Talk nerdy to me :D

  • Spykee@lemmings.world
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    2 hours ago

    Watches bro!
    Digital watches are fine & the battery operated ones are cool too, God speed to them, but I’m talking about the Analogue ones.
    Specifically Automatic ones.
    Fucking piece of assembled metal parts and it will go all tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick on its own from the moment you put it on your wrist.
    It’ll continue to show you the proper time. Some will also tell you what day of the week it is or what’s the date. Heck, I’ve got one that tells me the day, date, month AND the moon phase!
    On top of this, these nuggets are built such, that they will last longer than your poor ass on this planet, still blingy and going tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick.
    You know those make Seikos and Citizen? Those mfs put bloody gps AND solar IN.A.FUCKING.WRIST.WATCH!
    Why you ask?
    So that when your dumb ass gives up on adjusting to the local time after you get off the plane in a different time zone, it will do it for you. That shit is too posh for your fumbly fingers to try to set the correct time, so it says, “Hold on, let me look at the sky real quick and I will set the day,date & time myself, you are too dazed and hungover. Please save your filthy fingers for your disgusting Doritos.”
    You know the best part? They look more gorgeous than Kate Winslet’s porcelain titties embellished with a diamond neck piece.
    It’ll cost less than your monthly groceries. Don’t miss out bro, get one.\

    • Spykee@lemmings.world
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      2 hours ago

      Watch tax.
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      The one I had before. I gave this one to my Pops coz his wasn’t working well.
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      Picture showing Mido Ocean Star Ceramic
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      The one that I’m currently wearing.
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      Pic showing Citizen Eco Drive Three Calendar Moon Phase watch kept on a balcony railing with green fields in the background.
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  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Ice, ice, baby! I love fancy ice. Have gear to make crystal clear big ice for whiskey, and also a countertop ice maker for what the kids call “the good ice”.

    It’s just such a cheap upgrade to any drink.

  • PrincessLeiasCat@sh.itjust.works
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    4 hours ago

    Star Wars and history - in particular how Lucas had aspects of Nazi Germany and the Vietnam War because he was an anthropology student and knew that empires most often fell from within.

    So yeah I’m still on a big Andor high right now, waiting for some novels and other books to drop after that.

    Other books I can recommend:

    Star Wars and History

    The History and Politics of Star Wars - Death Stars and Democracy (the author is a World War I historian)

    Star Wars: Battles that Changed the Galaxy

    Star Wars Propaganda: A History of Persuasive Art in the Galaxy

  • Monster@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Characters. I love designing characters and doing a deep dive into who they are and why they’re designed the way they are. For example, I did one recently about a girl who is a mechanist in my Victorian modern world who works on robots and airship but likes to go to a dance club at night. She keeps her goggles from work since they’re seen as fashion in this world and wears a distinctive hair clip that was given as a gift to her from someone dear to her before the war. And, then there’s another guy I did that is basic rich kid egotistical. Looks like and ultra Chad and has the dance moves to show for it. Basically, he’s like the ultra Chad meme in this world.

  • Perspectivist@feddit.uk
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    5 hours ago

    I’ve come to the conclusion that if you’re buying tools, you should go for the sets. Take a socket set, for example. Realistically, you’re probably using the ratchet, an extension, and three to four sockets the most. At some point the cheap ratchet breaks and you replace it with a high-quality one. You may also lose or break a few of the most commonly used sockets and replace them with high-quality ones. In ten years you’ll have a set with a high-quality wrench and a few high-quality sockets that you commonly use, plus the rest of the other sizes you’ll only touch once every few years.

    Had you gone for the high-quality set right away, you would have paid even more - and now you’d have a 4mm made-in-Japan socket you spent 10 euros on that you’ll never use.

  • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    6 hours ago

    Self-hosting, device modding and homebrew, and getting the most out of PC hardware/DIY gaming setups.

    IT jobs are a ton of fun for me when I’m helping someone new to the hobby because they love to get invested in all of the little tips and tricks to bring the most out of their machine (Even if they have to use Windows ;-;).

    Every single console I’ve ever owned has been cracked open with homebrew installed, and it’s a large reason I got into retro gaming and 3D printing spare parts for things.

    Also, hosting PC game servers for yourself and friends instead of paying a provider is so liberating, you start looking at it as “I paid for the whole machine, how far can I push the experience?” and start pushing mods and configs in games that would bring most VPS systems to their knees.

  • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Mechanics in nature.

    There’s a protein that’s basically a tiny little mobile suite that literally walks along microtubules.

    Some bacteria propel themselves with a literal electric motor.

    Your ears are more something that belongs under the dashboard of a helicopter than something growing organically… they can literally detect an air-pressure change caused by a pin dropping on the other side of the room, by allowing that pressure to beat on a drum connected to a chain of bones that transmit pressure into a little snail that squirts little jets of fluid over a tiny little field of grass stuck to the inside of the snail shell, and depending on how much grass wiggles, it sends a jolt over to your brain as an interpretation of pitch. AND IT DOESN’T STOP THERE! Connected to that snail are three little hula-hoops made of bone, each oriented to a different plane, and also filled with tiny grass and fluid; and when you move your head along that specific plane, the tiny grass wiggles and that’s how your brain knows which way you’re moving / gives you a perception of balance.

    There’s a type of grasshopper with gears in its legs.

    I love this shit.

  • ProfessorScience@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Aperiodic tilings! Just a couple of years ago someone discovered a single tile (down from the set of ~20000 that was first used to prove that aperiodic tiling was even possible) that can completely cover an infinite plane without ever falling into a repeating pattern.

    • Eheran@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      The use of “aperiodic” is somewhat loose here compared to what I would expect. Like… I can instantly see several places with the same pattern just on that small sample…

      • ProfessorScience@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Aperiodic, in this sense, doesn’t mean that there aren’t any bits that repeat. In fact, if you pick any patch of tiles of any arbitrary size, that patch will be repeated infinitely many times. What it means to be periodic is that if you slide the whole tiling over so that one of the patches aligns with the repeated bit, there will still be something outside the patch that doesn’t align. Compare that with, say, a repeating grid of squares, where if you slide one square onto a different square then everything lines up, all the way to infinity; it’s impossible to tell that it’s been slid over.

  • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    Old mechanical things.

    The Japanese have a myth called tsukomogami. It’s the idea that things get a soul after 100 years.

    And while I don’t believe that’s technically true, per se. It’s fundamentally based on something that I adore, and that’s the fact that mechanical things all age individually and that it’s something that we’ve lost with modern technology.

    My go to examples are always typewriters and vintage camera lenses.

    Each typewriter will age differently. Different keys will become sticky, it’ll become misaligned in different places. They develop individual personalities as they get older. So much so that forensics can actually pinpoint when a specific typewriter typed a specific note.

    In terms of camera lenses it’s much the same thing. Different lenses will wear differently depending on what aperture/focal length, etc… that the photographer uses most often. Mold and discolouration between the glass elements will eventually form a unique look to a specific lense.

    It’s magical (to me) and something that I am sad that we are losing with modern consumer technology based on on “throw it away and get a new one”.

    Sorry. Longer than I intended. But you asked for it.

  • Mister Neon@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Aztecs.

    Mixtec-Pueblo culture before European contact was vibrant, dynamic, and layered. It was reflected by its surrounding cultures of K’iche’ (Mayan), Chichimeca, Iréchikwa (Purepecha), and Otomi. Their books look like comics painted on accordions. I’ve been to Teotihuacan so I’ve seen the massive pyramids the peoples of the valley built millennia ago. I’ve read about how cities were planned and zoned then built with stone and you can still witness the logic behind those decisions today. The comida is good too.

    I wish I was smart so I could learn Spanish easier.

  • mesa@piefed.social
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    7 hours ago

    Retro handhelds.

    My favorite is between the monster (steam deck) and the custom build (miyoo mini plus). A few friends and I geek out over them. And custom Roms, indie devs, ect…

    There’s a ton of Indies onastodon as well.

  • kescusay@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Oh, goddamn it, this is gonna take a while.

    • Code. Like, I actually get real pleasure from seeing elegant and well-structured code. I have no idea why, but I’ll almost start salivating at particularly beautiful code.
    • Anime. Yeah, I’m a walking stereotype, a software developer who likes anime. But have you seen Frieren? It’s so goddamn good.
    • Philosophy. No, not bullshit continental philosophy. I’m talking real philosophy. Analytic philosophy. Distilled and legitimately useful logic. Which of course leads me to…
    • Science. My YouTube feed is full of fascinating deep-dives into esoteric mathematical and scientific topics. Fuck yeah.
    • Tabletop RPGs. Surprisingly, not a huge D&D fan, though it can certainly be fun. These days, I’m much more into story-focused systems, like Fate or Blades in the Dark. Most people I mention that to have never heard of either.
    • Science fiction and fantasy. I mean, are you surprised at this point?
    • Writing science fiction and fantasy. I mean, are you surprised at this point?
    • Politics. Less so nowadays, since our political system is falling apart and we’re being overrun by fascism, but I still do enjoy a meaty policy discussion.

    That’s a good list for starters.

    • Xaphanos@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Who is the most criminally under appreciated philosopher/author and why is it Ursula LeGuinn?

    • Jimbabwe@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      You might be interested in a video game called The Last Sovereign. I discovered it during the recent fiasco around payment processors trying to block lewd stuff, but the nsfw visuals can be turned off if you’re not into that. It’s a very serviceable RPG with turn based combat that is well balanced and engaging. But I’m recommending it because you said philosophy and it’s basically a series of Platonic dialogues between characters discussing life, the nature of man, morality, ethics, sexuality, power, and much more. I’m pleasantly surprised at how often I find myself deeply invested in the conversations. I think the writer(s) must’ve needed an outlet for their philosophical musings and chose this quirky “lewd” RPG as the medium.

      • kescusay@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        I’ll check it out. I’m very much interested in video games that delve into deep topics that way. Have you ever encountered The Talos Principle series? Fantastic games that do surprisingly accessible treatises on philosophical topics while forcing you to think through pretty mind-blowing puzzles. Highly recommended.

    • Xaphanos@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      What is a good ruleset for a table that absolutely refuses to read more than an index card of rules but will follow the lead of the referee? Freeform, story-forward, ages 14 to 65? Swords and magic.

      Unrelated, what do you think about the various versions of Traveller?

      • kescusay@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Oh, you need Fate Accelerated. Six stats, five descriptive phrases that define your character (one of which is your character’s “trouble,” giving the GM automatic story hooks) and a smattering of stunts your character can perform, and off you go!

        Regarding Traveller, I’ve never had the stomach for it. Me and a group once sat down to create characters, and discovered it was so rules-heavy that by the end of two sessions dedicated to character creation, we still didn’t know for sure that we’d done any of the characters correctly.

      • kescusay@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        I’ve read Lord of the Rings a few times. And The Hobbit. And his lesser-known works (e.g., Leaf by Niggle, which is just great). And The Silmarillion. And The Adventures of Tom Bombadil (which, honestly, isn’t his best). And I know what an Istari is (and why Gandalf, being a lesser Ainur, is actually so much more than a mere “wizard”). And I know that while they changed the line from “you cannot pass” to “you shall not pass” for dramatic purposes in the movie, the original line subtly says a whole hell of a lot more about who and what Gandalf is and why the Balrog should have actually been shitting itself.

        So you might say I’m passingly familiar with it.

      • ValarieLenin@midwest.social
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        4 hours ago

        I just love studying how culture cross pollination leads to art movement’s throughout history ie. how Japanese prints are largely responsible for the Impressionist and Post impressionist movements in Europe or how the Mughal Emperors of India had Paintings of a Greek God on the ceiling, in the Palace of Muslim rulers.