reasonsmysoniscrying:

‪**Walking some place that we’ve never been**‬

‪8yo: “I’ve seen this before.”‬

‪Me:‬

‪8yo: “You know how sometimes you go to sleep and you see things in your dreams and then later on you see them for real? Like that.”‬

‪Me, quietly terrified: “Umm oh yeah! That’s called ‘Deja Vu’! Great!”‬

 

kaylapocalypse:

I have this too, and like a bunch of the other people who say they have this in the notes have described: it’s like…less prophetic full fledged dreams and more like a 2second snapshot of you doing an activity with no context. Like cutting paper then looking up or opening your purse with specific scenery in the background. Then you wake up and you’re like “what was that pointless dream scene.” Then later (sometimes weeks or months later), when you’re doing The Thing you’re like “oh”

 

fandomsficsandfeels:

I DIDNT KNOW THIS HAPPENED TO OTHER PEOPLE TOO

 

audrey-hepbae:

Good morning all you That So Raven sons o guns

 

living-for-fiction:

…I thought this happened to everyone? Is it really so unusual?

 

maryellencarter:

It’s never happened to me quite that way (although I did once have a dream that a lost checker was behind a desk, where I then found it the next morning), but my younger sisters both had these, one of them quite a bit. Brains are weird as fuck and we don’t understand them.

I once read an article about “Story of Your Life” by Ted Chiang (here’s the article, and coincidentally enough it’s by the guy who was the subject of my previous post), in which the article-writer pointed out that it’s really quite simple to make an entity that remembers the future. All you have to do is take their subconscious guess as to what the future is going to be, and have their conscious mind remember this prediction as fact; then, quietly edit their memories of the *past* continuously/as-necessary, so that at any given time they *don’t remember ever having been wrong* about what the future was going to be.

My precognitive events–such as they are; it’s rather less than what the people upthread are describing–feel suspiciously like a weaker version of this, in which my brain doesn’t even bother to present me with a fabricated memory of having seen this in a dream a while back, just a vague sense that this dream occurred.

(…not that I would *prefer* it present me with fabricated memories)

Most of my revelations regarding dreams are about realising what part(s) of the *past* they were referencing, or what puns they were making. In at least one case I didn’t notice the pun for *months*; I wonder how many I’m still missing.


Tags:

#dreams #amnesia cw #reply via reblog #is the blue I see the same as the blue you see #unreality cw?

rationalists-out-of-context:

gwern sighs as he looks for a ref. oh for heaven’s sake. he deleted all of his tweets, and threadreader deleted their mirror, and IA didn’t catch it, and Evernotes doesn’t seem to support html/pdf export from the web, so I have to… export a PDF from Nixnote -_- good thing I clip these fucking things.
tl;dr: you need at least 4 layers of backup in order to prevent something from disappearing from the Internet


Tags:

#Gwern is a hell of a person #I hope to be that intensely myself one day #(also a while back I tried his linkchecker/archive-requester to see if I could automate that aspect of my WordPress project) #(whereupon it was made rapidly clear to me that Gwern has a hundred and ten GB of RAM and I…do not) #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers #amnesia cw

prokopetz:

prokopetz:

Today’s aesthetic: a footnote inside a parenthetical inside an interjection inside a subordinate clause.

(You can tell how many levels of academia somebody is on based on whether this post makes them feel offended, traumatised, or just vaguely called out.)


Tags:

#…academia? #I thought we were talking about writing blog comments #relatable #language

eternalgirlscout:

Avatar OC concept: a pedantic earthbender with a degree in geology who can bend ice on a technicality

 

bananonbinary:

the implication that bending is completely reliant on whether you think you should be able to instead of like…innate laws of the universe pleases me greatly

 

lesbianbrachiosaurus:

me bending someone’s bones: buddy they’re practically just limestone I mean it’s on you for walking around full of rocks

 

sufficientlylargen:

A waterbender, levitating a slice of pizza: See, I believe that pizza is technically a soup, not a sandwich, so


Tags:

#Avatar: The Last Airbender #story ideas I will never write #fun with loopholes #I love when superpowered people talk the universe into letting them do stuff #by arguing that the ability logically follows from the powers they already have

500 Million, But Not a Single One More

{{Title link: http://blog.jaibot.com/?p=413 }}

jaiwithani:

We will never know their names.

The first victim could not have been recorded, for there was no written language to record it. They were someone’s daughter, or son, and someone’s friend, and they were loved by those around them. And they were in pain, covered in rashes, confused, scared, not knowing why this was happening to them or what they could do about it – victim of a mad, inhuman god. There was nothing to be done – humanity was not strong enough, not aware enough, not knowledgeable enough, to fight back against a monster that could not be seen.

It was in Ancient Egypt, where it attacked slave and pharaoh alike. In Rome, it effortlessly decimated armies. It killed in Syria. It killed in Moscow.  In India, five million dead. It killed a thousand Europeans every day in the 18th century. It killed more than fifty million Native Americans. From the Peloponnesian War to the Civil War, it slew more soldiers and civilians than any weapon, any soldier, any army (Not that this stopped the most foolish and empty souls from attempting to harness the demon as a weapon against their enemies).

Cultures grew and faltered, and it remained. Empires rose and fell, and it thrived. Ideologies waxed and waned, but it did not care. Kill. Maim. Spread. An ancient, mad god, hidden from view, that could not be fought, could not be confronted, could not even be comprehended. Not the only one of its kind, but the most devastating.

For a long time, there was no hope – only the bitter, hollow endurance of survivors.

In China, in the 10th century, humanity began to fight back.

It was observed that survivors of the mad god’s curse would never be touched again: they had taken a portion of that power into themselves, and were so protected from it. Not only that, but this power could be shared by consuming a remnant of the wounds. There was a price, for you could not take the god’s power without first defeating it – but a smaller battle, on humanity’s terms. By the 16th century, the technique spread, to India, across Asia, the Ottoman Empire and, in the 18th century, Europe. In 1796, a more powerful technique was discovered by Edward Jenner.

An idea began to take hold: Perhaps the ancient god could be killed.

A whisper became a voice; a voice became a call; a call became a battle cry, sweeping across villages, cities, nations. Humanity began to cooperate, spreading the protective power across the globe, dispatching masters of the craft to protect whole populations. People who had once been sworn enemies joined in common cause for this one battle. Governments mandated that all citizens protect themselves, for giving the ancient enemy a single life would put millions in danger.

And, inch by inch, humanity drove its enemy back. Fewer friends wept; Fewer neighbors were crippled; Fewer parents had to bury their children.

At the dawn of the 20th century, for the first time, humanity banished the enemy from entire regions of the world. Humanity faltered many times in its efforts, but there individuals who never gave up, who fought for the dream of a world where no child or loved one would ever fear the demon ever again. Viktor Zhdanov, who called for humanity to unite in a final push against the demon; The great tactician Karel Raška, who conceived of a strategy to annihilate the enemy; Donald Henderson, who led the efforts of those final days.

The enemy grew weaker. Millions became thousands, thousands became dozens. And then, when the enemy did strike, scores of humans came forth to defy it, protecting all those whom it might endanger.

The enemy’s last attack in the wild was on Ali Maow Maalin, in 1977. For months afterwards, dedicated humans swept the surrounding area, seeking out any last, desperate hiding place where the enemy might yet remain.

They found none.

35 years ago, on December 9th, 1979, humanity declared victory.

This one evil, the horror from beyond memory, the monster that took 500 million people from this world – was destroyed.

You are a member of the species that did that. Never forget what we are capable of, when we band together and declare battle on what is broken in the world.

Happy Smallpox Eradication Day.


Tags:

#Tumblr traditions #illness tw #proud citizen of The Future #history #anniversaries

little-brisk:

has anyone found a good way to back up their tumblr that isn’t a complete fucking mess? all i want is an archive of my original posts, a function which every blogging platform since the invention of blogs has made extremely easy but we all know the hellsite wouldn’t be our home if it was a functional blogging platform, so

{{maryellencarter replied to little-brisk: I think @brin-bellway knows things about tumblr backups… }}

@maryellencarter​ summoned me here, since I have experience in this topic and am pretty much always up for talking about archiving methods.

So, I know of a few different options, depending on how exactly you define “good” and whether you specifically want *only* OPs or would be good with a full-blog archive too.

1. tumblr-utils. On Linux, you just download their zip, put the file labelled “tumblr_backup.py” in your home directory (I keep the rest of the folder elsewhere in case I ever need it for anything), and then open a command-line terminal and run “python tumblr_backup.py little-brisk”. I’ve never done it on other operating systems, but I expect it’s fairly similar; since this is a relatively popular method, we might be able to find someone with firsthand experience doing it on your operating system to give you more details.

By default, this will give you a local folder (a sub-folder of the folder your tumblr_backup.py file is in) containing both reblogs and OPs, with images included but not video or audio, and posts indexed by month but not by tag. There are various options you can add to the command [link]: for example, “python tumblr_backup.py –save-video –save-audio little-brisk” will include the audio and video as well as the images. Warning: if you use the “–tag-index” option and you have any tags (whether organisational or commentary) with a slash in them, the archiver will crash. I have not tested the “–no-reblog” option, but it does exist.

Depending on how many posts you keep and how many images were in them, the folder may be several GB in size and contain tens of thousands of files (most of them tucked away under the image and individual-post sub-folders). IME one *needs* to zip a large blog’s folder in order to move it around: attempting to copy 30k individual files to a USB drive or suchlike tends to result in stuff like “Estimated time remaining: 4 months”. Zipping a large blog only takes an hour or three, though, and then you can copy it to places in just a few more minutes.

2. WordPress. This is mostly for if you really want your backup to be public-facing: the formatting *is* a bit of a mess (especially on long reblog chains and tag rambles), and I personally have been chipping away at fixing my WordPress’s formatting for an entire year and am still in 2017 (admittedly, I’ve been doing some mental crop rotation lately).

I’m not sure if they offer an OP-only option.

If you’re feeling particularly paranoid and are willing to fiddle around with a few software guts, you can self-host this, or keep a kitted-out WordPress server stashed away on your computer in case you want to import into a self-hosted platform later [here is a post I wrote on how I did this].

3. I know it must be possible to use wget because I’ve seen people do it [link], but I’m not sure exactly which options you need to add to the terminal command to make it work properly. I just now made a few promising-looking variants of my Dreamwidth-archiving command [link], and none of them could get past the front page of any of the blogs I tested them on.

TumblThree is Windows-only and Soup is OPs-only, so I haven’t used them, but I hear some people like them.


Tags:

#reply via reblog #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers #Tumblr: a User’s Guide #the more you know #WordPress