7 months Ago
KRAZAM videos are gold
Published by marco on
KRAZAM makes videos about working in tech and, more specifically, about working in a tech team that has been scrummed out, with lots of layers of management.
This is one of the more recent ones.
“Your friends and family understand what you do.”
“Your friends and family appreciate your humorous work stories…”
“DevOps is a meaningful term.”
“That joke you told in your meeting was funny! If your coworkers were not on mute, you would’ve heard them laughing.”
At the beginning, it shows that... [More]
ESC 2024: Semifinal #2
Published by marco on
- Malta
- Body suit. Naked-looking. Getting dragged around by a bunch of 90s-era-looking background dancers. This is just f*%ing awful. My ears hate me already. Jesus Christ, anyone who thinks this is good should reevaluate their life choices. This is how we’re starting off? No-one will notice when the robots take over. They’ve blindfolded her, flipped her around, they all threw their shorts off, now they’re porn-dancing. She’s got quite a Madonna-style tooth-gap going on. Good for her. There was... [More]
ESC 2024: Semifinal #1
Published by marco on
- Cyprus
- Dances way better than Dua Lipa. But, then, doesn’t everybody? She’s 17 and lip-synced in English. Her backup dancers all look like they go to high school with her. She’s very, very cute. Gorgeous, actually. And, for ESC very special: not in a porn-y way. Good for them.
- Serbia
- Alone on the stage. Goth-y. Low, slow song. She sang in what I assume was Serbian. She was barefoot. Utterly forgettable. We won’t have to hear her again.
- Lithuania
- Not English. Rappy. Boys got some backup... [More]
The Cosmic Call
Published by marco on
The article Try it and see by Mark Dominus (The Universe of Discourse) discusses the graphic below, which is part of the “Cosmic Call”, a message to extraterrestrials.
The author says that he told his 11-year-old niece,
““I bet you could figure it out if you tried.” She didn’t believe me and she didn’t want to try. It seemed insurmountable.”
I sent this to a few people in my family.
Hint #1
After a little while, I provided some context. The Cosmic Call is:
“In 1999, two Canadian astrophysicists, Stéphane Dumas and Yvan Dutil,... [More]”
11 months Ago
Some good, American comedians
Published by marco on
There are a ton of comedians that everyone talks about, like George Carlin, Richard Pryor, and so on. I was talking to some friends in Switzerland who are very much into stand-up comedy and they asked for some suggestions.
We talked about a few comedians—Bill Hicks, Bill Burr, and Doug Stanhope—that they might want to try. They all have good insight into the human condition and don’t shy away from describing humanity as it actually is, rather than how we wish it were.
I started off more... [More]
Cruciverbalism and cruciverbalism-adjacent
Published by marco on
Just a couple of quick notes. It’s the depths of winter and I’ve had some time off, so I’m playing with puzzles. I kind of like Wordle. I don’t play to win as quickly as possible. I like to throw unusual words at it, on the off chance that it will result in a lucky punch.
I sent the picture above to a friend who also likes Wordle with the note:
“There are probably not a lot of people who unironically and eminently hopefully guess “capon” before they’re forced to remember that “bacon” would... [More]”
Passenger Tortoise
Published by marco on
When a friend recently responded to messages of mine from nine days ago, I wrote back,
“Don’t sweat it. I just like to imagine that my messages arrive at Apple headquarters, whereupon they’re laboriously transcribed and illuminated by monks before being delivered to you by tortoise. The return trip takes equally long.”
1 year Ago
SBB was having a bad day
Published by marco on
Today was not a great day for the SBB.
I took three trains to get where I was going and each of them was 3-4 minutes late. The Swiss pack their schedules pretty tightly, so 4 minutes late at the end meant that the SBB had eaten up the two-minute buffer between the train’s arrival in Dietikon and the departure of the 301 bus I was meant to catch.
It was only a 1km walk, so no big deal, but it might have sucked more had it been raining even harder than it was—or had it been as windy as it has... [More]
Cool celebrity photos
Published by marco on
The post What’s a picture of a celebrity that lives rent free in your mind? I’ll start…. by N_Ywasneverthesame (Reddit) gives us this image of Mads Mikkelsen.
The foreground objects make this a bit of an odd photo, but he looks cool.
I think this is from The Jerk. I was a big fan growing up. She’s hilarious.
Big DILLIGAF energy.
This was an actual photo shoot that Chris Evans did. No-one should let him forget it.
These two fools also did a photo shoot.
So did John Wick, way back in his Private Idaho days.... [More]
Mad Props for Yngwie Malmsteen
Published by marco on
The YouTube recommendation algorithm is slowly starting to get better for me. For example, it showed me this video:
Japan: where speed-metal virtuosity goes to dielive forever. I love watching an earnest and serious Japanese orchestra playing along with the music I grew up with.
It’s 2017, Yngwie’s gotten chubby, he looks maybe a bit ridiculous in all of his stretched leather, gold rings, and gold watch—but he sounds amazing. You can really hear how appropriate most of his compositions... [More]
Family emojis cannot be unseen
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What’s New in Unicode 15.1 & Emoji 15.1 by Keith Broni (Emojipedia)
Am I the only one that thinks bad thoughts when he sees, for example, the third emoji in this list? I know that they think it’s a parent with a child, but does that not look like a gender-neutral blowjob to you? You won’t be able to unsee it, either. In fact, I can’t look at any of the four pictures and see “family”. Look at the second one! That’s two people “sharing”! How does the emoji committee not see this? Or maybe they do! Maybe they’re making... [More]
2 years Ago
Generational Disconnect
Published by marco on
I was watching a video today—Everything Is Going to Be Fine: Preparing for the end of the world by Aeon Video (YouTube)—which featured the narrator and his wife in their apartment, shown below.
This is actually what they look like—like caricatures made up by conservative “comedians” making fun of hipsters. I know we shouldn’t make fun of people’s appearance—lord knows I have no idea what I’m doing—but this was just too good to pass up.
He has a pen in his pocket. What is that?
It was only later that I... [More]
Humor is sooo context-dependent
Published by marco on
I was chatting with a friend about mistranslations and “false friends” (words that sound like a word in another language, but have a completely different meaning).
He sent me a link to Slowly down the feathers floated… (Imgur), an image without context. Still, in the image, you could see that a menu item on a Chinese menu had been translated to “Fuck the duck until exploded”, which is humorous, but only on a pretty superficial level, if we’re being honest. Using the word “fuck” without seeming to... [More]
Wordiply
Published by marco on
So there’s a new game called Wordiply that I took for a test drive.
The rules are that you start with a sequence of letters. Your job is to think of the five longest words that you can, that include those letters, in that order. That’s it.
I did the warmup and then took a crack at today’s puzzle. Booyah:
🅦🅞🅡🅓🄸🄿🄻🅈 #33
🌟 Length Score: 100%
💫 Rare long word found!
🚀 Letter Score: 76
🔗 Play Wordiply: https://www.wordiply.com
🎬 Today’s starter:... [More]
Jigsaw puzzles
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I just finished my first jigsaw puzzle in more than 2½ years.
A von Ballmoos Christmas tradition is to put together a jigsaw puzzle. The putting-together of it borders on obsession and we stay up ridiculously late, straining our eyes in the dim winter light and ignoring the telephone.
I got started a bit late this year, but still managed to strain my eyes and go to sleep very, very late.
2023: NY Public Library
This one started off relatively straightforward, but the final ¼ or so was... [More]
Telling time in different languages
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I was telling a friend about the article How To Be on Time in Estonia by Alex Bellos (Atlas Obscura) and its accompanying solution (PDF).
“[…] in Estonian, a “quarter past the hour” is instead described as “a quarter of an hour on the way to the next hour,” “half past the hour” is described as “half an hour on the way to the next hour,” and “three quarters past the hour” is described as “three quarters of an hour on the way to the next hour.””
Our conversation was as follows:
Me: Estonians say “one... [More]
Purely alliterative sentences
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The following are examples of alliterative sentences from What are sentences called where all the words start with the same letter?
- She Sells Sea Shells by the Sea Shore
- Peter Piper Picked a Peck of Pickled Peppers
- The Baker Betty Botter Bought some Butter, But she said “this Butter is Bitter, Bitter Butter is Bad for Batter.”
I looked with nearly exactly the query in the link title after I’d written the following doodle in my notes:
“Which witch will win well when witches wend ways... [More]”
Je veux les bon-bons
Published by marco on
The video One of the most effective ads to air in TV history (Twitter) is of a child misbehaving in a grocery store, with the father looking on in horror as the child escalates a desire to get what it wants into a full-blown tantrum involving destruction of property. The boy yells “je veux les bon-bons”[1] a couple of times, then goes apeshit.
The fun police showed up almost immediately and settled in to the top of the comment thread.
JFC, shut the f#%k up, Kathryn and Corey. It’s a joke. Relax.
It’s... [More]
A recommendation algorithm gone awry
Published by marco on
A friend of mine recommended a book he’d read called The Plot. I didn’t really know what it was about, but his recommendation was enough for me to add it to my list and check it out when it became available.
Pretty soon after I saw the following collection of books at the bottom of my page at the public library.
Reckless Hearts, Five Dares, and Love in Play looked quite a bit more overtly racy than I’d expected. I was starting to wonder what he’d recommended. Maybe he was just messing with... [More]
Why I still like Reddit sometimes
Published by marco on
So, Dave Levitan tweeted,
“Someone please tell me if I’m wrong, but I have the impression that the best climate models and projections didn’t really have “all the rivers are gonna dry up, like now-ish” in there”
The Rhine, the Yangtze, the Po by aprettyp (Reddit) is a screenshot of the tweet. The top response by whoareyoutoquestion is wholly informative,
“Except they did and do. “Unprecedented droughts” and “Increased cyclic extremes of weather” are two common things in climate change caused by global warming.... [More]”
3 years Ago
Worldle
Published by marco on
Another game that rides on the coattails of Wordle a bit is a game called Worldle. Just like Wordle, you get six guesses. Unlike Wordle, it shows you a country or a territory somewhere on the planet and then tells you how far off you are as well as the direction in which you should go to find the real territory or country. Sometimes, it throws a real curveball, like Christmas Island or French Southern Territories.
Almost all of the “hole-in-ones” are due to my partner, who’s just amazing at... [More]
Thank you for helping us defeat the Russian menace
Published by marco on
The article Restaurants Now Requiring Proof Of Ukraine Support (Babylon Bee) shows a sign outside a restaurant that reads,
“Notice: Proof of Ukraine Support Required
“Patrons must show proof of Ukraine support to enter this restaurant. Please have your social media profiles open and a photo ID ready. Thank you for helping us defeat the Russian menace.”
Just be clear—because the world has largely lost its sense of humor and sense of irony—The Babylon Bee is a satirical newspaper.
Translations for “joist” in German
Published by marco on
I use LEO quite a bit, both to learn new words and to check word genders in German. Over the years, I’ve become quite used to German having only a single word where English has several.
For example, “die Schande” in German translates to “obloquy”, “opprobrium”, “infamy”, “scandal”, “dishonor”, “disgrace”, and the most common one, “shame”.
The other day, though, I found a good example in the other direction. The word “joist” in English translates to “Balken”, “Träger”, “Dachträger”,... [More]
Wordle
Published by marco on
I suppose it should come as no surprise that I’ve been playing this with Kath. As long-time Crossword (even occasionally cryptic crosswords) and Spelling Bee fans, Wordle fits right in. And it takes only a couple of minutes per day.
In Wordle, you have to guess a 5-letter word. All guesses must be real words. The puzzle indicates letters that are in the right position with a green background and letters that are in the solution, but in the wrong position with a yellow background. It’s kind of... [More]
Schlitz Malt Liquor with Wilson Pickett
Published by marco on
With enough time having passed since it aired, I would have believed you had you said that this real commercial was an SNL spoof from the 70s.
It was great enough before before the bull showed up and Pickett elevated his egg-shaped lounger up out of reach.
Dilbert is getting darker
Published by marco on
What Should Have Happened at the Cryptocurrency Hearings
Published by marco on
I think Austin Bragg and Andrew Heaton (of Reason Magazine) make pretty funny videos.[1] Their latest is about the recent the congressional cryptocurrency hearings. These are a good idea—you can’t just hand your economy over to a world of unregulated scamming without asking a few questions[2]—but some of the people seemed…unprepared, to be charitable.
Libertarian James Bond
Published by marco on
I think this was actually quite well done and is quite funny. “I was literally a different person then.”
4 years Ago
A spammer’s cry for help from hell
Published by marco on
At Encodo, we recently turned off comments on our web site because we hadn’t gotten anything useful in years. Instead, we’d gotten a ton of spam comments that had gotten past the captcha included with Umbraco.
Several years ago, we switched from earthli WebCore, which has a home-grown captcha with math that seems to stymie the robots and spammers much more effectively. Now we’re kind of stuck with Umbraco and its patchwork CMS.
At any rate, there are comments to delete now, because some are... [More]