I’m not even sure how to comment on this

I’m not even sure how to comment on this

Decided to go see Dune in IMAX tonight. Bought the tickets. It seems they overdid it with social distancing – there’s no one else in the hall except us

Is it just me, or does Zuckerberg seem inspired by Ready Player One?
This is a paper wasp, probably a parametricus paper wasp. Gave it some paper, after all, itβs not called a paper wasp for nothing. It doesn’t eat. Left it to wander further around the walking area. Found Yuki

It seems that there are words for all the important qualities of people, but… We all know that there are people who don’t understand humor. Often at all. They are called “people without a sense of humor”. And there are people who think they can joke, but actually can’t (objectively), yet they often try. They are kind of also “people without a sense of humor”, but there is a chasm between the first and the second group. Not understanding humor is not a problem. But a person who tries to joke unfunnily often (for me, for example), causes at least a feeling of awkwardness for that person, and at most, wariness, mistrust, and amplification of other negative qualities, if they are present in that person.
Of course, to understand irony and sarcasm, wordplay or ambiguity, one needs to have at least a common cultural layer. But six years in the USA showed that Americans are amused by exactly the same kind of humor as Russian speakers. In the sense that it’s crafted from the same mold. Clearly, quotes from Soviet cartoons won’t work at all. Nor could you explain to an American why intuition is the ability of the head to sniff with the behind. But constructing funny/witty parallels between what is happening and something else, naturally causes a smile or laughter in any culture. Also, you cannot build humor on something that might theoretically offend a person, especially humor not understood, or not realized to be humor.
Does it not provoke secondhand embarrassment for you when a person tries to joke but clearly can’t?
Ha-ha, on Reddit I was found by GenderNeutralBot, who came to make a remark, and then AntiObnoxiousBot found him to make a remark to him π

Khatia and Gvantsa Buniashvili – Astor Piazzolla Libertango
They are currently replacing the screen on my Macbook Pro 16″ (Dec 2020). In the invoice, I see a Lid Angle Sensor listed for replacement. It really surprised me. It turns out that this sensor, which precisely measures the angle of the laptop’s lid, is a recent addition, only found in 16″ Macs. Previously, there was just a standard magnetic field sensor (Hall sensor) for the lid, but now, for some reason, they’ve introduced a more advanced sensor. It leaves one only to guess why. For instance, it could be used in image processing algorithms of the built-in camera. Or maybe it’s for future-proofing, to better integrate FaceID (which, for some reason I donβt understand, is still not included in laptops). Or maybe they just collect usage logs of the lid to better understand the causes of wear issues with various cables and the lid overall.


I am a cat

My phone says I’ve been going up and down a 120-story building for three days straight. I hope my knees will forgive me. Since there was no internet, and I needed something to think about, a question started to bother me.
When climbing stairs, people often push on their thighs with their hands, pressing against the thigh of the leading leg as they step onto the next stair. Why does this work? From a physics perspective, there seems to be no point in doing it. Yet, it somehow makes the climb feel easier. I can’t understand why. The only hypothesis is the shift of the center of gravity slightly forward, but then pressing on the thighs really shouldn’t be necessary, yet everyone does it.
Any ideas?
