:awoo:
Posts
-
:awoo: -
Not everyone can be LucasArts, but everyone sure triedNot everyone can be LucasArts, but everyone sure tried
-
“Hammond of Texas, would you one day show me this ‘House of White’?”“Hammond of Texas, would you one day show me this ‘House of White’?”
-
“Would you still love me if I were a flugtag?”@purple you can tell the Maddie slept by the way it is
-
“Would you still love me if I were a flugtag?”“Would you still love me if I were a flugtag?”
-
"Is it bodgejob or badhack today?""Is it bodgejob or badhack today?"
-
We sure make a lot of plans.We sure make a lot of plans.
Maybe we need a plan planner.
-
I have two work meetings, a Tele health appointment, a hackerspace members meeting, need coffee in me and we just tripped a breaker from a ground short.I have two work meetings, a Tele health appointment, a hackerspace members meeting, need coffee in me and we just tripped a breaker from a ground short.
:ablobcat_cordkamikami:
*screaming*
-
Which one is the ground coffee and which one is the iron oxideWhich one is the ground coffee and which one is the iron oxide
-
My new band name is beanflake.My new band name is beanflake.
-
Don't, be evil!@rgegriff We take your security and privacy, seriously
-
️ CR2032 for scale.@Polychrome @thegibson So, for the Cold War era, we’re mostly talking typewriters, but it would also work for paper printed today. The method is the same.
I made this miniature to-do list by typing it on a typewriter, and then taking an analog photograph of it, and developing the film. What’s photographed above is the negative viewed through a loupe.
If you had access to nation state levels of R&D in the 1960s, you’d be using a special microfiche film and very high grade optical lenses to do this miniaturization process to a much, much higher degree.
Your government spook would then cut the film into a very, very small circle (think 1 millimeter in diameter for a full page of text), coat it in a water-rinsable black ink and glue it to a document. Say, directly onto the third period in the document. Wherever it is, you told your asset at the time where to find it.
Maybe you mailed a benign, bureaucratic form to your contact in a US embassy, for example.
They’d cut the period out, and rinse it in water until just the film remains, read the covert document with a magnifying element, and then destroy it.
I’m way more interested in using this for knowledge preservation on the scale of hundreds or thousands of years. This is the same technique they use at the Svalbard seed vault to store gitlab projects.
-
Where do I go if I want the GMO food@purple Sure but like where do I go to specifically not purchase “non-GMO food”?
Like, I don’t want to support a mass delusion.
I want my money to only go to food producers that take full advantage of the genetic tools available to us for improved food production yield and quality.
My hot take is that this is the most eco-friendly and ethical choice.
-
Where do I go if I want the GMO foodWhere do I go if I want the GMO food
-
️ CR2032 for scale.@thegibson It can be so, so much smaller.
You could conceivably hide a microdot in a period on a piece of printed paper.
In a way, this is mostly the same tech tree that gave us integrated circuits. Just a couple decades too soon.
-
️ CR2032 for scale.️ CR2032 for scale.
-
Queer bitches really be out here not ever stretching and wondering why they're in pain (it me, I'm bitches)Queer bitches really be out here not ever stretching and wondering why they're in pain (it me, I'm bitches)
-
#FilmPhotography -
Not like this…@randomgeek @thegibson Ah yes, the civilized 70s, with the.. *checks notes* Manson murders and vietnam war.
Oh, maybe the 80s? With the.. *checks notes* conspicuous consumption and excess.
Hm.
Well, there are the binders.
-
Not like this…@randomgeek @thegibson A trapper keeper reference?
It's an older code, sir, but it checks out.