Naรฏvely I thought that the dominant social media platform might reform itself sufficiently to regain my trust and that I might reactivate my account one of these days.
Learning, however, that the company has approached major financial institutions all over the world seeking partnerships just reinforces my feelings that the unprincipled amalgamator that already knows too much is far too beholden to its backers’ demands for indicators of growth over sustainment and quality. I don’t think I’ll be rejoining though in the meantime, I do wonder what my shadow profile has been up to and its purchasing power and credit-worthiness mean to advertisers. Morbid curiosity always gets the better of us. What do you think? Such comprehensive services may seem normal elsewhere but there comes a point where convenience is no longer a choice but rather something foisted on the public.
Tuesday, 7 August 2018
panopticon
catagories: ๐ฅธ, networking and blogging
Monday, 6 August 2018
beep-bop-boop
The always engrossing Things Magazine directs our attention to a blog dedicated to showcasing cameos and walk-on roles by non-fictional computers in film and television.
Not only does the site fastidiously and exhaustively identify and document all the personal computers and office terminals that appear in 1990s television sitcoms, it all goes on to curate the film credits of the iconic, scenery-chewing machines like the AN/FSQ-7 (or at least the maintenance console of the mainframe), the 1958 “electronic brain” developed by the US Air Force during the Cold War as the master-control of a semi-autonomous network of that monitored American airspace and could coordinate a response to an attack from Soviet missiles. The computer has been featured in dozens of films (it does not feel right referring to the army surplus as a prop instead of a cast member) including War Games, Planet of the Apes, Santa Claus Conquers the Martians, Westworld, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and many others—as often as a vision of the future as that of the past. Rather than a supercut of the AN/FSQ-7’s appearances, here is a short from the Air Force on the defensive system:
้จ
We were quite enamoured (longingly) with this short list of Japanese terms for rain (above ame or in Kana ใใfor plain old rain) and were curious to know if there were more poetic possibilities. It turns out that there are more than fifty turns of phrases and some of our favourites—which caused us to reflect on others ways we might express the weather in our own language—included, by intensity, in combination with or transforming, type and duration:
ๅฐ็ณ ้จ / ใใฌใใใ Konukฤme Fine Rain
็ดฐ้จ / ใใใ Saiu Drizzle
ๅนใ้ใ/ ใตใใถใ Fukiburi Driven Rain
้ขจ้จ / ใตใ Fลซu Wind and Rain
ๅ้จ / ใใ
ใใ Jลซu Refreshing Rain Once in Ten Days
ๅคฉๆณฃ / ใฆใใใ
ใTenkyลซu Rain from a Cloudless Sky
ๅค็ซ / ใใใ ใกYลซudachi Sudden Evening Rain
The image is from an earlier Present /&/ Correct post on rain in anime. We do not speak or read Japanese, so as a universal disclaimer that should probably apply to most things one finds on the internet, so please do not use this as a basis for a tattoo or any sort of permanent commitment.
catagories: ๐ฏ๐ต, ๐ฌ, environment
public law 89-110
On this day in 1965, during the height of the civil rights movement President Lyndon B Johnson signed into law the Voting Rights Act, drafted and subsequently amended on five occasions to expand its protection to enforce the spirit of the fourteenth (abused as it was) and fifteenth amendments to the US constitution.
The previous summer saw LBJ sign legislation that outlawed discrimination of protected classes (then race, colour, sex or national origin) in employment practises and public accommodations, nullifying local laws to the contrary. Juxtaposed to current efforts to add a citizenship question to the US census, travel bans, purging inactive voters from rolls and shameless gerrymandering, scholars and lawmakers consider the VRA one of the most effective pieces of legislation ever passed. Among the provisions included in the Act requires that jurisdictions privilege no language over another nor impose literacy tests—infamously used to discriminate and disenfranchise minorities and the poor.