Despite the downvotes you’ve received, I appreciate you posting this, because I am always jazzed to discover “classic” pieces that are new to me.
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I wonder if the poor legibility is part of the point. I would not wear an outrageous t-shirt such as this in public, but I would be even less likely to wear a more legible version — precisely because more people would be able to read it. Poor legibility may evoke curiosity in some people who are too far to read it, and perhaps even result in a humorous surprise when someone who could not originally read the text moves close enough to read it.
Smaller text feels like a whisper, and maybe that’s the effect the designer was going for
AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.netto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Debugging imagesEnglish4·2 months agoOh, I love this one, it’s very silly. I find it oddly grounding when I discover that the cause of a problem was me being silly, because I’m already aware that I am prone to foolish errors (as all humans are); when I discover that an unfathomable computer error is actually my fault, it feels like everything is right with the world
AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.netto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Modern Font RequirementsEnglish1·2 months agohttps://www.codingfont.com/ is a fun, tournament style quiz that compares different monospace fonts. It’s far from comprehensive, but I found it useful to gauge what font features I find stylish and readable
(For the record, my go-to font is Jetbrains Mono)
AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.netto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•I like seeing the numbers go upEnglish1·1 year agoThat’s a really interesting question, I don’t know what that might look like.
As a biochemist, my brain naturally goes to the different hierarchical levels of increasing complexity in life. Like how eukaryotic amoebas are freed from some of the challenges that constrain bacteria (mitochondria really are awesome), and how similarly, the complexity ceiling is much higher for multicellular life than unicellular life.
I just think a systems view of stuff is neat, and it’s cool to see how modularisation, coupling and specialisation work together
Only a couple. I can imagine that “the user is not the enemy” may be a difficult sentiment for some people with heavily user-facing roles. I’m curious what federated service you’re interfacing with this from. I imagine that’s why you didn’t see the votes on your comment. I am posting this via Lemmy