • Thermodynamics Simulator

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  • You probably didn't expect that comment to make me feel so old.

  • There are some places where they are not ethical.

    There are some places where they are.

    They're both actually saying the same thing. I don't understand how two people saying the same thing could possibly be invalidating each other.