Chuck D. Bones
Circuit Wizard
Engrish.
Actually the analogy (excuse the pun) of using a rectum for a diode is quite accurate - in theory. A rectum should only allow the flow in one direction. I guess that's where the fire comes in.Spotted on reddit
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I believe you're referring to a sphincter.Actually the analogy (excuse the pun) of using a rectum for a diode is quite accurate - in theory. A rectum should only allow the flow in one direction. I guess that's where the fire comes in.
*Deletes search history*I think you're right! Close enough for the sake of an internet joke though.
I do think that sphincter is a word we should use online more often.
I do think that sphincter is a word we should use online more often.
The Mac is Not a Typewriter.This is half joke, half manifesto
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Em and en dashes are fundamentals to me. I was educated in the autumn years of peak print design and, typographically speaking, these are required glyphs; essential.
I use En a lot, but the way I write, I rarely use an Em dash.
Precisely this. I manage and review a lot of pharma submissions (CMC, specifically, if you care) that include specification ranges so en dash is an hourly thing for me. As is the negative sign... I have a whole list of alt-numpad keycodes memorized for these things. For reasons of "boring-is-good" Times New Roman is the preferred font for regulatory submissions around the world, and while it may be boring, it has almost every glyph I ever use (Cambria Math slides in occasionally).Grossly oversimplified: em dashes are for interjections and abrupt vectors to end clauses or sentences; en dashes are for numerals, such as in numerical differentials; hyphens are self-explanatory; and if one wanted to get Bringhurst levels of typographical anal-retentiveness, the subtraction glyph is completely separate. And only a well-crafted typeface will have all of them. (And ligatures, too.)
Sadly, I haven't set them up on Linux. I know them both on Mac OS and Windows by muscle memory.
BwahahahahahahahahahahahaTerrible jokes are my speciality. Just ask my wife. Terrible jokes have to be a speciality because they're harder to tell.
There is a joke that I'm always hesitant to tell because it can easily be considered dated and sexist. I like to think it's funny because we laugh at it in an ironic "yes it might be considered sexist but seeing as we are all educated here and know that it's obviously sexist we can see past that to the pure absurdity of it" kinda way. As in the sexism is part of the absurdity. My wife, who is a writer and has an honours degree in philosophy laughed at it. She also has a 2nd degree black belt in Muay Thai kickboxing and a brown belt in Krav Maga, so I am justifiably scared of her. Just remember that there is no woman involved in a bad situation here - it is completely fictional, and the implied violence is purely for the sake of the joke.
What do you say to a (metaphorical) woman with two black eyes? Nothing. You already told her twice.