lizawithazed:

elpatrixf:

elpatrixf:

You know how there’s team instinct, mystic and valor right?

We should make a team for us people who can’t play pokemon go because our phones don’t support it

I present you team can’t play Pokemon GO because my phone or tablet does not support it and this is the official team logo

Team Shitty Phones

there, now we can all feel like we belong somewhere

How about team “doesn’t live in a country where it’s out yet”

Team logo is a maple leaf surrounded by EU stars


Tags:

#Pokemon Go #I’m both

Well, I’m curious what all these Pokemon Go players are on about, and it’s past time I acquired some cultural literacy in this area. I hear they don’t have Canada maps out yet, but I can still look into it and prepare as best I can.

*searches for Pokemon Go app on Google Play*

*doesn’t find it*

(in my experience, when an app you know exists doesn’t show up in Google Play search results, it’s because your phone can’t run the app. might just be picking up on the Canadian thing, though)

*looks up direct link to Pokemon Go app page*

“This app is incompatible with your device.”

(further down the page:)

“Compatible with Android devices that have 2GB RAM or more and have Android Version 4.4 – 6.0 installed.”

*looks at phone*

“Firmware version: 4.2.2″

“RAM: 470.8 MB”

I see.


Tags:

#to be fair this phone was a low-end model when it was released three years ago #I’m surprised I haven’t run into more problems with that #(I hear the life expectancy of a smartphone is two years) #(not because it breaks down but because it becomes too outdated to keep up with your changing needs) #(I’ve had this phone for a year and eight months) #oh look an original post #Brin owns *two* 2010’s computers now #(but that doesn’t say much considering how far along into the decade we are) #Pokemon #Pokemon Go


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Fun (and useful) fact for the day: you can email a phone number* and text an email address. The message will be automatically translated into the other format.

Does your friend with an unlimited texting plan want to have long texting conversations, even though you don’t have unlimited texting? Email your parts of the conversation to them, and you won’t have to pay for the outgoing texts!

Are you trying to call your ride to come pick you up, only to find that their phone is broken, you don’t have a data plan to email them with, and there are no public Wi-Fi hotspots around for miles? Text their laptop!

(I use those two examples because they are things that actually happened to my mom and me, respectively, and we had to muddle through them the hard way because we didn’t know about email-to-text/text-to-email. Next time, we’ll know better.)

To text an email address, just type the email address into the “send to” box instead of a phone number.

To email a phone number, send the email to [the person’s phone number]@[the email-to-SMS website of the person’s phone carrier; here’s a list I found covering many carriers in many countries]

Happy typing!

*(if it’s a mobile phone, anyway; don’t know about landlines)


Tags:

#the more you know #oh look an original post #I suppose I’ll tag this #Brin owns *two* 2010’s computers now #even though I still haven’t activated my SIM card #(I stumbled across this information while considering maybe actually buying a phone plan) #(turns out mobile Internet is not as useful as it looks at first glance) #(a lot of the things I would want it for I can get done with texting) #(texting OTOH is *more* useful than it first appears for the same reason) #((in case anyone notices the discrepancy in)) #((”I still haven’t activated my SIM card” and)) #((”if I’d known about text-to-email I could have texted my ride”)) #((it’s because I was borrowing my mom’s phone during that incident))

Happy New Year, everyone!

As is our tradition, my family gathered in the living room to eat hors d’oeuvres and chocolates while we watched the Times Square feed on TV. A couple minutes after midnight, we had the annual realisation that none of us know the words to “Auld Lang Syne” past the first verse and so can’t sing very much of it ourselves, the annual hasty scramble to find a recorded version to play instead, and the annual reminder that we don’t speak Scottish and the reason we can never remember the other lyrics is because we can’t understand them.

Ah, tradition.

(On the other hand, “getting out a smartphone and bringing up an ‘Auld Lang Syne’ video on the Youtube app” is absolutely the right way to ring in a mid-2010′s year. It felt very Correct.)


Tags:

#oh look an original post #New Years #proud citizen of The Future #Brin owns *two* 2010’s computers now

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justice-turtle:

brin-bellway:

ilzolende:

ozymandias271:

aprilwitching:

has anybody read the ted chiang short story “liking what you see

its interesting sci-fi. i read it/am reading it today!

anyway, the reason im making this post is that the story made me realize i basically have the supposedly fictional condition that the story describes as “calliagnosia”? i think!

i mean, im not face-blind, but ive always known i had some perceptual oddities when it came to faces. the story seems to say that a normal person automatically has some kind of emotional or visceral response to seeing a really “beautiful” (or really “ugly”) face, and also that it is easy for a normal person to tell right away if another person is beautiful or ugly, without having to think about it. 

i dont have that, though! i asked @pipistrellus if it knew what that meant, to respond to human faces that way, if that was, like, a Thing. 

it didnt know, and then we commiserated over the shared experience of, like, trying to join in other peoples talk about cute boy band members or cute actresses or w/e, but not really being able to tell which ones were supposed to be cute

pip kind of associated it with asexuality, which makes sense, but im not asexual– i can definitely be physically attracted to people– and i still have this issue

and, yk, i can think someone is interesting or appealing to look at, for sure, but it doesnt really seem to map on to whether they’re…?? like, sometimes people call other people “striking” and i get that! i TOTALLY understand “striking”! when someone is unusual-looking, with a lot of character and presence and visual interest to them. and sometimes im really attracted to that unusualness, that interestingness, right away. but like… “interestingness” for me, when its really attractive, is as likely to involve highly visible scars or crooked teeth as it is to involve big eyes or long, shiny hair or something. and the attraction still isnt really like a “turn on” thing or even a pleasure thing, not initially and not just based on appearance. its more a fascination, like how i feel when i see a really weird-looking, cool giant bug and immediately wanna pick it up or draw it or something. plus, while im not really face-blind, i do have a lot of trouble telling people with similar features apart unless i know them pretty well. (if anything, i think this pulls me away from very conventionally attractive types a little bit, bc they can end up looking super indistinct/bland to me. sometimes i have trouble following the plots of movies if the actors look too similar in that way. its like im watching several copies of the man in the tan jacket– “well– he definitely had hair! and facial features!”)

anyway, i always figured most people look interesting and distinctive somehow when you look at them long enough, so i never really questioned those “everyone is beautiful in their own way!” and “if you have a really great personality, it will eventually shine through your physical appearance and you will look wonderful!” cliches. sure, i thought they were cheesy, and ineffective in actually changing social values/standards of beauty at all, and maybe a little misguided in the sense of why are we so focused on physical “good looks” over other stuff anyway. but i never felt like they were fundamentally untrue? i suppose a lot of people do though ( “well some people just ARE beautiful or ugly!”)

i remember telling someone about one of my many intense teenage crushes once, and i remember she said, after a really long, awkward pause, “well…im glad someone is really into [person]. im glad someone thinks [person] is cute. thats sweet.”

Ooh I definitely have an instinctive reaction of, like, “pretty face!” and “ugly face!”

It seems pretty uncorrelated to conventional attractiveness though? Like on one hand I go “pretty!” at girls with big breasts and lots of makeup and stuff, but on the other hand I also go “pretty!” at people with really kinky hair, or pudgy bellies, or big noses.

Also one of the biggest things for me seems to be, like, affect? Like there are people who are meh until you see them move or talk or, especially, smile, and then suddenly they are THE PRETTIEST and you want to stare at them ALL THE TIME.

And I *can* be sexually attracted to people who don’t make me go “pretty!” at first; like, I’ve definitely dated people where I can tell that they don’t have any of the traits that make me go “pretty!”, but also I am full of The Feels, and so they are SUPER PRETTY to me anyway.

Liking What You See is also interesting from a youth-rights standpoint (and other standpoints I have), and it might be nice to discuss it that way sometime. In a post that started out being on that subject. I’ll write one later, perhaps, unless someone else writes one first.

@ ilzo: I’d be interested in that.

As for this conversation:

I’ve been considering the term “grey-aesthetic” regarding my relationship with beauty, and this seems to support that. Like, I can tell when someone (or something, I don’t feel like it’s different with faces vs objects) is pretty, and all else equal I’ll pick a pretty object over an ugly one, but it doesn’t feel…I usually don’t feel a pull towards pretty things, a desire to stare at it longer than I would stare at an aesthetically-neutral thing, a reward of pretty things doesn’t motivate me. I say I usually don’t feel a pull because every so often I do, every once in a while I’ll see a particular pretty thing that I feel an urge to stare at, and to possess if applicable. It’s always fleeting, though: before long (hours, maybe a day or two tops), it fades, and I’m back to “okay, so it’s pretty, so what?”.

(Actually, now that I think about it, sometimes it’s longer than a couple days with people; once it was a couple months, but that was someone I didn’t see very much. Perhaps the difference isn’t people vs objects, but rather level of access: a certain (fairly small) amount of time spent looking at the thing, however long it takes to get that much time in.)

(Also, on an unrelated note, this is the third Ted Chiang story I’ve been linked to (the others were “Hell Is the Absence of God” (broken link) and “Seventy-Two Letters”), and I liked all of them. Perhaps I should seek out more of Chiang’s work.)

*growls* I wrote a long thinky reblog about this and didn’t think to screenshot it, and tumblr mobile ate it… :P

(short version: I kinda remember having something like this as a teen but I’m not too sure I wasn’t just hella gay. Also long complicated questioning of possibly constructed sexuality with weird ties to childhood abuse factors.)

I was going to say “you really need an automatic text-backup add-on”, but then I looked and apparently add-ons have to be specifically made for mobile browsers, and a lot of the PC add-ons don’t have a mobile port. I couldn’t find any relevant add-ons on Android Firefox, so whatever you’re using might not have one either.

(Are you sure it’s not, like, hiding in your drafts folder or something?)


Tags:

#reply via reblog


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Today on ‘Alison Is A Fucking Idiot’:

sinesalvatorem:

sinesalvatorem:

Underwear: Did I pack it?

Like all headlines ending in question marks, the answer is no.

*head desk* *head desk* *head desk*

But wait: There’s more!

I forgot my thrice-damned chargers. Both phone and laptop. If I can’t borrow one tomorrow, I’ll be offline until Friday evening.

*head desk* *head desk* *head desk*

*wordless sympathetic noises*

I’ve been compiling a pre-made general-purpose packing list on my laptop, listing things I’d want to pack for any trip. (I may add sub-sections for different types/seasons of trip, haven’t decided yet.) Maybe you could do something similar to prepare for next time.

(I also keep my phone charger in the same pouch where I keep my phone, thus ensuring it is very difficult to bring my phone and not bring my charger, but that advice might be harder to generalise.)


Tags:

#Brin owns *two* 2010’s computers now #reply via reblog #(the following category tag was added retroactively:) #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers


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Since I’m talking about the trip, here is a picture of a rainbow seen from above. There are many similar pictures floating around the Internet, but now I have one of my very own.


Tags:

#oh look an original post #this picture brought to you by my phone camera #(the ‘Welcome to Canada’ one was as well) #without my phone I would not have had a camera handy to capture this moment #yet more ways my phone is useful #rainbows #Brin owns *two* 2010’s computers now #(I think I’ll go tag the reply post that too) #(what with the praising its GPS in the tags)

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image sinesalvatorem replied to your photo: Home! *flop* hooooome

Welcome back! I’m afraid I didn’t notice when you left…

I didn’t say much about it because…well, first of all it’s very hard to talk about going to Disney World without sounding awkwardly frivolous. It sounded awkwardly frivolous to me when Mom first said we were going. On the other hand, that “first said we were going” was two years ago. There’s been a fair few obstacles in the family’s path over those two years, and I saw the way that the thought of a Disney trip at the end of the tunnel kept Mom going. It was probably worth it for that alone.

(Especially when she managed to convince them to give us a whole bunch of Disney restaurant credits: one “snack” (roughly what you’d think it means, though it had to have a symbol next to it on the menu indicating you could use a credit on it) and two fast-food “meals” (entree, beverage, dessert, though you could swap out any or all of those three for any available snack) per person per day. She got all this for the low, low price of researching Disney enough to hear about the free-food promotion (that bit wasn’t really a price, as she enjoyed it), staying up most of one night to get in as soon as the deal opened, spending an hour and a half on hold while trying not to fall asleep, and promising to stay in a Disney-owned hotel and schedule our trip for mid-September, which is apparently a relatively bad time for them profit-wise because most kids have just gone back to school. Joke’s on them: we were going to go then regardless, and I think we were going to be in a Disney hotel too.

The portions in Disney, for the record, are very big, and our appetites (especially mine) are not so big, so it was rather more credits than we could actually use on the trip itself. We ended up bringing back about a hundred chocolate bars to eat at home later, as they were the least perishable tasty thing available for a snack credit.)

Also, I was taught as a young child that the fact that one is leaving one’s house unoccupied is a vulnerability that should be kept secret as much as practical until after it is over. Intellectually, I’m not convinced this is reasonable advice, but on more visceral levels I’ve inherited much of the paranoia of my native culture, and perhaps added some of my own.


Tags:

#we drove to Ohio and flew domestic to minimise security issues #(and indeed security issues were minimised by American standards) #this was my first road trip since getting a smartphone and oh my god it is *so much easier* when you have a decent GPS handy #Mom brought the usual printed Google directions but they were frequently inadequate #and the phone was there to the rescue #no more getting lost for two hours trying and failing to follow a detour! #if you miss a turn the phone’s directions will compensate rather than becoming near-useless! #GPS navigation is so great you guys #replies #Brin owns *two* 2010’s computers now #food


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ursulavernon:

t’s an Olloclip for my phone. All of these are at 7x magnification. It goes up to 21x, but at that point I feel like I’d be taking photos of individual grains of pollen.

I’ve had macro lenses before, but not since I changed phones awhile ago, and I tend to go a little mad every time I get a new one. All unknown bugs are submitted to bugguide.net for ID, so hopefully I’ll know soon!

(Someday I’ll shell out for the lens on the good camera and THEN we’ll see some hot bug action!)

Nothing wrong with taking photos of individual grains of pollen.


Tags:

#bugs #I took a picture of a beetle with my phone recently #but I don’t have a magnifier so it’s not as awesome a picture #what was awesome was that it went like this: #’Hey that’s a neat beetle on Dad’s leg.’ #Dad (not seriously): ‘We should take a picture of it.’ #Me: ‘…hey wait a minute *I have a camera on my phone*’ #’*I’m totally going to take a picture of it*’ #Me: *boots up phone* *takes picture* #(it was already off his leg and in the grass by that point) #(but oh well)

ilzolende:

thathopeyetlives:

And now my parents have tried to pester me into developing a sense of direction.

You’re a transhumanist, get a NorthPaw?

That’s a thing? That’s awesome.

I have a terrible sense of direction, and I did find myself having a lot more peace of mind once I started carrying around a smartphone with MapFactor installed. I went for a wander through a residential development yesterday, which I would never have done if I hadn’t had that GPS with me. (I did happen to find my way out unassisted, but it was a close thing. I would have been scared without the comforting knowledge that I had technology to fall back on if need be.)

Sooner or later I’m eventually going to have to start driving places on my own, and immediately after that I’m going to need one of those smartphone dashboard mounts.

(I reblogged this from Ilzo because I was mostly replying to them and thought they should see it, but I see from thathopeyetlives’s reply {{here}} that their parents would not have taken “okay, just let me ask my phone for directions” as an answer. Sorry to hear that.)


Tags:

#transhumanism #sense of direction #Brin owns *two* 2010’s computers now #reply via reblog