Shared posts

26 Nov 20:49

the sound of silence

















the sound of silence

24 Sep 05:48

kqedscience: 'Murdersquishing' Them To Death: How Little Bees...



kqedscience:

'Murdersquishing' Them To Death: How Little Bees Take On Enormous Hornets

Japanese giant hornets have large yellow heads, enormous eyes, and they eat bees. “Eat” is too polite. They grab European honeybees, rip off their heads, tear off limbs, throw those parts away and take the big, juicy middle piece (the thorax) back to their kids (the larvae). They are unstoppable. A single hornet, you are about to learn, can kill 40 European honeybees a minute.

European bees, being new to Japan (brought in by cultivators), have evolved no defenses. They haven’t had time. But there’s a second group of bees — the locals, the Japanese honeybees — who have found a way.”

Learn more from Robert Krulwich at NPR.

23 Sep 21:02

Arizona’s Law Against Revenge Porn: Nice Try, But It Makes All Nudes Illegal

by Kim Zetter
Arizona’s Law Against Revenge Porn: Nice Try, But It Makes All Nudes Illegal

If you shared or re-published any of the images of nude celebrities that leaked online earlier this month, you could be charged with a felony under a new Arizona law.

The post Arizona’s Law Against Revenge Porn: Nice Try, But It Makes All Nudes Illegal appeared first on WIRED.








23 Sep 20:27

Photo



23 Sep 18:05

Programming Sucks

Mattalyst

"So no, I'm not required to be able to lift objects weighing up to fifty pounds. I traded that for the opportunity to trim Satan's pubic hair while he dines out of my open skull so a few bits of the internet will continue to work for a few more days."

Every friend I have with a job that involves picking up something heavier than a laptop more than twice a week eventually finds a way to slip something like this into conversation: "Bro,1 you don't work hard. I just worked a 4700-hour week digging a tunnel under Mordor with a screwdriver."

They have a point. Mordor sucks, and it's certainly more physically taxing to dig a tunnel than poke at a keyboard unless you're an ant. But, for the sake of the argument, can we agree that stress and insanity are bad things? Awesome. Welcome to programming.

All programming teams are constructed by and of crazy people

Imagine joining an engineering team. You're excited and full of ideas, probably just out of school and a world of clean, beautiful designs, awe-inspiring in their aesthetic unity of purpose, economy, and strength. You start by meeting Mary, project leader for a bridge in a major metropolitan area. Mary introduces you to Fred, after you get through the fifteen security checks installed by Dave because Dave had his sweater stolen off his desk once and Never Again. Fred only works with wood, so you ask why he's involved because this bridge is supposed to allow rush-hour traffic full of cars full of mortal humans to cross a 200-foot drop over rapids. Don't worry, says Mary, Fred's going to handle the walkways. What walkways? Well Fred made a good case for walkways and they're going to add to the bridge's appeal. Of course, they'll have to be built without railings, because there's a strict no railings rule enforced by Phil, who's not an engineer. Nobody's sure what Phil does, but it's definitely full of synergy and has to do with upper management, whom none of the engineers want to deal with so they just let Phil do what he wants. Sara, meanwhile, has found several hemorrhaging-edge paving techniques, and worked them all into the bridge design, so you'll have to build around each one as the bridge progresses, since each one means different underlying support and safety concerns. Tom and Harry have been working together for years, but have an ongoing feud over whether to use metric or imperial measurements, and it's become a case of "whoever got to that part of the design first." This has been such a headache for the people actually screwing things together, they've given up and just forced, hammered, or welded their way through the day with whatever parts were handy. Also, the bridge was designed as a suspension bridge, but nobody actually knew how to build a suspension bridge, so they got halfway through it and then just added extra support columns to keep the thing standing, but they left the suspension cables because they're still sort of holding up parts of the bridge. Nobody knows which parts, but everybody's pretty sure they're important parts. After the introductions are made, you are invited to come up with some new ideas, but you don't have any because you're a propulsion engineer and don't know anything about bridges.

Would you drive across this bridge? No. If it somehow got built, everybody involved would be executed. Yet some version of this dynamic wrote every single program you have ever used, banking software, websites, and a ubiquitously used program that was supposed to protect information on the internet but didn't.

All code is bad

Every programmer occasionally, when nobody's home, turns off the lights, pours a glass of scotch, puts on some light German electronica, and opens up a file on their computer. It's a different file for every programmer. Sometimes they wrote it, sometimes they found it and knew they had to save it. They read over the lines, and weep at their beauty, then the tears turn bitter as they remember the rest of the files and the inevitable collapse of all that is good and true in the world.

This file is Good Code. It has sensible and consistent names for functions and variables. It's concise. It doesn't do anything obviously stupid. It has never had to live in the wild, or answer to a sales team. It does exactly one, mundane, specific thing, and it does it well. It was written by a single person, and never touched by another. It reads like poetry written by someone over thirty.

Every programmer starts out writing some perfect little snowflake like this. Then they're told on Friday they need to have six hundred snowflakes written by Tuesday, so they cheat a bit here and there and maybe copy a few snowflakes and try to stick them together or they have to ask a coworker to work on one who melts it and then all the programmers' snowflakes get dumped together in some inscrutable shape and somebody leans a Picasso on it because nobody wants to see the cat urine soaking into all your broken snowflakes melting in the light of day. Next week, everybody shovels more snow on it to keep the Picasso from falling over.

There's a theory that you can cure this by following standards, except there are more "standards" than there are things computers can actually do, and these standards are all variously improved and maligned by the personal preferences of the people coding them, so no collection of code has ever made it into the real world without doing a few dozen identical things a few dozen not even remotely similar ways. The first few weeks of any job are just figuring out how a program works even if you're familiar with every single language, framework, and standard that's involved, because standards are unicorns.

There will always be darkness

I spent a few years growing up with a closet in my bedroom. The closet had an odd design. It looked normal at first, then you walked in to do closet things, and discovered that the wall on your right gave way to an alcove, making for a handy little shelf. Then you looked up, and the wall at the back of the alcove gave way again, into a crawlspace of utter nothingness, where no light could fall and which you immediately identified as the daytime retreat for every ravenous monster you kept at bay with flashlights and stuffed animals each night.

This is what it is to learn programming. You get to know your useful tools, then you look around, and there are some handy new tools nearby and those tools show you the bottomless horror that was always right next to your bed.

For example, say you're an average web developer. You're familiar with a dozen programming languages, tons of helpful libraries, standards, protocols, what have you. You still have to learn more at the rate of about one a week, and remember to check the hundreds of things you know to see if they've been updated or broken and make sure they all still work together and that nobody fixed the bug in one of them that you exploited to do something you thought was really clever one weekend when you were drunk. You're all up to date, so that's cool, then everything breaks.

"Double you tee eff?" you say, and start hunting for the problem. You discover that one day, some idiot decided that since another idiot decided that 1/0 should equal infinity, they could just use that as a shorthand for "Infinity" when simplifying their code. Then a non-idiot rightly decided that this was idiotic, which is what the original idiot should have decided, but since he didn't, the non-idiot decided to be a dick and make this a failing error in his new compiler. Then he decided he wasn't going to tell anyone that this was an error, because he's a dick, and now all your snowflakes are urine and you can't even find the cat.

You are an expert in all these technologies, and that's a good thing, because that expertise let you spend only six hours figuring out what went wrong, as opposed to losing your job. You now have one extra little fact to tuck away in the millions of little facts you have to memorize because so many of the programs you depend on are written by dicks and idiots.

And that's just in your own chosen field, which represents such a tiny fraction of all the things there are to know in computer science you might as well never have learned anything at all. Not a single living person knows how everything in your five-year-old MacBook actually works. Why do we tell you to turn it off and on again? Because we don't have the slightest clue what's wrong with it, and it's really easy to induce coma in computers and have their built-in team of automatic doctors try to figure it out for us. The only reason coders' computers work better than non-coders' computers is coders know computers are schizophrenic little children with auto-immune diseases and we don't beat them when they're bad.

A lot of work is done on the internet and the internet is its own special hellscape

Remember that stuff about crazy people and bad code? The internet is that except it's literally a billion times worse. Websites that are glorified shopping carts with maybe three dynamic pages are maintained by teams of people around the clock, because the truth is everything is breaking all the time, everywhere, for everyone. Right now someone who works for Facebook is getting tens of thousands of error messages and frantically trying to find the problem before the whole charade collapses. There's a team at a Google office that hasn't slept in three days. Somewhere there's a database programmer surrounded by empty Mountain Dew bottles whose husband thinks she's dead. And if these people stop, the world burns. Most people don't even know what sysadmins do, but trust me, if they all took a lunch break at the same time they wouldn't make it to the deli before you ran out of bullets protecting your canned goods from roving bands of mutants.

You can't restart the internet. Trillions of dollars depend on a rickety cobweb of unofficial agreements and "good enough for now" code with comments like "TODO: FIX THIS IT'S A REALLY DANGEROUS HACK BUT I DON'T KNOW WHAT'S WRONG" that were written ten years ago. I haven't even mentioned the legions of people attacking various parts of the internet for espionage and profit or because they're bored. Ever heard of 4chan? 4chan might destroy your life and business because they decided they didn't like you for an afternoon, and we don't even worry about 4chan because another nuke doesn't make that much difference in a nuclear winter.

On the internet, it's okay to say, "You know, this kind of works some of the time if you're using the right technology," and BAM! it's part of the internet now. Anybody with a couple of hundred dollars and a computer can snag a little bit of the internet and put up whatever awful chunks of hack code they want and then attach their little bit to a bunch of big bits and everything gets a little bit worse. Even the good coders don't bother to learn the arcane specifications outlined by the organizations people set up to implement some unicorns, so everybody spends half their time coping with the fact that nothing matches anything or makes any sense and might break at any time and we just try to cover it up and hope no one notices.

Here are the secret rules of the internet: five minutes after you open a web browser for the first time, a kid in Russia has your social security number. Did you sign up for something? A computer at the NSA now automatically tracks your physical location for the rest of your life. Sent an email? Your email address just went up on a billboard in Nigeria.

These things aren't true because we don't care and don't try to stop them, they're true because everything is broken because there's no good code and everybody's just trying to keep it running. That's your job if you work with the internet: hoping the last thing you wrote is good enough to survive for a few hours so you can eat dinner and catch a nap.

We didn't start out crazy, we're being driven crazy


ERROR: Attempted to parse HTML with regular expression; system returned Cthulhu.

Funny, right? No? How about this exchange:


"Is that called arrayReverse?"

"s/camel/_/"

"Cool thanks."


Wasn't that guy helpful? With the camel? Doesn't that seem like an appropriate response? No? Good. You can still find Jesus. You have not yet spent so much of your life reading code that you begin to talk in it. The human brain isn't particularly good at basic logic and now there's a whole career in doing nothing but really, really complex logic. Vast chains of abstract conditions and requirements have to be picked through to discover things like missing commas. Doing this all day leaves you in a state of mild aphasia as you look at people's faces while they're speaking and you don't know they've finished because there's no semicolon. You immerse yourself in a world of total meaninglessness where all that matters is a little series of numbers went into a giant labyrinth of symbols and a different series of numbers or a picture of a kitten came out the other end.

The destructive impact on the brain is demonstrated by the programming languages people write. This is a program:


#include <iostream>

int main( int argc, char** argv ) {
    std::cout 

That program does exactly the same thing as this program:


`r```````````.H.e.l.l.o. .w.o.r.l.di

And this program:


>+++++++++[-]+++++++[-]++++++++[-] +++++++++++[-]++++++++[- ]

And this one:


Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook? Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook? Ook! Ook! Ook? Ook! Ook? Ook.
Ook! Ook. Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook? Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook?
Ook! Ook! Ook? Ook! Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook. Ook! Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook. Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook? Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook? Ook! Ook! Ook? Ook! Ook? Ook. Ook! Ook.
Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook? Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook? Ook! Ook! Ook? Ook! Ook? Ook. Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook.
Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook! Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook! Ook. Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook.
Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook! Ook!
Ook! Ook. Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook. Ook! Ook? Ook! Ook! Ook? Ook!
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook.
Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook.

And once somebody wrote a programming language that let somebody else write this:


#:: ::-| ::-| .-. :||-:: 0-| .-| ::||-| .:|-. :||
open(Q,$0);while(){if(/^#(.*)$/){for(split('-',$1)){$q=0;for(split){s/|
/:.:/xg;s/:/../g;$Q=$_?length:$_;$q+=$q?$Q:$Q*20;}print chr($q);}}}print"n";
#.: ::||-| .||-| :|||-| ::||-| ||-:: :|||-| .:|

According to the author, that program is "two lines of code that parse two lines of embedded comments in the code to read the Mayan numbers representing the individual ASCII characters that make up the magazine title, rendered in 90-degree rotated ASCII art."

That program won a contest, because of course it did. Do you want to live in a world like this? No. This is a world of where you can smoke a pack a day and nobody even questions it. "Of course he smokes a pack a day, who wouldn't?" Eventually every programmer wakes up and before they're fully conscious they see their whole world and every relationship in it as chunks of code, and they trade stories about it as if sleepiness triggering acid trips is a normal thing that happens to people. This is a world where people eschew sex to write a programming language for orangutans. All programmers are forcing their brains to do things brains were never meant to do in a situation they can never make better, ten to fifteen hours a day, five to seven days a week, and every one of them is slowly going mad.

</rant>

So no, I'm not required to be able to lift objects weighing up to fifty pounds. I traded that for the opportunity to trim Satan's pubic hair while he dines out of my open skull so a few bits of the internet will continue to work for a few more days.

(Update: now available in Italian, Russian, Portuguese, and Hungarian)

23 Sep 06:18

Obama Wages Unconstitutional War, Amash Blames Congressional Leaders

by Robby Soave

AmashAs noted by other Reason writers, U.S. forces have begun bombing ISIS targets in Syria on the orders of President Obama—even though the president has no legitimate power to give such an order, absent authorization from Congress.

W. James Antle III explains why the White House's self-justifications are clearly illogical:

The Obama administration apparently believes it has the legal justification to attack ISIS under the resolution that authorized the war on terror in 2001. But that law quite specifically covers “those nations, organizations, or persons” that “planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons.”

“On its face this is an implausible argument because the 2001 AUMF requires a nexus to al Qaeda or associated forces of al Qaeda fighting the United States,” Robert Chesney, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law, told The Daily Beast. “Since ISIS broke up with al Qaeda it’s hard to make that argument.”

Even the Bush administration accepted that it needed a separate authorization of force to go to war in Iraq, even though some of its officials and defenders wereasserting a connection between 9/11 and Saddam Hussein’s regime. Meanwhile, President Obama is winding down the war most directly associated with the 2001 law: Afghanistan.

Antle concludes by insisting that Congress is obligated to do more to restrain the president—a sentiment shared by Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.). Amash took to Twitter to blast do-nothing Congressional leadership in the wake of the Syrian bombings:

It's irresponsible & immoral that instead of debating & voting on war, congressional leaders chose to recess Congress for nearly two months.

— Justin Amash (@repjustinamash) September 23, 2014

But, as I explained previously, most Congressmen seem more concerned about the political ramifications of casting a potentially toxic vote on the war than about exercising their governmental duties.

23 Sep 05:51

thespeedoofsolomon: colonel—dog: legalmexican: samaelcarver: ...





















thespeedoofsolomon:

colonel—dog:

legalmexican:

samaelcarver:

The Meme of our Years.

this post is beautiful

god that last one

23 Sep 05:48

omg

omg
23 Sep 03:23

From Pole to Pulpit, a Strip Club and a Church Do Battle

by By TRIP GABRIEL
Mattalyst

"And so half a dozen topless dancers with hand-lettered signs began showing up at Mr. Dunfee’s church on Sunday mornings last month. The pastor acknowledged that they cannot be arrested since courts have interpreted indecency laws to mean that female breasts are not genitalia and can be bared in public.
...
Robert A. Skelton, the law director, said he feared the potential for violence in “an escalating-type situation.”"

A pastor’s nearly nine-year battle to close a strip club has succeeded in getting the dancers to his church on Sundays, albeit as part of a topless protest against him.
23 Sep 00:58

Apple Wave

22 Sep 22:12

aseaofquotes: Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities



aseaofquotes:

Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities

22 Sep 21:58

Space Imperialism

by jwz
22 Sep 20:45

Good point.

by jwz
Mattalyst

Simple comforts.

"If no one comes from the future to stop you from doing it then how bad of a decision can it really be?"

Previously, previously, previously, previously.

22 Sep 19:25

Yemen Rebels Gain Concessions From Government After Assault on Capital

by By SHUAIB ALMOSAWA and DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK
Mattalyst

Oh, good, another reason for Saudis to feel pressed-upon. This'll go well.

President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi announced that the rebels, known as the Houthis, had agreed to an immediate cease-fire and the formation of a new government, a process in which they were expected to hold sway.






22 Sep 19:21

The Un-Fappening: Awesome Art covers leaked Celebrity Pics

by René

007

003 010 020 001_800px

Illustratoren malen auf den geleakten Nackedeibildern rum. Großartig! Und ich finde, es sollte viel mehr bunt angemalte Hacks geben. Wenn bei dem ganzen Drama am Ende dann noch Kunst bei rauskommt, dann hatte das ganze immerhin irgendwas gutes.

The fappening happened. We can’t change that. But we can cover it up. It’s the least we can do. Here we show the works of artists who did so.

The Unfappening (via Blogrebellen)

22 Sep 18:58

Akino Kondoh

22 Sep 18:04

John Oliver Goes Deep Inside Miss America (Video)

by Doktor Zoom
Mattalyst

My favorite part of Oliver's success is watching reviewers try to figure out what to call it. "Longform investigative comedy" is begging to become something snappier.

John Oliver meets Butt Glue

John Oliver meets Butt GlueIn yet another terrific piece of longform investigative comedy, John Oliver and Last Week Tonight take on the Miss America Pageant, which likes to promote itself as “the World’s Largest Provider of Scholarships for Women.” Obviously, there are two questions here: 1) Is it still 1959? and 2) Really? Miss America provides $45 million of scholarships a year? There’s also the follow-up question of why anyone seeking an academic scholarship needs to know how to keep her swimsuit snug with butt glue.

On the first question, there’s some lovely snark thrown, especially at the absurdity of all pageant events that don’t involve swimsuits. Yes, a clip of Miss Teen South Carolina 2007 is included, like such as. On the other hand, the notion that a beauty pageant contestant should provide a 20-second answer to “What do we do about ISIS?” is already so ridiculous that it’s a wonder more contestants don’t end up similarly tongue-tied (we should note that in some pageants, tongue-tying is one of the actual events). And then there’s the competing Miss USA pageant, which of course is owned by Donald Trump, “a clown made of mummified foreskin and cotton candy.”

But it’s that second question that launches this segment into satirical low-earth orbit. Leaving aside the question of why a scholarship should depend on the candidates’ never having been pregnant, there’s the simple question of whether Miss America actually does provide all that scholarship money. Guess what? Absolutely not. It turns out that the actual amount of scholarships paid out was a bit under $500,000; the rest is a brilliant accounting gimmick resulting from adding together every single potential scholarship that winners might access, nationwide, if they could go to virtually every college in the country simultaneously.

Watch, enjoy, share. Also, there’s Kathy Griffin and a hunky male model who she thinks is more academically qualified than John Oliver.

22 Sep 15:23

The Edge of the Sky by Roberto Trotta [Uncertain Principles]

by Chad Orzel
Mattalyst

Up-goer-five, the language of poetry and love.

I get a fair number of books to review, but I’m often pretty bad about writing them up in a timely manner. Of course, most of them are well over 70 pages long, which is why I’ve managed to turn around Roberto Trotta’s The Edge of the Sky: All You Need to Know About the All-There-Is in the course of a weekend.

As you can probably get from the title, this is a book about astronomy written in Up Goer Five style, using only the thousand most common English words (which are helpfully listed near the start of the book, in case you want to check whether he cheated…), plus proper names. And there’s only so far you can run with that conceit (says the guy who wrote not one but two pop-physics books about a talking dog…). It does a quick run through modern astronomy framed by the musings of an astronomer during an all-night observing session with a giant telescope (a “Big-Seer” in Upgoerese). This includes a bit of personal history:

She would never have thought to end up here.

She had not been one of those kids with a clear idea of what they are going to become. And to become a student-woman was not something she had dreamed of– even less to become a student-woman who studies the All-There-Is.

Her family wanted for her a real job: a job everyone knew about.

A doctor– that was a great job. She would have been good at that, they thought. Or one of those people who wear horse hair on their head and try to trip up other people for a living. They explain how things have really gone, say, if someone has killed another person, and have to make sure they are believed.

I excerpt this bit because it gets the basic idea across, and also shows the weakness of the form. Namely that if you don’t already know a bit about what he’s talking about, Upgoerization can render relatively simple ideas utterly baffling. I puzzled over that last paragraph for a disgracefully long time before I remembered the key fact: Trotta is British, or at least based in the UK. Which explains the relevance of horse hair.

And that’s the problem I end up having with the whole Up Goer Five thing. It’s sort of interesting as a technical exercise, in the same way that, say, a villanelle or a double dactyl is interesting. But beyond demonstrating the cleverness of the author, I’m not quite sure what the point is supposed to be. English offers a rich and amazing bounty of descriptive words with fine shades of meaning, and not making use of that seems kind of silly. The circumlocution required by the Upgoer form ends up obscuring as much as it reveals.

And that’s pretty much the review of the book right there. Trotta does an impressive job of boiling astronomy down into Upgoerish, and it’s fascinating (in a writerly sort of way) to see how he manages it. He also gets full credit for not “dumbing down” the discussion in anything but a linguistic sense– the survey of astronomy presented here is compact but mostly complete, including mysteries of dark matter, dark energy, and inflation, and a good discussion of how we know those things exist. It’s not clear to me, though, that this book would convey all that much to people who didn’t already know the basic outline of the subject.

Of course, the counter to that is that this might be an effective outreach to people who like language games and constrained verse forms. The whole Up Goer Five thing was vastly more popular than I would’ve expected, so clearly I don’t have a great read on the appeal of this sort of thing. Maybe there are people who will pick this up to appreciate a virtuoso display of formally constrained writing (it’s certainly that), and end up reading astronomy books containing a wider range of words to pick up some of the finer points.

So, anyway, I wish I had a stronger opinion to offer on this. It’s an outstanding example of the form, and if you’re more interested in that form than I am, I definitely recommend checking it out. Which I know is the worst kind of tepid “Sure to appeal to people who like this sort of thing” review, and will probably result in Basic never sending me another free review copy, but there’s such a mismatch between this book and my tastes that it’s hard to say anything more.

22 Sep 05:15

thepredatorblog: The Pacific blackdragon is a deep sea fish,...



thepredatorblog:

The Pacific blackdragon is a deep sea fish, that can be found up to depths of up to 3,300 ft. Female blackdragons are about two feet long and have fang like teeth and a long chin whisker. They are black on the outside, aswell as on the inside to prevent light from swallowed bio-luminescent prey shining out. The males are small, about three inches in length, and brownish in color. They have no teeth, no chin barbel and no stomach. Unable to eat, the male lives only long enough to mate.

Source

22 Sep 03:17

Photo



22 Sep 03:06

bestqualitybeksinski: Zdzisław Beksiński



bestqualitybeksinski:

Zdzisław Beksiński

21 Sep 23:03

Want the perfect smiley selfie? Carry a big silver stick

by Chris Matyszczyk
The importance of the selfie in establishing self-worth is underlined by those who choose to carry with them something called a Selfie Stick. Seeing one in real life is sobering.






21 Sep 04:40

Photo









21 Sep 01:02

Photo



20 Sep 23:24

ianbrooks: Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune They say beauty is in...


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me


Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune / posted by ianbrooks.me

ianbrooks:

Macabre Makeup by Miss Lakune

They say beauty is in the eye of the beholder, though sometimes it’s just an empty socket. Lakune’s elaborate makeup designs must surely resemble the kind of looks tormented souls ask for in the salon at the end of Hell, where looking fabulous goes hand in twisted, gnarled hand with the tortured demons locked inside, desperately clawing to get out.

Artist: Deviantart / Facebook / Tumblr

20 Sep 04:08

thegirlwithgoldeyes: thegirlwithgoldeyes: She had curves in all the wrong places. She had a boob...

thegirlwithgoldeyes:

thegirlwithgoldeyes:

She had curves in all the wrong places. She had a boob sticking out of her kneecap and I’d never seen an ass on the back of someone’s head before

She had legs that went on forever. And ever, and ever. Legs going on into the endless primordial void from which we all came from and to which we shall all return. Her toes touched infinity, her hips perched on the cessation of existence.

19 Sep 21:58

Parody Of Little Mermaid's "Under The Sea" Celebrates Deep Sea Horrors

by Lauren Davis
Mattalyst

Peter Watts approves.

Things may be better down where it's wetter, but when you plunge in the ocean depths, the marine life can get downright terrifying. In this video, The Little Mermaid's Sebastian the crab sings all about the often hideous and gargantuan creatures "Under the Deep Sea."

Read more...








19 Sep 21:48

Need Help Getting Into Anime? Use This Anime Matchmaker - Sie Sind Das Essen Und Wir Sind Die Walker

by Paul Jensen
Mattalyst

Yahunh, and if you like Homeland, try Psycho Pass, and if you like any of the police procedurals, try Ghost in the Shell.

Attack-On-Titan

Ah, anime. That tempting treasure trove of imported entertainment, filled with all kinds of shows worth geeking out over. It seems like something worth checking out, but where in the world should you start? Well, one way to go about it is to take your favorite TV show and find an anime series that offers the same kind of appeal. Luckily for you, the hard part’s already been done. Here you’ll find a broad selection of great ways to get started on anime, all paired with a fan-favorite US TV series.

If you like The Walking Dead, try Attack on Titan

The Premise: A race of hungry giants called Titans have overrun the world and pushed humanity to the brink of extinction. Three circular walls protect the surviving population, with the innermost wall reserved for the wealthy and privileged. People have grown complacent after years of relative safety, but the illusion of security is shattered when the Titans breach the outer wall. Humanity must find a way to fight back against the Titans and reclaim the outside world.

The Appeal: Take the zombies from The Walking Dead, make them move a whole lot faster, and zap them with a growth ray until they’re taller than your house. Presto, you’ve got the human-eating monsters from Attack on Titan. Much like the popular zombie franchise, Titan offers a mix of tense, desperate action scenes and tough examinations of human nature. With a large ensemble cast, you’ll be sure to find someone to root for, but don’t get too attached. Attack on Titan shares The Walking Dead’s habit of killing characters off left and right.

If you like Breaking Bad, try Black Lagoon

Black-Lagoon

The Premise: A mild-mannered businessman heads to Southeast Asia for work, but his trip is interrupted when pirates kidnap him and steal the data disc he’s carrying. Rather than negotiate for the sensitive information, his employers hire mercenaries to sink the pirates’ torpedo boat, destroy the disc, and kill him in the process. Not content to go out quietly, our white-collar hero joins the pirate crew and jumps headfirst into a life of crime.

The Appeal: Breaking Bad evolved a lot from its first to its final season, but it started out by appealing to the fantasy of giving society the finger and starting a new life as a gritty anti-hero. Black Lagoon does for smuggling and piracy what Breaking Bad did for the drug trade, but it does it with a much more generous helping of gunfights and explosions. It’s a bullet-dodging, profanity-slinging good time, but Black Lagoon is smarter than it first appears. Like Breaking Bad, it’s not afraid to show how a life of crime can change an initially good-hearted person over time. The main characters are a nuanced, compelling group of men and women who just happen to kick ass and take names.

If you like Firefly, try Cowboy Bebop

Cowboy-Bebop

The Premise: In the future, an eclectic group of bounty hunters travel the solar system, hunting down criminals for money. As they clash with murderers, mobsters, and one another, each member of the crew must confront his or her own past. Old enemies and lost loves continue to haunt them all as they struggle to get on with their lives and keep their ship flying.

The Appeal: Just as Firefly is a cornerstone of sci-fi fandom, Cowboy Bebop has earned a lasting place at the heart of the US anime community. It follows the same strategy of taking a charismatic group of characters and bringing them together aboard a run-down old spaceship. The show is witty, exciting, and emotionally deep, and its jazz-influenced soundtrack is one of the best out there. If you liked the crew of the Serenity, the bounty hunters aboard the Bebop will easily work their way into your heart.

If you like How I Met Your Mother, try Toradora

Toradora

The Premise: Ryuji and Taiga are the very definition of polar opposites. He’s a big, intimidating guy with an easygoing personality and a love of cooking and cleaning. She looks tiny and adorable, but her appearance hides a bad temper and a habit of punching anyone who gets on her nerves. They reluctantly agree to work together upon realizing that each of them has a crush on the other’s best friend. Hilarious antics, awkward friendships, and plenty of teenage heartbreak ensue.

The Appeal: When How I Met Your Mother was at its best, it used its endearing cast to deliver both laughter and tears. High school romantic comedy Toradora does much the same thing, sneaking plenty of tearjerker moments into a very funny, very convoluted mess of relationships. It may not have the spaceships and gunfights of other shows on this list, but it more than makes up for it with the strength of its characters.

If you like House of Cards, try Eden of the East

Eden-of-the-East

The Premise: Amnesia has become a common plot device over the years, but Eden of the East ups the ante by having its lead character wake up naked in front of the White House with a gun in his hand. In his other hand is a smartphone that gives him access to a vast fortune. Of course, he has no memory of how any of this happened. Things only get crazier as he begins to uncover the network of conspiracies that brought him there.

The Appeal: All right, even I admit that this comparison is a bit of a stretch. Eden of the East may lack House of Cards’ menacing monologues and congressional power plays, but it provides the same kind of conspiracy-driven thrills and intrigue. The series performs an amazing balancing act, managing to be both insightful and fun at the same time. It’s a tough show to describe without spoiling any of its many plot twists, but it’s extraordinarily addicting right from the first episode.

And there you have it: five awesome, accessible shows to get your anime addiction rolling. Pick whatever appeals to you the most and give it a shot. You might just end up with a new hobby.

Paul Jensen covers anime, manga, and video games at SharkPuppet.com.

Previously in anime

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19 Sep 19:46

This corrosion, Seung-Hwan OH













This corrosion, Seung-Hwan OH

19 Sep 19:29

How to Crash Apple’s Servers