• 0 Posts
  • 47 Comments
Joined 8 months ago
cake
Cake day: August 31st, 2025

help-circle


  • Especially with things like cyberattacks (institution losing access to your accounts), scamming (you lose access to your accounts), power failures (everyone loses access to their accounts), etc.

    I mean, I literally have a small stash of money in the closet (some 20’s and a bunch of smaller notes), so that if a semi-major disaster hits, I can still buy any supplies I can find that I need - gas, water, food, a couple nights in a hotel, whatever. Plastic is a great backup system, but it relies on me having my card, my card having enough money free, the merchant having power to run the card, the merchant’s communications working, the system they link into having power and communications, etc. With cash, it’s just “here, take this” and it’s all good.







  • SkyeLight@piefed.socialtoMemes@sopuli.xyzcool
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    10
    ·
    2 months ago

    In my college Sociology class, my professor ran us through a couple situations, then ran them back for us. Gender-wise, women tended to make small interjections, nod their heads, etc, as the conversation went among, to indicate that they were listening. Which apparently leads into two “classic” complaints between M/F partners.

    Men tended to think that women were “always changing their minds”, because the men interpreted the women’s nods and interjections as agreement instead of “I’m listening to you”.

    And women tended to think that men “weren’t listening to them” because men never provided this feedback.


  • Hey, here’s a TIL: that’s a specific part of a newspaper article, generally called a drophead or a deck. The drophead appears between the headline and the byline, is often in a font partway between that used in the headline and that used in the article, and typically provides one of three types of additional information:

    A) important additional context, usually some combination of who, what, where, when, or why;

    B) explain why it matters;

    C) or sets the tone.

    As a specific part of a newspaper column, it has it’s own set of linguistic and stylistic rules. One of those rules is that (as with headlines) it may drop “unnecessary” words. In this case, the drophead has been transformed from Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, [who is] known for [his] lavish lifestyle, [is] also accused of theft and being [an] illegal immigrant after [a] man [was] allegedly shot in back to it’s current form.

    My one quibble with this particular drop head is the use of “being illegal immigrant” instead of the “illegal immigration” that I personally would have found ‘smoother’ to read. However, there may be language differences that explain their decision [it was written by the South African correspondent of a British paper, and I’m from the States]; alternatively, there may be some legal distinction between being accused of “being [an] illegal immigrant” vs being accused of “illegal immigration”. I don’t know what the reason for that specific wording is and I’m not invested in this article enough to go research it.

    But anyway, tl;dr: that’s a drophead, which is a specific part of a newspaper article with it’s own linguistic and stylistic rules.






  • Her ear is purple because the light is coming from the right. The top of her ear is in shadow - but it’s also being lit from underneath, through the thin skin of her ears. And her ears are pink because of her skin color, her fur color, and the blood running through. Blue/twilight shading from being in the shade, mixed with being underlit with pink, is purple.