One of the best writing advice I have gotten in all the months I have been writing is "if you can't go anywhere from a sentence, the problem isn't in you, it's in the last sentence." and I'm mad because it works so well and barely anyone talks about it. If you're stuck at a line, go back. Backspace those last two lines and write it from another angle or take it to some other route. You're stuck because you thought up to that exact sentence and nothing after that. Well, delete that sentence, make your brain think because the dead end is gone. It has worked wonders for me for so long it's unreal
Tidying the desktop* and ran across this just sitting there. Might as well post it.
*I had no choice. There was no more space for icons. :)
fireflies lighting up a rural Pennsylvania field at dusk
my dream of learning a little of everything gets a lot easier when they're all related :D
So the other night during D&D, I had the sudden thoughts that:
1) Binary files are 1s and 0s
2) Knitting has knit stitches and purl stitches
You could represent binary data in knitting, as a pattern of knits and purls…
You can knit Doom.
However, after crunching some more numbers:
The compressed Doom installer binary is 2.93 MB. Assuming you are using sock weight yarn, with 7 stitches per inch, results in knitted doom being…
3322 square feet
Factoring it out…302 people, each knitting a relatively reasonable 11 square feet, could knit Doom.
jason “idealism sits in prison” todd
dick “chivalry fell on his sword” grayson
tim “innocence died screaming” drake
damian “i slithered here from eden just to hide outside your door” wayne
do you see the vision
A cosmic tribute to my current favourite comment in YouTube history
Sometimes you don’t make art that changes the world.
Sometimes you make art that just makes someone’s shitty day a little bit easier to bear.
And that?
That’s damn good too.
Can't believe Diane Duane invented the nerd we all want to be
Can't believe Diane Duane invented love with this passage that's so crazy
Y’know an awful lot of Terry Pratchett’s books are concerned with how powerful women are when they get angry and how important anger is as a driving force to defend what is right and to tackle injustice.
A lot of his most interesting and most deeply moral characters are angry ones. Granny Weatherwax, Sam Vimes, Tiffany Aching. All are to a large extent driven to do good by anger.
And that honestly means a lot to me.