mitatemono
mitatemono
found distractions
780 posts
amuse us, o muse. (a repost feed of my microblog at http://namakajiri.net/stream) at namakajiri.net
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Text
Jōyō kanji variants: The curious case of 叱 and [censored]
I’m working on a reliable, machine-readable edition of the Jōyō kanji data, and this came up. Can you spot the difference between 𠮟 and 叱? Me neither. Let’s look at the reference image: …Welp. The left one is a left-to-right stroke stopping at the end, in the model of 七 “seven”; the right one is…
Jōyō kanji variants: The curious case of 叱 and [censored] was originally published on The Nanbanjin Nikki
2 notes · View notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Quote
Just try! It doesn’t matter if it’s not perfect.
But when it’s your own language, it does matter. It matters when it’s your own people who are laughing behind their hands at you. It matters when you’re seventeen, painstakingly reading a road sign, and passing strangers sympathise with your parents. And it matters in adult language classes, when you can’t relax and laugh at your own mistakes like the other learners, because of the constant, drumbeat internal litany: you should know this. You should be better than this.
And, as ever, it matters because the personal is political. It matters because Hindi, like Gaelic, is a colonised space.
“A’ghailleann”: On Language-Learning and the Decolonisation of the Mind (via languagehat)
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Link
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Story here
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Quote
We scanned data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2014 American Community Survey—which covers 3.5 million households—to find out how people are pairing up. Some of the matches seemed practical (the most common marriage is between grade-school teachers), and others had us questioning Cupid’s aim (why do female dancers have a thing for male welders?). High-earning women (doctors, lawyers) tend to pair up with their economic equals, while middle- and lower-tier women often marry up. In other words, female CEOs tend to marry other CEOs; male CEOs are OK marrying their secretaries.
This Chart Shows Who Marries CEOs, Doctors, Chefs and Janitors (via Andrew Gelman)
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Quote
0
a href=”https://www.etsy.com/listing/186462691/game-of-thrones-maesters-chain-knit”>
Tumblr media
♥♥♥
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Quote
Asano: Right to the very end, I wasn’t sure how to go about doing the last chapter. Among the possibilities I’d considered, I’d thought up an ending in which Punpun dies. –How? Asano: Satchan’s child falls off a train station platform, Punpun goes down to save him, dies instead. It’s a very clean way to end. But I wasn’t sure if I wanted to end on such a clean note. –What do you mean, “clean”? Asano: It’s too clear-cut an ending for the story. It wraps it all up a little too well. Living is harder than dying, see, so I thought this was the most painful, worst possible ending for Punpun, and that’s why in the end I went with this final chapter. –The worst ending is the truest ending for this manga, you’re saying.
full interview
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
(boulet)
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
A little-appreciated feature of the TV adaptation is the calligraphy porn. Ramsay’s letter lost a lot of impact when compared to the book version (spoilers in link), but the hand is particularly interesting (spoilers in text):
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Video
youtube
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Clickie for full comic. CW: discussion of parental abuse.
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Quote
I was around Richard Feynman – the Nobel prize winning physicist – one time when he was on acid. Before he started to come on I asked him, "What do you really think about the mind-body problem? Now come on, don't just shove it under the rug. You probably experience yourself existing on the inside; how do you think that reconciles with the matter of the brain? Do you think there's any problem there?" He said, "I've thought about that a lot, and I really just don't understand it." That was just an example of the immense honesty and integrity that he had. Rebecca: It was proof that he'd really thought about it.(laughter) Jaron: Exactly. I asked him again when he was on acid and he said, with this most wonderful smile and this effervescent glee, "I don't understand it." That sort of glee at the fundamental mysteriousness of the universe is just the motivational core of science and you always run into that with a great scientist. Just to be clear, though, Feynman didn't state any mystical ideas, he just was rigorous about what he did and didn't know, which I think is one of the hardest mental disciplines.
How far the militant atheists have fallen…
1 note · View note
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Quote
The last stop of this meditation is Zagorsk, Russia, where, troubled by the anti-Semitism he encountered there, my friend Andrew Solomon asked a local peasant why, in his estimation, there was such antipathy everywhere against Jews. Without a moment’s hesitation, the peasant answered, in Russian: “It is because the Jews have a secret vegetable they eat so they don’t become alcoholics like the rest of us. And they refuse to share that vegetable with anyone else.”
(source)
0 notes
mitatemono · 9 years ago
Quote
This office, of a media app with millions in VC funding but no revenue model, is particularly sexy. This is something that an office shouldn’t be, and it jerks my heart rate way, way up. There are views of the city in every direction, fat leather loveseats, electric guitars plugged into amps, teak credenzas with white hardware. It looks like the loft apartment of the famous musician boyfriend I thought I’d have at 22 but somehow never met. I want to take off my dress and my shoes and lie on the voluminous sheepskin rug and eat fistfuls of MDMA, curl my naked body into the Eero Aarnio Ball Chair, never leave.
[…] Around here, we nonengineers are pressed to prove our value. The hierarchy is pervasive, ingrained in the industry’s dismissal of marketing and its insistence that a good product sells itself; evident in the few “office hours” established for engineers (our scheduled opportunity to approach with questions and bugs); reflected in our salaries and equity allotment, even though it’s harder to find a good copywriter than a liberal-arts graduate with a degree in history and twelve weeks’ training from an uncredentialed coding dojo. This is a cozy home for believers in bootstrapping and meritocracy, proponents of shallow libertarianism. I am susceptible to it, too.
[…] Half of the conversations I overhear these days are about money, but nobody likes to get specific. It behooves everyone to stay theoretical.
[…] I attend a networking event at an office whose walls are hung with inspirational posters that quote tech luminaries I’ve never heard of. The posters say things like “Life is short: build stuff that matters” and “Innovate or die.” I am dead.
Anna Wiener, Uncanny Valley.
0 notes