Oct. 7th, 2017

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ENDLESS LIST OF MY FAVORITE CREATIVE WORKS: BLACK MIRROR

We’re so out of our minds with desperation, we don’t know any better. All we know is fake fodder and buying shit. That’s how we speak to each other, how we express ourselves, is buying shit. What, I have a dream? The peak of our dreams is a new app for our Dopple, it doesn’t exist! It’s not even there! We buy shit that’s not even there. Show us something real and free and beautiful. You couldn’t. Yeah? It’d break us. We’re too numb for it.
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thexorcistgifs:

Anonymous: can u please make a gifset of 3 times marcus looked at tomas very specifically lmao when he was touching his face after they were fighting / the bar scene / when he goes “ok then” after tomas’s speech about being chosen. for scientific reasons.
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““i just want to go home” said the astronaut.
“so come home” said ground control.
‘‘so come home’’ said the voice from the stars.”
- jonny sun
(via mcthilda)
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dendritic-trees:

notoyax17:

thelibrarina:

tsreena:

baby: *incomprehensible babbling*

me: WHAT!? really??? no way :0

This is actually really good for babies’ brain development. You’re laying the groundwork for conversation, teaching them through example that people take turns talking and listening.

Did you know that babies from affluent families hear an average of thirty MILLION more words before age 5 than babies in families below the poverty line? For context, Les Miserables is about 650,000 words and it looks like this:

So it’s like reading this book 46 times.* And that’s not the total number of spoken words, that’s the GAP between affluent and poor babies. And these are the years in which the brain undergoes the most development. It’s mind-boggling.

So what I’m saying is: keep doing the thing. Do it to all babies, all the time. Narrate your day. Ask them for opinions. (“Should we buy the large bag of potatoes or the small bag?” “Gaabooglagje.” “Yes, just as I thought.”) Point out colors and shapes and letters. Let them scribble outside the lines and treat their babble like talk. Sing them nursery rhymes and Raffi songs and songs from the radio. All of these things are going to build their brains to prepare them for kindergarten and beyond.

*Please do not read Les Mis 46 times to an infant. They don’t even care about the Parisian sewer system.

So…are we going to pretend that that difference in words spoken has nothing to do with the fact that poor parents are more likely to be working then spending time with their children? Or that the childcare that they can afford (if any at all) is likely to be overcrowded, limiting the amount of one on one attention any individual baby gets?

I don’t think anyone has pretended that. This is a statement of a fact translated into goofy Tumbl-speak. No one’s pretending anything. Not enumerating the entire biopsychosocial basis of the phenomenon isn’t a lie, its just being succinct. Heck, this could be new information for the person who wrote it.  You could have elaborated without being pointlessly hostile.

I mean, I’m assuming you’re objecting to the exhortation to “speak to babies”, but does it occur to you that this might have encouraged someone to speak to their sister’s baby, or their little cousins, when their parents might be busy? Or help a young and inexperienced (and therefore cheap) babysitter do a better job?
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via http://ift.tt/2fTxaQr:You Don't Own Your Ebooks:

zigraves:

vaspider:

katherinethegrape:

unlikelylass:

vaspider:

ayellowbirds:

dr-archeville:

You don’t own your ebooks with DRM.  You’re merely licensing the privilege to read them.  Some readers overseas have learned this the hard way (yet again) now that Nook is going out of business in the United Kingdom.  But don’t worry, they’re working to let you maybe possibly transfer all those books you bought.

The Register and TechDirt brought this notice from Nook’s UK site to our attention (emphasis mine):

Effective from March 15, 2016, NOOK will no longer sell digital content in the United Kingdom.  The NOOK Store on NOOK devices sold in the UK, on the UK NOOK Reading App for Android, and at nook.com/gb will cease operation.

To meet your digital reading needs going forward, NOOK has partnered with award-winning Sainsbury’s Entertainment on Demand to ensure that you have continued access to the vast majority of your purchased NOOK Books at no new cost to you.  Further instructions on how to transfer your NOOK Books to a new or existing Sainsbury’s Entertainment on Demand account will be sent to you by email over the coming weeks.  Please ensure that you look out for these emails as they will contain important information on what to do next.

Your action is required.

“…continued access to the vast majority of your purchased NOOK Books…”

They’re not even promising that you’ll be able to transfer all your books!

Digital rights management (DRM) is absolutely crippling our ability to preserve digital knowledge for the future.  And it’s half the reason I prefer deadtree books.

Even when it’s an accident (like when Amazon deleted everybody’s copies of George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm from their Kindles) it shows just how little control we have over the books we “buy” from digital retailers.

So repeat after me…

You don’t own your ebooks.

You don’t own your ebooks.

You don’t own your ebooks.

This has been an issue for libraries since e-books first started being released.

I keep forgetting that this is a thing that isn’t widely known outside of libraries, the mentality of publishers that electronic media is being “lent” to the buyer, rather than actually becoming a thing you own.

This really bothers me on an accessibility level, bc my Kindle having everything on it makes it accessible to me in my tiny house, with my busted back. I don’t have to get up to get another book. I don’t have to reserve space I don’t have for books. I don’t have to carry a bunch of heavy books when I’m already managing my wheelchair etc while traveling.

This is such a problem.

My husband has complicated allergies. Book ink and the formaldehyde in the paper is a major issue for him. But an ereader works great!

Richard Stalman wrote an article about this back in the 90s called The Right to Read, IIRC.

Welcome to our dystopian cyberpunk present. :/

This is why I use Calibre to back everything up.

There you go.

For anyone who reads sci fi and fantasy, Baen/Tor (who publish a LOT of SF/f, including my beloved Vorkosigan Saga) sell most of their own ebooks on their own site unless the author has a special agreement, and all their ebooks are DRM free. They’re available in a bunch of different formats depending on what kind of ereader you have. Some other publishers also do, though I can’t remember which ones.

I know that nook, Amazon, et al are convenient aggregators, but it may be worth checking if the publisher sells a DRM free version directly if there’s a book you really wanna make sure you don’t lose access to. In addition to the nook problem listed above, Amazon have also been caught retroactively editing the content of books in people’s libraries after purchase. So. You know. Either find a DRM free version to start with, or be prepared to crack every book you buy.
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sussoria:

I know you told everyone a different story about who you are. I want the real one.
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tshifty:

waking up and my window is cold to the touch

foggy mornings

the forest is filled with 1000 different shades of colors

that smell you can’t describe as anything other than autumn

pumpkin spice lattes 

halloween

wearing sweaters and boots and beanies

the crunch of leaves under my shoes

breathing in the cold air

stargazing on crisp nights

the feeling of coziness paired with adventure

drinking hot tea while reading a book outside
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tiaralilibet:

100 Days of Ichabbie ↪ Day 32
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bennylafitte:

They’ll write songs about us, graphic novels: The Misadventures of Crowley and Squirrel. Dean Winchester completes me.
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asouesource:

…Imagine this story has a happy ending. You can pretend the woman at the door is the Duchess of Winnipeg, and she’s come to throw the Baudelaires a pony party at her chateau. Or you can pretend that she’s a butler with a tray of blueberry pancakes, or a loving parent that you thought you’d never see again. – requested by @ceedawkes, @lebdinechew + anonymous
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likesuperwheeearchive:

those times on glee when:  santana and brittany pinky link
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renlybaratheon:

Into this house we’re born, into this world we’re thrown, like a dog without a bone.
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