I’m in a hotel, and I forget how wild live tv is. I passed by a news channel that was just eight other news channels in split screen. I’m watching Mike Huckabee sell pills made of red grapes that “widen blood vessels”
I’m in a hotel, and I forget how wild live tv is. I passed by a news channel that was just eight other news channels in split screen. I’m watching Mike Huckabee sell pills made of red grapes that “widen blood vessels”
Maybe, weirdly, LinkedIn’s shallow feel-goodery makes it a better place to share professional stuff? At least stuff that’s not lamentation or rage?
90 percent of the conversation in my feed here is anger about the present dystopia. Seems like stuff that’s not that, including more “apolitical” academic conversation, gets drowned out.
Bums me out because I think we need both, and I want people to like my shitposts.
Some cold water on the idea that a massive sea change of public opinion is happening. Good to keep in mind.
In all honesty, a few boxes of pop tarts are our hurricane prep treat, so I’m part of the problem.
It’s important to have six weeks worth of toilet paper and perishable milk; this could be the big one.
A sandwich board sign for a student support service. The prominent text reads “no bots; no AI.”
A student peer support service promising you’ll get to chat with a person.
My university, like so many others, is embracing GAI. But when you talk to students on the ground, they’re more ambivalent.
Having grown up through the rise of commercial social media, they see the mixed bag of big tech.
I have been teaching about communication tech for a long time, and if there's one through line it's people will use things they find useful even if they see a lot of downsides to society or their self-interest. Survey after survey says it's leadership/management pushing the current iteration of AI.
As President Trump approaches one year back in office, the policies his administration pursues — and how those policies are communicated — have been increasingly shaped by social media.
"look no one has sued THIS clown yet"
when i was publishing my 2016 book on memes, we asked the MIT press lawyers, and they were like *shrug we dunno*, so that sealed it for me. the appendix of that book provides an ethical justification if it helps make the case to the journal
I've never requested any permissions and will only track down an original source if it fits the argument. I include when and where I collected an image, though. In the early days, I had to justify this a bit more, but a decade + into meme research that argument has been made and that seems standard
The ‘deck’ in “Deck the Halls” means “to decorate.”
But, it is not related or a shortening of ‘decorate.’
It comes from the Dutch word meaning “to cover.”
You also use it when you’re all “decked out.”
“I made it simple for baby boy”
ahh, december. wherein i determine whether organizing my desktop wallpapers is "work"
I am watching a blu ray from the library as we speak! That plus kanopy and hoopla for streaming, and you’re so set.
Seems extra relevant after today’s news
the sentence structure isn’t quite right, and “some see” the visible crew member with the fake vomit tube as immersion breaking? it sounds like an Amazon review synthesis. Maybe we just write like this now? Or maybe I’m paranoid. Which is another fun side effect of the AI internet.
okay but is this headline an AI summary?
smart kids. they cracked the code.
but what if the antennas were like REALLY big?
I think the desire is for the sense of accomplishment? Click the button, and it becomes “I made this”? I offended a student because I said her AI generated project title wasn’t good.
“I’m not critiquing you. You didn’t come up with it.”
“But I picked it from the list.”
a decade after I threw away all my DVDs, I’ve bought my first 4K blu-ray. discs, vinyl, hardbacks. physical media as luxury item is a funny streaming-era byproduct.
“Never rake” under my live oak made my backyard a giant mosquito love nest. I have switched sides.
I have a John Henry's Hammer mentality about AI. I can write emails better and faster than you, and I will die proving it.
If you have ‘dibs’ on something, you claim or declare rights to that thing before anyone else.
‘Dibs’ comes from an old children's game called ‘dibstones,’ which resembled the game of jacks.
I feel one million years old here, but we do actually have a pretty reliable way of knowing what news is true. Did a real newspaper publish it? Then probably yes. Can’t find it in a real newspaper? Maybe not.
those of you who are afraid of aging, please understand that one of the huge blessings of middle age is arriving at this exact station
I'm happy to report I just put on The Big Hoodie for the first time this season
I’ve never read this book, and I am tickled to death this is how I’m reading it