You can follow us in other languages. Visit our website for more information wordsmith.social/protestation/…
You can follow us in other languages. Visit our website for more information wordsmith.social/protestation/…
Anecdotal evidence technology is interfering with children's ability to learn to read. Anecdotes from elementary school through college. Allegedly the trend began before AI, so it's not a consequence of AI, and it's not because of covid because the trend began before covid as well. Smartphones and tablets began affecting childhood before AI showed up. But the trend is allegedly being accelerated by AI because AI can read for you and you can talk to it, so it is removing the need to learn to read.
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Mo Chara, whose real name is Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, is to contest the charge.TheJournal.ie
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Extraits:
La #désinformation n’est plus une simple dérive ou une erreur d'appréciation, elle est devenue un outil de gouvernance. Quand l'État perd sa légitimité et s’enfonce dans la #corruption, il n’a plus d’autre recours que la #manipulation systématique. Les institutions, ces prétendues garantes de la vérité, ne sont plus que des machines à mentir. Loin d’être des entités neutres, elles sont désormais les artisans d’une #falsification à grande échelle, distillant des #mensonges savamment calibrés pour maintenir un contrôle total sur la population. Le mensonge est leur #politique, la vérité leur ennemie. Et face à la montée de la contestation, à l’éveil d'une population qui ne croit plus aux discours officiels, ces institutions n’hésitent plus à tenter de censurer ce qui échappe à leur emprise. Les réseaux sociaux, les sites alternatifs, les journalistes indépendants qui osent briser le silence et révéler la réalité, sont attaqués sans relâche. On les accuse de "fausses informations", de "désinformation", alors qu’ils exposent la vérité nue, celle que les chaînes d'information et les journaux subventionnés tentent d’enterrer.
....
Mais c’est peut-être l’ #Iran qui cristallise le mieux cette inversion. #Israël frappe un consulat à Damas, viole la souveraineté d’un État tiers, tue des diplomates et c’est l’Iran qu’on accuse d’escalade. Quand Téhéran répond, avec une précision chirurgicale, en ciblant des bases militaires, les #médias s’enflamment et crient à la "Menace contre la paix mondiale", à la "Provocation" ou à "l'Attaque massive". Sans aucun rappel du contexte, ni aucune symétrie de discours. Israël frappe des #civils et des #enfants et c’est simplement normal. L’Iran répond, alors ça, en revanche, c’est inacceptable ! C’est ici que le #mensonge atteint sa forme la plus achevée. Ce n’est plus un récit, c’est une grammaire. Une grammaire de la #domination. Un langage où les agresseurs sont des victimes, où les défenseurs sont des menaces, où le réel n’existe que s’il peut être capitalisé politiquement.
jevousauraisprevenu.blogspot.c…
#France #UE #US #narratif #narration #désinformation #médiavers #Gaza #Palestine
Les gouvernants d’aujourd’hui, ces prétendus défenseurs de nos intérêts, ces "élus" censés incarner nos valeurs et veiller à l...Phil BROQ. (Blogger)
like this
#justice #france #politique #corruption
Tiens tiens... J'en peux plus de cette clique intouchable.
Pas de #prison ferme : l’addition finale est allégée pour #François Fillon .
L’ex-premier ministre a été condamné mardi à quatre ans de prison avec sursis, cinq ans d’inéligibilité, une amende et des dommages et intérêts pour l’emploi fictif de son épouse à l’Assemblée.
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Merz admitted that the Israeli regime’s attack on Iran is doing the “dirty work” for Western powers.IRNA English
Very moving to hear Amjad Al-Rifaii from Nablus talk about the current situation in the Wesr Bank last night. 3 things stood out: 1. Navigating gates and checkpoints for hours a day 1,300 gates now in WB). 2. That he used to believe in the two state solution; not anymore. 3 And: the problem is Zionism, not religion. “We all believe in the same god, we are all brothers.”
Thanks to Eastbourne’s Emmanuel Church for hosting (always hard to find a venue for PSC events).
Brandenburger Pension beklagt Ausbleiben von Gästen nach AfD-Wahlerfolgen
und weiter
Ja, ein großer Teil der Prignitzer Bevölkerung hat die AfD gewählt, aber die Mehrheit unserer Mitbürger wünscht sich ein demokratisches und tolerantes Miteinander, damit wir alle von dem guten wirtschaftlichen Weg, den unsere Stadt in den letzten Jahren eingeschlagen hat, profitieren. Dazu trägt der Tourismus in unserer Region einen großen Teil bei.
Das stimmt.
Aber mein Stream ist auch voll von Meldungen über Trupps von Vermummten, die mit Messern und Latten und Baseballschlägern Leute aufs Korn nehmen, die gleichgeschlechtlich Händchen halten, bunte Haare haben oder sonstwie nicht in spießbürgerliche Schubladen passen.
Und die gerne Urlaub machen möchten ohne sich krankenhausreif schlagen zu lassen.
Und da helfen keine Apelle, das ist wie Terror wirkt.
statistikportal.de/de/vgrdl/er…
BIP Brandenburgs betrug 2024 rund 97,5 Mrd Euro. Der touristische Konsum lag 2022 bei etwa 7 Mrd. Euro.
Das sind ca. 7-ish Prozent in Brandenburg. So auch MVP, Berlin.
Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt und Thüringen liegen eher bei 4-5% Tourismus.
Der Tourismus ist also in allen diesen Ländern kritisch wichtig. Eine Resession von 7% wäre fatal und durch nix zu kompensieren.
Aber Rassismus und Terror gefährden auch Staffing und Hiring – das HR für Amazon Standort Dresden muß ein exquisit beschissener Job sein.
Robots, protéines d’insecte, Hyperloop… Ces entreprises du futur appartiennent déjà au passé – Charlie Hebdo charliehebdo.fr/2025/06/econom…
Tags: #dandelíon #capitalisme
via dandelion* client (Source)
a unofficial diaspora* client for Android. Contribute to gsantner/dandelion development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
Trump is demanding Iran’s “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER” in his latest rant on social media, one day after he posted that “Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!”Rachel Blevins
Though the cycle of protest and counter-protest will continue at both the micro and macro levels, the hope has to be that our People Power…Strategic Culture Foundation
As Latin America's demand for construction materials grows, many contractors and quarry operators are investing in heavy-duty crushing equipment. But a key question for buyers remains: do stone crushing plants hold their value over time? Whether you're considering a stationary stone crusher plant for a large-scale quarry or a mobile stone crusher for on-site flexibility, understanding the long-term value of these machines is crucial—especially in regions where terrain, transport, and resale options vary widely.
Latin American buyers often face a unique mix of economic and logistical challenges—high import taxes, currency fluctuations, and limited access to spare parts can all influence equipment choices. In this environment, investing in a crushing plant(planta trituradora de piedra) with high residual value offers major benefits:
As public infrastructure projects and private construction continue to expand across countries like Brazil, Peru, and Colombia, the demand for second-hand crushing equipment is also growing—making now a good time to assess what makes an aggregate crusher plant a long-term asset.
Crushing plants from well-known manufacturers generally retain their value better. These brands are trusted for durability, service support, and spare part availability. If you're operating in remote or rugged locations, having a trusted machine that rarely breaks down significantly increases its market appeal years later.
A mobile stone crusher(trituradora movil de piedra) tends to have higher resale value due to its flexibility. These machines are designed for fast setup and relocation—perfect for Latin America's varied terrain, where projects often span mountainous regions, rainforest zones, or urban construction sites.
Mobile units are also easier to resell across regions, as they can be transported without needing disassembly, making them attractive to a wider range of buyers.
Just like used cars, the condition of a crushing plant is heavily influenced by how well it’s been maintained. Buyers in Latin America are especially cautious due to limited access to high-quality replacement parts in some areas. A plant with full service records, recent part replacements, and low operating hours will always command a higher resale price.
Equipment that matches local demand trends—such as medium-capacity units suitable for housing developments—holds value better. Oversized plants might be harder to resell in areas where small to mid-scale operations dominate. Understanding your region’s demand for aggregates, including crushed stone size and volume, is essential.
If your goal is long-term value, choose a plant with versatility. Models that allow quick adjustments to produce different aggregate sizes or integrate easily with screening equipment will be more appealing on the used market.
In Latin American markets where trust plays a major role in equipment transactions, a well-maintained stone crusher plant with documented repairs, operator logs, and usage data can significantly boost resale value. Buyers want assurance that your equipment won’t fail them in the middle of a job.
As fuel prices rise and environmental standards tighten, energy-efficient crushing plants—especially those that reduce dust and noise—are increasingly desirable. Retrofits or smart automation systems may raise the initial investment, but they also increase long-term value.
In Latin America's fast-developing aggregates industry, purchasing a crushing plant is not just about upfront price—it's a strategic investment. Whether it's a rugged stationary aggregate crusher plant(chancadora de agregados) or a versatile mobile stone crusher, the long-term value lies in durability, adaptability, and smart operation.
For contractors looking to maximize ROI and minimize downtime risk, understanding what drives equipment value is the first step toward making smarter, more profitable decisions in a dynamic construction landscape.
Planta Trituradora De Piedra de AIMIX tiene diferentes formas, como línea de producción estacionaria y planta portátil. ¡Contáctenos!AIMIX Trituradora De Piedra
The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum will be held on June 18-21TASS
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi condemned the Israeli airstrike on the Iranian state broadca...Al-Manar TV Lebanon
While the Israeli attack on Iran dominates the headlines, Israel has been accelerating its campaign of mass killing in Gaza. Israeli soldiers have repeatedly gunned down people lining up for food as they stand on the brink of starvation.jacobin.com
With the escalation in the Middle East, Kyiv was left behind the MSM headlines and Zelensky lost the necessary Western...Anonymous103 (South Front)
#Music on #White-Galactic-Worldbridger
#BeverleyCraven 6/28/1963 #Birth English singer-songwriter
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The devolution of Black politics has never been so evident and could not happen at a worse moment. While the crisis of legitimacy accelerates, and provides opportunities for movement politics, many Black people have declared themselves to be uninterested in political engagement or even worse, to be in solidarity with state oppression. Social media is replete with examples of Black people declaring that they don’t care about genocide in Gaza, or that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has nothing to do with them or even that they are glad other people are targeted for deportation.
The city of Los Angeles, California is now the focal point of resistance, and while there is Black solidarity within the coalition protesting ICE raids and Donald Trump bringing in the National Guard, there is also a strange resistance to acting in solidarity with those who are specifically targeted in this phase of state repression.
There is a great deal of confusion about what Black politics should be. The confusion continues because Black politics, the assertion of Black/African people’s human rights here and abroad, was killed off by repression, the influence of money in politics, years of right wing indoctrination, and the presence of a neo-liberal, imperialist Black man in the office of the presidency. The result is that the people who once were most likely to be at the very least skeptical of the state’s motives are now in support of some of its worst acts.
Entertainer Azealia Banks not only declared , “I’m a Zionist,” but felt compelled to add , “No black person should be supporting Palestine.” Ms. Banks attempted to explain away her inexplicable comments by asserting that all Arabs are racist and therefore undeserving of any solidarity. Even if that broad generalization were true, why would it mean that a genocidal state would be acceptable to her or to anyone?
Banks is one of the worst examples of this dubious narrative, which says that Black people should only be interested in themselves because all Arabs are supposedly racist or all Latinos are racists or because other groups have not been in solidarity with us, or because ICE isn’t raiding them. It is difficult but necessary to clear through many levels of misguided thinking if we are to find our way out of a dangerous morass.
The same forces that destroyed the liberation movement have convinced many Black people that effective political engagement is limited to voting, when in fact voting is the least effective means of bringing about change. Numerous studies have shown that voters don’t get what they want even when their chosen party is in office. Of course, bourgeois democracy delivers a revolving door of democrats and republicans who alternately fall out of favor with the public only to market themselves anew and periodically switch places so that the duopoly can take turns raising hopes and then failing the public over and over again.
We see Black people claiming that their vote for Kamala Harris or Joe Biden or Barack Obama is akin to movement organizing when nothing could be further from the truth. The claims that Black people shouldn’t be involved in the fight against genocide or ICE because we have all fought so hard often amounts to nothing more than people having voted for a democrat in a presidential election year. The duopoly confidence game causes people to be angry because they think their quadrennial trip to a polling place amounts to more than it actually does.
The lack of historical knowledge is another factor in the encouragement of apathy. “No one helped Black people.” “Why should we care if someone else is deported?” “They’re stealing our jobs.” The prevalence of discredited American Descendants of Slavery (ADOS) and Foundational Black American (FBA) ideology leads to hostility even towards Black immigrants. The site of masked ICE officers making violent arrests elicits nothing more than a shoulder shrug from the masses who think their situations are not linked with those being victimized.
At the very least, one would think the admonition warning against cutting off one’s nose in order to spite the face, would be kept in mind. Black people should know better than anyone that police, whether local or from ICE, are the enemy and that we should never applaud their actions, even if we appear not to be the target.
As for anti-Blackness among other groups, discernment is important. There is anti-Black racism among groups who are not white and it isn’t difficult to find examples. But that should not mean support for arresting people when they appear for immigration check-ins as they have done for years or that we shouldn’t feel repelled by ICE agents seeking entry to school buildings, dragging people from work places, and arresting U.S. citizens in the process. Black immigrants are always targets and are easily swept up in a racist system.
But there is also a lack of understanding about immigration itself. Immigration secures a class of disposable labor for capitalists, which is why people from all over the world are admitted to the U.S. If immigrants take what Donald Trump referred to as “Black jobs” it is because that is what the ruling class wants. It is not an accident that entire industries rely on immigrant labor. These same capitalists want a race to the bottom. If they don’t have migrants coming to the U.S. to work, they will leave the U.S. in search of even cheaper labor, and find ways to emiserate citizen workers even more than they do now. That dynamic is a constant, and no one should be fooled into thinking that Black workers would benefit even if every immigrant returned to their home country.
There is a mistaken belief that the fortunes of Black people from the U.S. would improve if others disappeared. Such conjecture is completely ahistorical. Yes, we must wage our own battle but what and who are we fighting? Our enemies are racism and capitalism. There is no reason to believe that mass incarceration, gentrification, or low wage work would disappear if global south immigrants were to leave the U.S. Our situation was not better before they arrived, and thinking that corporate, capitalist parties would somehow offer up something different is not borne out by any experiences Black people have had.
Donald Trump’s actions and his persona are different from other presidents, and that is a problem, but not just for the obvious reasons. It is important to remember that the Democratic Party’s allegiance to its oligarchic class, and its determination to vilify Trump instead of doing what their voters want, led to his return to the white house. It would be unfortunate if the only conclusion reached about this crisis is that we need another Democratic Party president when that party’s fecklessness led to Trump’s second term in office.
The lesson to be learned is that US Black people must understand that every phase of repression is a danger to us. We have no choice but to be in solidarity with all oppressed groups as we struggle for a new system altogether. This is better than finger-pointing about why the democrats failed to win the presidency. Democrats have cut the safety net, increased military spending, created a prison industrial complex, deported millions, and promised their capitalist sugar daddies that they will do everything in their power to keep people in a constant state of precarity. There must be no confusion about who our enemies are.
Margaret Kimberley is the author of Prejudential: Black America and the Presidents .
source: Black Agenda Report
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=…
#blackLiberation #fascism #iceRaids #laRebellion #northAmerica
The ADOS and FBA (American Descendants of Slavery and Foundational Black Americans) movements have gained influence by advocating for reparations exclusively for Black Americans descended from U.S.Jacqueline Luqman (Black Agenda Report)
Solidarity Against ICE and the Entire State Apparatus abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/197…
Statement of the ILPS US Country Chapter The International League of Peoples' Struggle US Country Chapter and Southern California (SoCal) vehemently denounce the militarized attacks on migrant communities in Los Angeles and around the country, where …Cody Urban (International League of Peoples' Struggle)
you should have watched the whole video with context..
don't be like them, bro...
2011
trump
00:00:44 "iran can be taken. i would never take the military card of the table and it's possible that it will be used, because iran can not have nuclear weapons, but you gotta exhaust other possibilities."
Watch Donald Trump warn that Pres. Obama will start a war with Iran because he can't negotiate, is weak, and wants to win re-election.Trump's remarks about I...YouTube
Israel hat den Iran angegriffen. Wer das verurteilt, verteidigt nicht gleich auch das Mullah-Regime, sondern vor allem die iranische Bevölkerung, deren Schicksal als Kollateralschaden hingenommen wirdDER STANDARD
"When Israeli warplanes struck #Iran this week — violating Iranian sovereignty in a brazen act of aggression, killing scores of civilians alongside top military commanders and nuclear scientists and inviting Iran’s equally indiscriminate retaliatory strikes — Europe’s leaders didn’t condemn the attack.
They perversely endorsed it and condemned Iran for the attacks on its own territory."
responsiblestatecraft.org/euro…
Colonial powers colonize again.
🧵 1/2
#Israel #Iran #Germany #France
In their hypocrisy over Israel, EU elites once again expose the rotting corpse of the so-called 'rules based order'Eldar Mamedov (Responsible Statecraft)
"The German foreign ministry went a step further and actually 'strongly condemned' #Iran for “an indiscriminate attack on Israeli territory' — even before Tehran launched its missiles in response for #Israel’s attack on its territory — while fully endorsing Israel’s actions."
responsiblestatecraft.org/euro…
That is, what white supremacy looks like.
"Rules-based order" is a scam. This talking point was allways a tool of the colonial powers.
🧵 2/2
In their hypocrisy over Israel, EU elites once again expose the rotting corpse of the so-called 'rules based order'Eldar Mamedov (Responsible Statecraft)
When visitors arrive at your e-commerce site, they make instant decisions. Within seconds, they choose to stay, browse, or leave. That choice depends on user experience—how intuitive the site feels, how fast it loads, and how easy it is to navigate.
Key Insight: You don't need vibrant visuals or elaborate animations to convert browsers into buyers. What you need is clarity. A clean layout, straightforward navigation, and minimal obstacles. That's what drives sales.
"A 1-second delay in page response can result in 7% reduction in conversions." - Aberdeen Group
Best practices for product pages:
- Keep descriptions under 50 words
- Highlight key specs in bullet points:
- Price
- Size options
- Availability status
- Key features
- Use ample whitespace (minimum 30% negative space)
- Place CTAs above the fold
Navigation essentials:
- Standard menu placement (top or left side)
- Maximum 7 main categories
- Breadcrumb trails for multi-level sites
- Predictive search function
- Filter/sort options for product listings
Pro Tip: Conduct card sorting exercises with real users to optimize your category structure.
Must-have elements:
Element | Importance | Implementation Tips |
---|---|---|
Images | Critical | 5-7 angles + zoom feature |
Reviews | 92% impact | Show recent verified purchases |
Videos | 64% lift | 15-30 sec demo clips |
Trust badges | Essential | SSL, payment icons, guarantees |
Statistics to consider:
- 67% of e-commerce traffic comes from mobile
- 53% abandon sites taking >3s to load
- 70% use mobile for price comparisons in-store
Mobile UX checklist:
- Thumb-friendly tap targets (minimum 48px)
- Streamlined forms with autofill
- Persistent cart icon with item count
- One-tap checkout options
Conversion killers to avoid:
- Mandatory account creation (offer guest checkout)
- Hidden costs (show all fees upfront)
- More than 3 form steps
- Limited payment options
Checkout best practices:
1. Progress indicators (1/3 steps)
2. Auto-address completion
3. Multiple payment gateways
4. Save info for returning customers
Essential analytics to track:
- Heatmaps (click, scroll, movement)
- Session recordings
- Conversion funnels
- A/B test results
Tools to consider:
- Hotjar for behavior analytics
- Google Optimize for testing
- Crazy Egg for visualization
Trust signals hierarchy:
1. Security badges (SSL, McAfee)
2. Real-time purchase notifications
3. Verified customer photos
4. Clear return policy (preferably 30+ days)
5. Physical address/phone number
Exceptional e-commerce design works quietly by:
1. Removing cognitive load
2. Anticipating user needs
3. Creating clear paths to purchase
4. Building trust at every touchpoint
"Good design is obvious. Great design is transparent." - Joe Sparano
When executed well, the design becomes invisible—customers simply flow through the buying journey without noticing the carefully crafted elements guiding them.
Users should always know what to do—where to click, what they’re buying, and why they can trust you. Whether you’re building your store or working with Singapore web designer, focus on this: great design doesn’t draw attention. It guides quietly and effectively.
Create a powerful online presence with our modern and innovative web design services. Our skilled web designers will create a custom website that fits your brand.iClick Media
Deutschland hat einen rechtsextremen Bundeskanzler.
#Merz
berliner-zeitung.de/news/merz-…
Und während #CDU / #CSU, #SPD und #Grüne weiter unverändert Waffen an die rechtsextreme, in Teilen faschistische israelische Regierung liefern, und #Israel's imperialisische Angriffskriege und den #Neokolonialismus ermöglichen, halten die bürgerliche Presse und Linksliberale konsequent die Klappe und stellen damit so offen ihren gewaltigen #Rassismus zu Schau. Sind ja nur Araber / Muslime!
🧵 1/2
Bundeskanzler Friedrich Merz dankt Israel für den Angriff auf iranische Atomanlagen und Militärziele. Die Operation sei ein mutiger Schritt – und ein Dienst an den westlichen Verbündeten.Alexander Schmalz (Berliner Zeitung)
Just moved from fosstodon to fediscience.
This is the third time I've moved #Mastodon instances! I've never wanted to move, but there have been compelling reasons each time.
I am always impressed at how seamless it has been every time I have moved instances.
well to be fair, once it was pointed out, new leadership also started complaining that people were too mean to them and should be more tolerant of hate speech, so
uh
Shelters are a lifeline in Israel from Iranian attacks, but Palestinian citizens of the country have been locked out.Al Jazeera
webcollart.net/capturer-le-tex…
Bonsoir le Monde ! Un petit bijou découvert grâce à un article de Korben qui permet de faire une capture d'écran et d'en extraire le texte vers le presse-papier ! C'est juste super pratique pour extraire des informations texte d'une page web, d'un ma…Li P'ti Fouineu !
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The Iranian Armed Forces have launched a new wave of missile attacks on the Zionist entity.www.saba.ye
TEHRAN, Jun. 17 (MNA) – The Chinese embassy in Israel has urged Chinese citizens to return home or leave the country via land border crossings as soon as possible.Marzieh Rahmani (Mehr News Agency)
I'm almost finished with my game, but I can't help but look at fundamental flaws that are too late to fix.
For one, the game is clearly inspired by Zelda, but I feel like that since it plays somewhat like Zelda then they should also expect shields to work like they do in Zelda, but in my game, the shields just reduce damage (making them act more like the rings in Zelda 1). The truth is that I made the shields reduce damage instead of blocking projectiles because I didn't want to bother writing collision detection for that along with trying to find/create sprites to accommodate. But then I realized that I have Octorok-like enemies that shoot projectiles and there is no way to dodge them outside of moving out of the way.
The other major flaw is something that someone else pointed out, which is that the enemies spawn in random locations. I should have included preset spawners in the room templates, but I never thought of that and including that now also means that I have to make different spawners in each template along with the number of spawners that appear in each difficulty.
I guess these are things to keep in mind for next game.
The base and those top influencers who channel their interests (and at times add their own insight) arguably define MAGA, but Trump is the only one with the power to implement it at scale, and he now believes that he knows better than them.Andrew Korybko (Andrew Korybko's Newsletter)
"Settlers, fully aware that the IDF has been ordered to stand down, are methodically erecting outposts beside Palestinian villages and carrying out daily pogroms until residents pick up and leave—at least sixty communities have been expelled since October 7. On the rare occasions the IDF does show up, they’re more likely to arrest the victims."
The Annexation of the #WestBank is Complete
thebaffler.com/latest/the-anne…
archive.ph/MGybE
#Palestine #oPt #colonialViolence @palestine @israel
The Western media remains largely oblivious to the bureaucratic coup redrawing the map of the West Bank. Annexation, for all intents and purposes, is complete.Zachariah Webb (The Baffler)
Get your Linux desktop or laptop here: slimbook.es/en/
The PinePhone PRO was just announced! I own a regular PinePhone, and while it's a great device to try out, and develop for mobile versions of Linux, I always felt the hardware couldn't really carry that phone into a daily driver state for me. It seems like The Pine 64 have decided to offer a more premium device this time around, so let's see what it will look like!
#PinePhone #PinePhonePro #LinuxPhone
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00:00 Intro
00:52 The Device
03:40 Who is it for?
04:56 The Strategy
It sports a Rockchip system on a chip, with 6 cores running at 1.5Ghz, paired with 4GB of LPDDR4 RAM, and 128GB of internal eMMC storage. That SoC seems to be a variant of the RK 3399, fine-tuned to have as good thermals as possible, and better battery life. They also managed to enable suspend state, so your phone will still be able to receive calls and messages without using too much battery life.
Compare this to the regular PinePhone, which only sported a Quad-Core Allwinner SoC running at 1.152 GHz, with up to 3GB LPDDR3 RAM, although my model only had 2 Gigs. It should be a major improvement, and have performance levels comparable to a mid range current Android smartphone.
As a matter of fact, The Pine 64 says it should be about 20% slower than a PineBook PRO, which is a very capable ARM laptop. That should make our Linux mobile desktops run really well on this thing.
Cameras have been vastly improved as well, with a 13MP main shooter in the back, and a 5MP front facing camera.
The regular pinephone had a 5MP main camera and a 2MP front facing one, so there should be a very visible upgrade in terms of image quality. megapixels aren't everything, but you need to have a healthy amount of them to at least pretend to take a decent picture.
The body of the phone seems very close to the original, to the point that the Pro supports all accessories made for the baseline pinephone, including back attachments, the keyboard and the wireless charging case. The only things that won't fit are the covers.
You still get the same hardware killswitches under the case to disable the mic, Wifi and bluetooth, headphone jack and the modem.
The display uses a 1440x720p resolution, the same as the original pinephone. It's an IPS display though, it's covered by Gorilla Glass 4, and has an elevated bezel to protect the screen from scratches when lying on a flat surface or falling.
It does make the chassis 2mm thicker though. The back plate has also been modified to be less prone to fingerprints, which is a good thing, as the original one could quickly turn into a nightmare for neatfreaks like me.
The battery is the same as the PinePhone, a Samsung J7 compatible one, at 3000mAh. This might be an issue, as the new SoC is more powerful and thus might use more power. We'll have to see if the optimizations they've worked on with the manufacturer can offset that.
The PinePhone Pro is available for preorder already, at a 399$ price, and people opting to buy one should expect it to arrive in early 2022, unless component shortages intensify.
Of course, this thing isn't a silver bullet for Linux phones. Software still has a ways to go to be daily driver material for me, and probably for a lot of people as well.
So the PinePhone PRO is still geared towards developers, and super early enthusiasts who want a phone that can also be their Linux desktop when they need it to, but who don't rely on apps too much.
Join @TheLinuxExperiment on Odysee, a content wonderland owned by everyone (and no one).Odysee
Generative AI chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT are driving some vulnerable users into delusional spirals and drug abuse, distorting their sense of reality in disturbing ways.Lucas Nolan (Breitbart)
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Milan (Italy) (AFP) – Hardcore supporters of Serie A giants Inter Milan and AC Milan were sentenced to up to 10 years in prison on Tuesday for a range of crimes including criminal conspiracy and murder, following a probe into illegal activities of so-called "ultra" groups.All 16 people standing trial for a variety of offences, in a fast-track procedure which began in March, were found guilty and handed sentences which added up to 90 years.
The crimes broadly involved activities around the iconic San Siro stadium on matchdays, from ticket touting to control of parking, sales from concession stands and taking payment from people without tickets and letting them into the stadium.
Andrea Beretta was one of three people handed the harshest sentence, the former leading Inter ultra being found guilty of criminal conspiracy aggravated by mafia methods and the murder of fellow top Inter ultra and mobster Antonio Bellocco.
Beretta turned state's witness after stabbing to death Bellocco during an altercation outside a boxing gym in a Milan suburb, weeks before the arrest in September of 19 leading Inter and Milan ultras.
The murder of Bellocco was especially shocking due to his status as a scion of an 'Ndrangheta mafia family, from the southern Italian region of Calabria, which bears his surname.
Beretta was also one of six people to be arrested in April for the murder of notorious ultra and career criminal Vittorio Boiocchi in October 2022.
He stepped up to take over the "Curva Nord" section of the San Siro from Boiocchi who was gunned down outside his house at the age of 69 as part of a power struggle between rival factions.
Beretta and Marco Ferdico -- sentenced to eight years -- used Bellocco's 'Ndrangheta connections to push aside more traditional football hooligans, linked with far-right politics, who were bidding for top billing among the Inter ultras.
Milan's top ultra Luca Lucci was also given 10 years in prison for criminal conspiracy and planning in 2019 the attempted murder of a rival ultra, Enzo Anghinelli.
His right-hand man Daniele Cataldo, judged to be the man who carried out the attack on Anghinelli, was handed the same prison sentence.
The fast-track trial, known as "rito abbreviato", is a legal procedure in Italian law in which defendants are judged on the basis of evidence brought by prosecutors, with no debate of that evidence by legal teams.
The procedure allows trials to be completed in a much shorter space of time than the years it takes for the ordinary judicial procedure, under which the remaining three people arrested in September began their trial in February.
That trio includes Francesco Lucci, who often took charge of the Milan ultras during his brother Luca's frequent problems with the law for offences that include drug trafficking and the assault of an Inter fan who was blinded and later committed suicide.
Neither of the clubs were charged in relation to the crimes, and were awarded 50,000 euros each as civil defendants and damaged parties in the trial.
Hardcore supporters of Serie A giants Inter Milan and AC Milan were sentenced to up to 10 years in prison on Tuesday for a range of crimes including criminal conspiracy and murder, following a probe into illegal activities of so-called "ultra" groups…RFI
The United States, while not directly attacking Iran, bears significant responsibility for the ongoing Israel-Iran war due to its long-term policies andСалман Рафи Шейх (New Eastern Outlook)
Even if you're not an Iranian nuclear scientist, it is always a good idea to move away from platforms that are run by (active collaborators of) fascist, warmongering Zionists.
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_…
[per km^2^]
Japan 340
UK 286
Germany 242
Switzerland 226
Italy 201
France 122
Mexico 67
USA 37
Venezuela 32
Canada 4.5
Greenland 0.14
The right wing here in the US would have us believe that our country is overcrowded, and so we must restrict immigration.
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The uninhabited parts of North America are in Canada, not the US. Only small parts of the US are unsuitable for human settlement.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_…
Besides the in Arctic and Subarctic (see above), few areas of any size in North America can be said to be uninhabited. Most of these are strict nature reserves or wilderness area protected by law. Among the largest of these are Improvement District No. 25, Alberta (4,601.52 square kilometres (1,776.66 sq mi) and Tweedsmuir South Provincial Park, British Columbia (989,616 hectares (3,820.93 sq mi).
Alberta and British Columbia are Canadian provinces.
There is not much desert in Japan, but it is a very mountainous country, and much of the land is too steep to build on. One of the schools I taught at was accessible only by a road that was too steep for my bicycle. I had to get off and push.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geograph…
The terrain is mostly rugged and mountainous, with 66% forest.
Switzerland is also mostly mountains.
aboutswitzerland.eda.admin.ch/…
Switzerland lies at the heart of Europe. It has three distinct geographical regions: the Alps, the Central Plateau and the Jura. The Alps cover two thirds of the country, but only a fraction of the population lives there.
Switzerland is one of the smallest countries in Europe. Mountains cover 70% of its territory but only a quarter of the population lives there.www.aboutswitzerland.eda.admin.ch
Our socials: fediverse.blog/~/ActaPopuli/fo…
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各位fedi友大家好,我想为大家推荐我们,两位位于欧洲女性开发、来自世界各地的女性运营与推广的文学网站:梨花文学城(lihuawenxue.com)
自海棠风波之后,我们深知一个安全、稳定且尊重创作者的平台对大家而言有多么重要。正是基于这份理解,我们着手开发了梨花文学城,希望能为中文互联网世界带来一个新的、值得信赖的文学家园。
梨花文学城的核心在于安全:
* 服务器位于欧盟:我们选择了数据隐私法律全球最严格的欧盟,您的数据受最高标准法律保护。
* 用户名密码加密存储:您的敏感信息经过salted hash加密,即使数据库被非法访问也无法泄露。
* 全站HTTPS加密:所有数据传输都在私密“隧道”中进行,保障您的通信隐私。
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我们深知访问不易,梨花文学城主站已被GFW屏蔽,但我们准备了多个镜像域名,以确保墙内用户的持续访问。
梨花文学城是一个开放的平台,我们诚挚地欢迎所有形式的文学创作,无论是原创的瑰丽想象,还是对现有IP的深度解读与再创作。我们希望这里能成为每一位热爱文字的友友的避风港和创作乐园。
我们深知,信任的建立需要时间和行动。我们团队将持续努力,致力于提供一个更安全、更稳定、更友好的创作和阅读环境。
梨花现在采用邀请码制度,未注册用户只能浏览作品的第一章,可以通过加入我们的discord服务器获取邀请码。(为了维护网站社区氛围,我们需要您在加入时简略描述经期体验)discord.gg/EEPBFrk7Mc
3D-printed device splits white noise into an acoustic rainbow without power
Link: phys.org/news/2025-06-3d-devic…
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…
In a study published in Science Advances, researchers from Technical University of Denmark and Universidad Politécnica de Madrid demonstrate a new device called an acoustic rainbow emitter (ARE) that takes in broadband white-noise signals from a poin…Sanjukta Mondal (Phys.org)
The silence of the sultans: Muslim regimes and the holocaust of our time | Middle East Monitor
#MiddleEast #Action4Gaza #Gaza #Genocide #Iran #Israel #US #OccupiedPalestine #Islam
middleeastmonitor.com/20250613…
Middle East Monitor
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...
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Heavy Israeli media censorship has been imposed on sites impacted by Iranian ballistic missilesthecradle.co
Source: libsoftiktok
BREAKING: Kathy Hochul announces that NY will provide $50 million of taxpayer dollars for legal services for illegals
[Video embedded in original tweet]
Original tweet : xcancel.com/libsoftiktok/statu…
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HernanLG
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Hernan, Wayne has expressed his opinion a couple times about this. I suspect he was in school districts that were unusually grades oriented, as well as him being unusually reactive to authority.
I went to many school districts (family traveled a lot), and my memory is that most teachers were more learning oriented and less grades oriented, exactly opposite of what Wayne experienced. And of course what you said, that students goals play a big part of the experience.
unmittelbar
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Wayne Radinsky
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •@HernanLG
No. I ran the experiment. When I was in college, and I wasn't learning anything (whether it was because of "learning" gobeltygook or just doing huge amounts of busywork from which neither I nor anyone else was learning anything) and complained, I was labeled "disobedient" and "troublemaker" and treated with unbearable hostility. The notion that I had the ability to unilaterally override the system's goal of "grades" and substitute my own, "learning" (even though "learning" is ostensibly the whole purpose of the entire institution) is laughably, completely wrong. No, students do not have the ability to override the goal set by the institution, and that's grades.
If one wants to learn new things, then one should not be in a university! There are bookstores and libraries full of books. There are online open-source textbooks. There's Wikipedia and other online encyclopedias. There's Wolfram MathWorld. There's a magic search engine called "Google" (and others) one can use to find educational materials on just about any topic imaginable. There are online education systems like Khan Academy. There are apps like Brilliant.org and Duolingo, which teaches languages. If you don't know what to search for on a system like Google, you can ask a chatbot like ChatGPT what to search for. (Sounds weird, I know, but try it.) One can ask chatbots like ChatGPT to act as one's tutor (though beware of inaccuracies).
Maybe 100 years ago, if you wanted knowledge, universities were the only place you could go and everyone there (or almost everyone) was a genuine knowledge-seeker. In the world of today, if you seek to learn, why would you ever go to a university? With such vastness of knowledge available so much more cheaply? The only justification is to obtain the credential. Everyone (for all intents and purposes) who goes to university today is a credential-seeker.
Probably not. Statistics on large populations show people with college degrees make substantially more average. Sure, if you're Mark Zuckerberg, you make more money by dropping out, but there's only a handful of Mark Zuckerbergs and millions and millions of regular people. For regular people, a college degree, actually not so much a money maximizer, but essential destitution insurance.
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Wayne Radinsky
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •@Will
Nope. I went to Denver Public Schools for K12 and the University of Colorado at Boulder (aka CU Boulder) for university. Totally normal schools. If these school districts were "unusually grades oriented," other students would have been affected, but it was only me.
It was only me. "Unusually reactive to authority" I suppose is one way to put it. From my point of view, the question was, why are all normal people so automatically obedient to authority?
I think I told you before how about 2 years after I was forced out of the school system (for disobedience) I met this young woman who was a college student (at UC Davis), majoring in biology. And for some reason I asked her these general, open-ended questions about what her college experience was like. I expected her to describe her daily struggle to be obedient, forcing herself to do her homework, forcing herself to obey the commands that are called "assignments" or whatever but are really commands that must be obeyed. But her experience was nothing like that. There was no struggle to be obedient, and in fact she didn't even think of school in "obedience" terms. She actually liked the system. She liked how someone else had broken down a body of knowledge and figured out a system for learning it, and on Monday we do this, on Wednesday we do that, on Friday we do this other thing, and all she had to do was "jump through the hoops" and everything would work out great for her. She actually liked the "hoop jumping" system. I had never considered before the possibility that such a thing was possible before. I thought other people who did well in school were just "tougher", "grittier", better at forcing themselves to be obedient than I was. I never imagined people existed for whom the obedience struggle was entirely non-existent.
That was what led me (over the last 30 years) to develop my theory of extrinsic motivation. For people who are extrinsically motivated (or sufficiently extrinsically motivated -- their extrinsic motivation level exceeds some threshold -- and in my mind, extrinsic and intrinsic motivation are independent personality dimensions, but I'm going to skip that explanation for now), they don't experience any loss of agency in school. They want to make money doing some profession, they work backwards from there -- they need a college degree in X major (ideally from a prestigious school), to get the college degree they need good grades (ideally "A"s and a high GPA) in various classes, to get their "A"s in those classes they need to do what the teacher says -- and oh how helpful it is that the teacher simply tells you what you need to do to get the "A"s, and all you have to do is whatever you're told. So people don't feeling like they're "being obedient" or like they've lost agency -- they're following their step-by-step plan to acquire extrinsic rewards ("A"s, high GPA, degree, high-paying job). People don't feel "hoop jumping" causes loss of agency because they want to jump through the hoops because they want the rewards for doing so. "Playing the game" is another expression I've heard a few people use (like my aunt who has a PhD). When I was in school, I didn't treat it like a "game". I treated it like my purpose for being there was to learn how to become a competent engineer and I took it very, very seriously. I spent my weekends in the math library while other students were getting drunk at frat parties. They have degrees and I don't. They understood they were there for the grades and the degree -- the credentials themselves are what matters (extrinsic motivation), not becoming a "competent engineer" (intrinsic motivation).
If the goal is to learn, in some classes, there won't be a problem. But in others there will be, because no learning is happening. There's some sort of imitation learning going on -- "learning" gobbeltygook or doing a lot of robotic busywork. In this situation, what you must do is STFU, do what you're told, get your "A", and go on with your life. You can't complain. You can't fight the system. You're one person, and the system is thousands of schools in hundreds of countries with millions of students and teachers and administrators, thoroughly embedded within all the other major institutions of society such as the employment system. The system is vastly bigger than you. You can't complain and change anything. You have to STFU and obey.
When you say
to me this just sounds like, you're a normal person with extrinsic motivation levels above the critical threshold, so you didn't experience any problem.
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Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Hmm, I was motivated with both a deep curiosity about the world (intrinsic) and intentions to get credentials (extrinsic) in the process of learning. All my teachers did their job about as i expected, and i learned a lot, much more than if i just read books. Much like that lady you mentioned.
What you might be missing is an appreciation of constraints. Sometimes constraints enable a process. You seem to view constraints only as limits and impedance since you framed your argument in terms of "obedience".
Alicia Juarrero, a philosopher, wrote a whole book about this idea. Here she is discussing the idea in a video interview:
Constraints, Context, Complexity, Culture and the OODA Loop | Alicia Juarrero
Or this video, i don't recall which interview is better:
Alicia Juarrero on Context, Constraints, and Coherence
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Just stumbled onto another article on the enabling value of constraints. Haven't read yet.
Biological organisation as closure of constraints
sciencedirect.com/science/arti…
Wayne Radinsky
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Apologies for the late reply on this, but I watched the two videos and read the article, and I am completely failing to see the relevance to my educational experience.
I don't see how unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority "enables" education. I am missing "an appreciation of constraints"... If I had "an appreciation of constraints" then I would understand how unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority is necessary for education and I would have embraced obedince throughout my school experience. I would have understood how the "process" of education was "enabled" by unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority and magically had no problem with it. How???? I don't get this at all. Apparently if I understood how unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority functions as a "constrains" that "enables" the "process" of education, then I would never have even "framed" the argument in terms of "obedience".
Doesn't my alternate hypothesis of extrinsic motivation do that already? Extrinsically motivated people don't feel like they are being "obedient" in school. If you want extrinsic rewards (money, jobs, degrees, grades, etc), then having the reward issuer telling you exactly what you need to do to obtain the reward is exactly what you want. They tell you what to do to get the reward, you do what they say, you get the reward, and you don't feel like you're engaging in obedience to an authority. There's no subjective experience of "loss of agency". I spent decades trying to understand this and the extrinsic motivation theory is the best I've been able to come up with. There are people who exist who go to school and excel and experience no subjective loss of agency, even though that seems impossible.
When I was in school, it seemed like I was placed in a room with an arbitrary authority in the front, and if I didn't obey, my life would be destroyed. Bad grades mean a bad college or no college, a bad job or no job, and your life will basically be terrible. Adults successfully instilled this in me in elementary school. Obviously adults felt it was necessary to instill this in me or I would get bad grades, and they were probably right. That's what got me through high school -- the expectation that obedience was childhood, and once you became and adult and went to college, college would be different, college would be about real genuine learning. When I got to college and discovered it was more of the same, (besides it being heartbreaking discovering the hope I had held on to that got me through K12 was completely false), I complained and got the associated punishment. I complained when learning was not happening and that's not allowed. Disobedience is not allowed. I got labeled "the disobedient student." That's literally what I was called by the professors.
But according to you, what went wrong was I had inadequate "appreciation of constraints"???
Wayne Radinsky
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •"I would have understood how the “process” of education was “enabled” by unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority and magically had no problem with it. How??? I don’t get this at all."
Well, no one that i know has described their educational experience as "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority". That sounds paranoid.
The enabling constraint is much more mundane than you describe. The constraint is the orderliness of ordinary institutions which have evolved systems to operate over a long period of time. Schools, banks, grocery stores, town halls, whatever institution. They have to plan ahead, hire employees, establish methods and standards. Many people are involved in this process and you're implying they are all a bunch of meanies.
Your apparent view of all this is that normal social and civil constraints are intrusions on your free will. Or, perhaps you personally did attend deviant schools and are not aware that most schools are quite benign about assignments, grades and whatnot.
Assigned reading, pop quizzes, presence in classrooms, all those constraints enable the educational system to endure. Maybe there is a better way. But, that requires activists to re-shape people's normal expectations.
If a person wants to avoid these mature institutions they are free to do so. And it is up to the free spirit individual to figure another way to become a civilized member of society.
So, your expression, "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority", is not a reasonable description of ordinary civil institutions.
The constraints that enable orderly institutions to endure is a collective norm. You personally don't buy into the educational institutions norms. That puts the burden on you to figure out a better way to get along in life.
Now, given all that, could most school districts become much better? Yes, of course. But fixing "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority" is not realistic in my experience.
I was dam glad a teacher would teach us. I was damn glad they made an effort to do their job well according to community standards. Almost all of my teachers were good to excellent.
I did go to catholic school my first 2 1/2 years. They were pretty strict and authoritarian, and the phrase "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority" sorta fits, but not quite. But that was their style, I still got educated quite well even tho they were all bossy about it.
I say all this even tho I personally am rather reactive to authoritarian institutions. But schools? nah, they are pretty much the same world wide. You must have got some wing ding schools or you got off on the wrong foot to be so totally alienated from normal educational institution standards.
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Wayne Radinsky
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •I feel like we're going in circles, over the same material over and over and over.
You know what this reminds me of? One time I saw a video of this woman who spent over a decade on antidepressants, and one day she decided, maybe these drugs aren't helpful, maybe I should get off of them entirely. And she discovered to her shock that "You're not allowed to say 'no'" -- that the system she thought existed to help her actually didn't care and she was oblivious to this as long as she said "yes" to everything, but as soon as she said "no", it turned against her. More specifically, as soon as she said she wanted to get off antidepressants and explained her thinking as to why, every last person she interacted with in the medical profession took the position that she absolutely must keep taking antidepressants. And suddenly she realized, all these people who she thought cared about her well-being were actually just in it for money -- everyone from the pharmaceutical companies, to the insurance companies, to the hospital administrators, to her individual therapists. Everyone was making money off of her -- but only as long as she stayed on the drugs. Luckily for her she was ultimately able to say "no" and get off the drugs, though it was hard because she was taking multiple drugs at once and you can't just quit psychoactive drugs "cold turkey" -- you have to taper them off. After getting off the drugs, she still had to deal with the reality that her life was full of problems and spend another decade getting her life together. I searched my files where I have piles of links saved, and I probably saved the link to this interview, but I couldn't find it, I guess because I couldn't think of the exact words in the title.
Anyway, I thought it was interesting as I've never taken any psychoactive medications voluntarily but was forced to twice -- once by an employer and once by the government (State of California). But here I'm just bringing it up because it reminds me of this discussion about school. When it comes to school, you're the person who always said "yes", yet you claim to know what happens when you say "no"?
To me, saying school == obedience is the most obvious thing in the world. Imagine you go to school and you tell every teacher, "I'm going to learn everything on the syllabus for your class and I'll be able to prove it at the drop of a hat -- on any exam you care to give me or however else you want to test that I've mastered the knowledge. But I won't obey you. I won't participate in class, and I won't do any homework assignments or any assignments of any kind."
I can tell you exactly what happens when you run this experiment because I've run the experiment (which I'll describe in a second -- but I think you've heard it before). What happens is the teacher gives you an "F". And in school, once you've accumulated enough "F"s, you get expelled from the system. At least once you're out of the compulsory phase of the system where they have to take you. And no, I absolutely did not attend some "deviant" or "wing ding" school system -- we've been through this before -- I attended Denver Public Schools, a standard US K12 school system, and the University of Colorado at Boulder, a standard US university.
Here's the time I ran the experiment. I had a digital circuits lab. The idea was to take digital devices and plug them together in accordance with a diagram in the lab manual, copy down various numbers output on the devices, put them in the boxes in the lab manual, and carry out simple arithmetic calculations, which were all laid out in the lab manual. Then you tear out the page and turn it in. I realized I was learning absolutely nothing by doing this -- I was just robotically following instructions in the lab manual but learning absolutely nothing about digital circuits. In talking with the other students, I realized everyone was in exactly the same situation. Nobody was learning anything. I complained about this to the professor, but the other students didn't -- they just continued to robotically follow the lab manual. To prove I'd learned everything on the syllabus, I did a big, complicated final project that demonstrated I had mastered Fourrier transforms and a whole bunch of stuff, all the concepts we were supposed to learn in that lab.
The end result was: I got an "F" while all the other students got "A"s.
If the purpose of school was learning, then the student who learned everything on the syllabus would get an "A" while the students who learned nothing (pretty close to nothing) would get "F"s. That's the opposite of what happened. The mystery goes away when you switch "learning" for "obedience". If the purpose of school is obedience, then it makes perfect sense that the obedient students all got "A"s and the one disobedient student got an "F".
The thing is, it wasn't just this one class -- this class is just the starkest example. In most classes, the intersection of the set of "things you are supposed to learn listed on the syllabus" and the set of "things you learn by being obedient to the instructor" is not the empty set. In this class it was.
So yes, school == obedience. For me, this is the most obvious thing in the world, but when I tell people "school == obedience", everyone argues with me and tells me I'm wrong. It's like saying the sky is blue, and having everyone you meet tell you that you're wrong. How is it that everyone everywhere says something so extremely obvious is wrong? If you don't obey, you get "F"s and once you accumulate enough "F"s, you get expelled. You must obey. This is super, super, super, super, extremely, extremely, extremely, extremely obvious. How can anyone deny it? (And yes, I'm totally aware if I don't obey, that "puts the burden on me" to "figure out a better way to get along in life" -- we've pretty much structured society so there isn't one. It's not as if, if you don't succeed in one school system, there's a dozen others to choose from, and you can switch to a different system that suits your personality temperament better. Children have no ability to do that. We have the one-size-fits-all obedience-based school system that all children must succeed in or not. If you fail, society will hold it against you for the rest of your life. That is the punishment I've experienced, and I totally get that from your point of view, it's totally deserved.)
One time I saw a video of an autism researcher -- this is another one where I don't have the link handy because I saw it years ago and don't have the magic keywords to search on in my pile of links -- I saw a video of an autism researcher who, after a talk, in the Q&A session, and I don't remember what question he asked that prompted this, but he said that some people learn best by direct interaction with the world, and not by listening to a lecture by an authority figure.
At that moment I realized that there are people in this world for whom learning by being lectured to and obeying an authority figure was the most natural thing in the world, so automatic and so built into their brains that they had to have someone tell them people exist whose brains don't work that way. And apparently that's the vast majority of all humans. In other words, the reason normal humans don't find school an excruciating exercise in "obey, obey, obey, obey" is because learning by obeying an authority figure is their natural, normal mode of learning.
I started programming computers when I was 9 and learning from direct experimentation. And I was fascinated by the ability of these machines to do math, and when I was 12, I met an older guy at a computer store who told me you could get computers to draw circles using sines and cosines. I figured out that there were 3 ways to draw circles: you could use the equation for a circle (based on Pythagoras's formula), you could imagine a particle moving around the circle and figure out the derivatives for its motion (this was my first glimpse of calculus), and you could do what the older guy I met said and use sine and cosine, so I started learning about trigonometry. At school, we were doing pages and pages of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division problems. (This was grade 6 math at the time. We were supposed to be introduced to exponents but hardly did any that year.) I told my math teacher I wanted to start learning trigonometry. She said no, "You should stay at your level."
Supposedly the purpose of school is "learning", yet I was being explicitly told by a "teacher" to not learn something. I did the pages and pages of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division problems because that's what you have to do -- you have to obey to get the grades.
Perhaps the distinction isn't "autistic" vs "non-autistic" but "autodidact" vs "non-autodidact". If learning by being lectured to and obeying an arbitrary authority figure is the most natural and normal way of learning for you, then maybe school is just fine. But if you're an autodidact, and are better at teaching yourself any subject rather than learning by obeying an authority figure, then school is an oppressive exercise in "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority".
You repeat my "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority" phrase as if you are shocked by it. Yes, it is absolutely unconditional -- when teachers give assignments, you must do them. You can't get out of them, you must do them. You can't go to the teacher and say, I'll learn all the material on my own, rather than obeying you and doing your assignments. You can't do that. You will get "F"s. Yes, the assignments are arbitrary. I had to do pages of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division at a time I was ready to start learning trigonometry. Yes, the authority figures are arbitrary. I'm a kid born into this world, and I'm placed before arbitrary authority figures that I must obey. How is my statement "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority" incorrect in any way? It seems exactly correct to me.
I guess your point is that I should have appreciated society's need for "constraints" and "orderly institutions" -- society has millions of children, and needs to establish "education factories" for the millions of children. But you don't take the obvious next step and just say obedience was chosen as the method of doing this. After all, what power do children have to disobey?
It's been years since I did any research on the history of the school system but I believe if you do some digging you'll find this is where the school system came from. The system we use originated in Prussia (now parts of Germany and Poland), which had a problem: it was losing wars. They devised a system to turn children into create obedient soldiers. It involved many familiar elements of our school system, such as being constantly interrupted by bells that make you stop doing whatever you're doing and do something else. Later, the industrial revolution happened, and industrialists -- in our country as well as what is today Germany -- realized they could adapt the Prussian system to produce obedient factory workers. So the system was actually designed on purpose for obedience. It's not an accident that obedience is central to the operation of the system.
Then the information revolution happened, and the system seems to have undergone another adaptation -- this time as a way for extrinsically motivated people to attach themselves to recognizable brand names to market themselves on the job market. That seems to be the primary function of school today. If you apply for a job and you have a famous school on your résumé, you're far more likely to get an interview than if you have nothing -- even if your actual knowledge and skill are the same. My theory is that extrinsically people don't feel like they are being "obedient" because they are pursuing the credential itself and the brand name recognition, and not terribly concerned about whether they learn anything or not. My fellow students in the college-level digital circuits lab are a perfect example. All of them were are they were learning zero (or pretty close to zero) about digital circuits, but didn't care as long as they got an "A" on the class. The "A" on the transcript was what mattered, not knowledge or competent mastery of any subject matter.
As an aside, another thing that happened was those students ostracized me. They knew they were there to get "A"s and if they were seen associated with someone the teacher hated, that teaching might apply "guilt by association" and not give them their "A". My last year in college, after I was publicly labeled "disobedient" and a "troublemaker" by the professors, I had only 3 friends: my roommate and 2 international students. I think the international students weren't invested emotionally in American society, at least not as much, so they didn't care if I was disapproved of by the American educational system, and were willing to be friends with me. Again, it's all about the "A"s, not the actual "learning".
Finally, you say, "personally am rather reactive to authoritarian institutions". I'm going to push back on this. I think this is false. If it is true, there would be evidence of it. What is the evidence? You have never told a single story that I can recall about getting punished by authority for anything. Not even getting fired from a job, which can happen for reasons other than disobedience to authority (you could simply have a mismatch between the person and the job, for example). If you've ever gotten a significant punishment from anyone in a position of power and authority, you've never mentioned it.
Peter Thiel says he likes to ask interview candidates, "What important truth do very few people agree with you on?" He mentions this in his book Zero to One and has mentioned it in some interviews I've seen of him. He's said what he's looking for is a willingness to consider "heretical" ideas. It's an intentionally dangerous question because if you answer the question with a genuinely "heretical" idea, it's something you can get in serious trouble for. So if you genuinely believe something very few other people believe, you'll be inclined not to mention it, but if you don't mention it, you won't be answering the question truthfully. Peter Thiel says most people give boring, milquetoast answers to this question.
What important truth do very few people agree with you on? Is there anything you believe that could get you in trouble with authority? You haven't expressed any idea that could get you in trouble with authority that I can recall. In this conversation, you're completely supportive of the school system, which obviously won't get you in any trouble. I don't think you're "reactive" to authoritarian institutions. If there's evidence I'll accept being proven wrong.
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Interesting. Ok, so a major point of contention here is your opening observation that we in the US have a " centuries old system that values grades over actually learning." You believe that is true, and I don't believe it.
You are an exceptionally bright person, so I respect your concern. I'm a person that likes to get to the bottom of things, so i'm motivated to figure out why we have such a different view of a matter that we both have decades of experience with.
You have given several examples where you showed the educational system to exhibit domineering treatment of students. And here you doubt my claim that I am reactive to authoritarian institutions, The implication being that I'm obedient and therefore perhaps not credible arguing against your viewpoint.
This is interesting enough that i want to give it a bit more thought to get to the bottom of things.
It's too early in the morning and I won't get into things just yet, but i'll mention a couple things where I've experienced domineering people.
I was in the military and there of course obedience is pretty much absolute (within certain parameters which rarely were unreasonable). I don't recall having any great reactance to that domineering. They got what they needed and so did I.
I signed up knowing the score, and i don't recall any incidents where it violated my sensibility. In exchange for me being a good boy in their eyes, I benefited greatly. I gained some needed confidence in general, and I got a paid college post graduate degree out of it. That is I parleyed the benefits they gave (monthly educational income for several years after serving my four years.) This whole experience was profoundly helpful to me. I came from a very dysfunctional social and family situation and my military experience helped fixed that.
My earliest experience of a heretical rebellion was when i was about 7 years old, attending catholic school for the first 2 1/2 years of school. The school tried to indoctrinate us into religion. At 7 years old i realized that their notions of god, and sins and you'll end up in purgatory, and all that other stuff was nonsense. I completely rejected it even at that young age. I looked up into the sky and said to myself I don't think there's some god up there watching us, it's all nonsense. Going to church was merely a social phenomenon and i thought it was mostly silly for people to act like that. But no one punished me for this heresy so I didn't learn to resentful. I did my thing, they did theirs. No harm, no foul, so to speak.
I did experience extreme reactance when I was called up for jury duty. I got very paranoid when i discovered how they handled that. During voir dire, for example, they think they can ask you on public record to tell about your personal and family life and your opinions of things. "Is anyone in your family an alcoholic?" I did write the judges criticizing them for some of their procedures violating personal privacy. And I figured out to avoid jury duty altogether, by merely stating that i was biased. I even told the judge during juror questioning that my professional experience with psychological research on memory led me to doubt the value of witness testimony and doubt that the legal system was up to date on the matter. He merely acknowledged my concern and sent me home.
Well, for now that's enough dredging through the cob webs of my mind. I'll come back to this matter because it is interesting to confront one's own brainwashing. I still think you had a dysfunctional reaction to having to follow social norms. But there's always a grain of contrary truth in there, and it's worth sorting that out.
My main disagreement with you is that I don't think schools, in general, value grades over learning. But I agree there can be the appearance of that.
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Here's an example where i would get reactive. I'd tell Thiel that's a stupid question. That's looking for trouble just for trouble's sake. I look for insight and understanding. If that leads to questioning established beliefs, then that's fine. But to go looking to prove conventions are wrong just because it's fun to prove them wrong is just being a maverick. Galileo didn't try to be a maverick just to be different, he had an idea and was willing to be a maverick to pursue it. That's the difference.
Yes, that's pretty stupid of your teacher. And if you go looking for examples of that you'd probably find a fair number. But that's the exception that proves the rule. You have a maverick student and an inflexible teacher which results in stupidity. Most teachers would NOT have flunked you. They may ding you for not following their procedure, but most teachers would compromise and acknowledge your excellence, Most teachers would NOT stigmatize you with an F just for being disobedient when you shine from another perspective. Most teachers would make a point of congratulating you on going beyond their expectations.
My question to you would be why didn't you take the hour or two and do the lab work in addition to your major year end project? Maybe you also excelled at being righteous and resentful. That's a recipe for disaster.
unmittelbar likes this.
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •You said, "I don’t see how unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority “enables” education."
That may be because you filter the experience through a resentment filter. The "obedience" most people engage in is not unconditional and it is not due to arbitrary requirements. Rather obedience is a process of cooperation, not coercion. And if you really do see it as coercion, then you are missing something about the nature of social cooperation. I'm trying to figure out what that is so that we can come to some common understanding.
Educational norms have been developed over centuries, by millions, even billions, of people. "unconditional obedience to arbitrary authority" is simply not a reasonable description of education institutions in general.
In grade school kids are not as smart as their teachers, and it's not uncommon for a student to need to be "coerced" into things they disagree with. They simply haven't learned about the broader context and requirements that they later will understand and accept and even go on to perpetuate.
In high school and college, it becomes less clear what is authoritarian and what is nurturing to individuals. But with millions of people willingly maintaining the norms, the burden of showing harm and lack of individual nurturance onto the individuals who disagree with the norms.
So, that's my first premise in this argument.
You have already acknowledged that you frequently are hostile to teachers and the institutions. Usually that pattern of social interaction with anyone will poison a relationship. And once a relationship is toxic, then the matter becomes a social relationship, not a matter of institutional patterns.
That's the second premiss.
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Side note, off topic. Here's the research on witness memory reliability that i mentioned:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabet…
Loftus was a member of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation Scientific Advisory Board.[56] She along with Peter Freyd, Pamela Freyd and the False Memory Syndrome Foundation have argued that there is sufficient experimental evidence that people distort their memories, that human memory is not usually faithful to objective facts, and that false memories can be implanted in other people through suggestion and recovered-memory therapy.
American cognitive psychologist
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Nah. Most doctors and nurses don't say people have keep doing their mood meds, unless they are in a psychiatric setting. They advise, encourage, and educate. So your description seems exaggerated, or if not, it is an isolated case. But, there are two grains of truth because, 1. yes doctors in particular are enticed by big pharma and do indeed over prescribe medicine rather than diet, exercise, and education and 2. medical people don't encourage patients to be actively involved in determining the treatment. (I've personally had to tell various med people, whoa, let's talk about this, and they step back and wonder why a patient would want to have a say in the matter. Most patients are "obedient". LOL.
I once caught my doctor prescribing an $80 pharma brand allergy med where a $20 generic brand was readily available. I asked him about that and he just mumbled. We both knew why.
Suddenly i'm wondering why you frame your examples in such an exaggerated, categorical way. I'm taking you somewhat literally. Maybe i should instead respond to a milder concern, "obedience to authority". In that case there probably is too much rigidity in many schools. On the other hand there is probably a lot of student focused modernization in education now that you aren't aware of. Maybe they have fixed some of what you went through a decade or two ago.
Jeez, this is getting to be a long read. I don't mind, but i doubt anyone wants to slog through it. And you did start off by saying we're going in circles.
So, what do you think?
unmittelbar
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Thiel is also driven by the charm of creative-capitalism, which is about filling a void. I'm actually using this as a motivation for a more general topic, not that you think I want to start an economic debate here. Capitalism as the free trade and ownership of material does more than foment creativity. Tech and finance sectors in particular use this property to justify a big void, which they fill exactly with its products. That void is empathetic reasoning, for which the logic and numbers of boards and shareholding, the reaffirmation of symbols like "free market" act as arguments against investing in whole branches of democratic and technologically independent thinking, simply because it would be "too complex" and we need to "get things done." Of course, one hardly fails to notice that centralization of power is antithetical to technological progress uplifting society, which requires adoption on our terms, not disruption by worldviews which only permit a functional take on life. We are not functions and to see us as such is not just heartless, but also counterproductive.
When it comes to dissonance with industrial education, it's fair to look at its sponsorship by the nearest power elites, be they kings or technocrats. I remember teachers of Einstein and Gauss also being depicted as somewhat clueless and even cruel. Why is it that so many teaching authorities remain in our minds as horrible people, while others excell?
Will, your amiable presentation avoids going deeper on the necessary blind spot when any common ground is striven--specifically pertaining to education. (To use a math metaphor,) no set of goals or approach will find a common denominator everytime which contains the primes of relevance which are going to factor into (1) the goals set (because kids have different needs and knowledge is going ) (2) the places knowledge wants to go under individuation (Wayne's frustration), or (3) the places knowledge wants to go as a collective impulse. And (3) is not attained, just by the fact of the common denominator approach: functionalizing misses opportunities to grow. It's a faulty assumption that we can generalize knowledge before generalizing our approach to knowledge: we have to become flexible by tempering and not by coincidence, or as psychologists would say (from normal to esoteric) "compensatory correspondence" to "synchronicity."
If an approach to approaches is not sought, or not known by the teaching authority, then its need to irk compulsion will (in hindsight) actually represent the gradual decline of society: precisely in the blind spots do we lose ourselves (Jung's shadow). The inverse elements to the set of knowledge under function of injective education will be precisely those foments of discontent and dissaray which we could have known about with more compassion. To a certain degree, we are missing a kind of flexible esotericism which would allow progress in (1) institutions (inverting some useless bureacracy related to schools to achieve more excellence), of (2) individuals, or of (3) collective relevance (contending with bureacracy/power establishments--Thiel's aversion to complexity as a thin justification of the benefits of centralizing power). It just takes a moment of compassion to recognize this, and trusting the process can even mean letting one child pass.
For example take my case: thanks to the compassion of being allowed to live, I am developing some great tools. It looks like Wayne is too. One day such compassion might become irrelevant, but I work like it won't, because that's the world in which our blind spots are being addressed. There is no cure for ignorance except that compassion is the equal partner to knowledge. There is naive knowledge, and there is the sense of systems. If more people were fostered in this aspect, we would have wide-ranging thoughts. Our bureacracy and power structures would also get more challenged, but that's why I exist: to prepare the means for these challenges themselves to be compassionate. Everyone got to get lucky. This is the challenge of self-interest, which is the common denominator of this world. I doubt it is the common denominator of every world, and it won't be the last stumbling block, but it's a big one unlimited by the void implanted in youth by the need to obey arbitrary inherited states of being.
If I may offer a common ground to your question: the adversarial approach is itself a response to the lack of prime factors in the social calculus. To make this have meaning as a common ground, you should consider that both positives like "the education system" and negatives like "the obedience orientation" are themselves positives. They are statements addressing the same thing (education) from the perspective of what it has versus what it takes away, and a negative can be all the more positive if it is actually addressing a blind spot.
A critique isn't necessarily saying "get rid of the thing", but is frustrated by some aspect which is lacking. The reason empathy is important for a society to develop is that it addresses our blind spots. Notably both ironic and tragic, many empathetic people end up on the streets or in mental hospitals, or just jaded people: precisely because the current education systems are all about factoring the world into uselessly functional primes: all the more useless because they sort out the world into mine and thine, missing, warping, or even deriding the whole shared space of inter-intellectual permutations. This least divides the set of options by 2, ignoring all the possible solutions which would come if we stopped for a moment to think differently, breath with the thoughts of our neighbor, and considered the world without our egos command.
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •@unmittelbar I read your comment but don't understand. It's pretty general and meandering. Do you care to make it more concise?
The term "empathetic reasoning" caught my eye but i have no idea what that means. And how does it relate to our topic?
For example you say the following:
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •@Wayne Radinsky Our conversation is puzzling to me. I know you to be an exceptionally bright person. And you are empirically oriented, facts matter to you. I've read your many posts about technology, and I mostly agree with your assessments. Occasionally I find something to comment on, mostly to clarify or introduce another perspective. It is one of my more gratifying reads and interactions here on social media.
However, our conversation about obedience to authority, mostly about educational practices, seems to be unusual. You offer one explanation that makes some sense of your extreme opinions about authoritative teachers -- autodidacts learn better on their own. Ok, I can buy that.
But nothing in that logic leads to a valid condemnation of teaching based on traditional, carefully organized methods (curriculum) that most students seem to benefit from. And, I don't see the logic that leads to saying that educational practices are more oriented towards grades over learning. Nor, any logic that leads to saying most students are in the classroom mostly to get credentials rather than to learn.
You are not merely advocating improving educational practices, you are categorically condemning them. That is what I am responding to. Certainly it is a worthy goal to improve educational practices. I'm not personally motivated to take on that topic, but it is a valuable goal. So, our difference of opinion isn't about improving educational practices, Our difference of opinion is about categorically classifying many things as dictatorial and people in general being submissive to authority.
Yesterday, I was reminded of a setting where I could see where your position made some sense. Over the years I've learned that medical patients seem to be passive about their medical treatments, and they often let doctors and nurses tell them what to do. I'm not like that. I always insist with my doctor that i am an active participant in determining my diagnosis and treatment. And I've seen a few medical people surprised by that.
One example of that was when i had to undergo some serious treatment for a heart condition. I was transferred to the hospital in the wee hours and it wasn't until 8 or 9 am that the surgeon came in to tell me what he was going to do. He had a dozen interns following him into the room. I really laid into him. I told him to get these students out the room and to explain to me what's going on so I could assess what i would agree to be done to me.
He was an arrogant ass, and threatened to expel me from the hospital for challenging him. I said no, you're not expelling me, you are going to explain to me what my condition is and what my options are. He apparently had never been challenged like that. And he left the room. Shortly later some head administrator came in to see what the conflict was. I told her that he was an asshole leaving me alone without consultation all night and then came in and started telling me what he was going to do. Long story short, she left and another doctor came in, a nice quiet Japanese doctor, and we talked, he explained things, and i consented to an option after i knew some facts. It all turned out well. But I hope that arrogant ass learned his lesson.
So, yes, I can see your point about excessive authority and passiveness in institutional settings.
But in our conversations I've been pushing back on your characterizations of situations, they seem way over stated: For example, you say a couple things here:
I find those descriptions hard to believe on the face of it. Perhaps there were extenuating circumstances that would make them more credible.
You also wondered about my experience with the threat or treatment by authority, since i had said i have a strong reactance to it. I may add another comment to talk about that, but this comment is long enough.
And by the way, even tho this conversation is about serious things, I'm comfortable with it and hope you are too.
HernanLG
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Will likes this.
Will
in reply to Wayne Radinsky • • •Back to the idea that sometimes constraints are enablers. When your geometry teacher discouraged you from moving on to trig, something may have been going on that you as a student couldn't yet know.
As just an example to illustrate, a person could make the case that geometry and trig are not a sequence. They are actually conceptually quite different. In a way, geometry could be considered more profound, it doesn't depend on number theory. Maybe your teacher wanted you to go deep rather than broad to fully grasp the fundamentals.
This is only to suggest the idea of students sometime not appreciating constraints.
And i might be out of my depths on geometry and number theory. Just taking some literary license.