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Over on Twitter, we post a healthy mix of politics, book promotion and tripe.
Mastodon seems like a cooler place to be, so we'll probably dial back the politics and concentrate instead on a more leisurely dive into our #books and #tripe. We've also been asked if we can provide more of an insight into the workings of the TMB. It's a deal!

A cryptobro DMed me to ask if I wanted to join his mailing list.

I spent slightly too long making this to send in reply.

RT @dorrismccomics@twitter.com

Since 2019 I’ve been in an expensive, stressful legal battle to protect Webcomic Name (my “oh no” comics). It’s a relief to finally talk about this publicly! I’m launching a crowdfunder to pay my
remaining legal fees to end this. 1/8 gofund.me/7478032b

🐦🔗: twitter.com/dorrismccomics/sta

Real long aggregation of Mastodon etiquette for birdsite expats 

Some Mastodon thoughts, for bird-site expats (which include myself). I'm aggregating these from posts I've boosted before, so little of this is my own brain.

- There's no algorithm here. That means favoriting/liking doesn't do anything except communicate approval to the OP and others (which is still nice!).

- No algorithm means boosting ("retweeting") is the true method to increase a post's visibility. Do that more than you did on birdsite.

- There's no post-quoting here, and that's by design. Look at quote-tweets on the birdsite; it's a feature primarily used for toxicity.

- There's no direct word-search here either; that means you want to use hashtags to make posts more searchable. This is also intended, since word-searching posts was often used to harass/stalk on the birdsite and elsewhere, so that was left by the wayside here. This also means hashtags are much more a thing here than any of the algorithm-powered sites.

- It's encouraged to put in text descriptions when you post images; a lot of Mastodon users use screen-readers due to various disabilities, and getting an image description read out loud helps them immensely.

- Speaking of screen-readers: using capitalization in your hashtags allows the screen-readers to read them more easily, especially if you're smashing multiple words together. #rockmusic = unreadable. #RockMusic = readable.

- The best way to make threads is to make set your first post as public, but "unlist" all of your replies. This prevents your whole thread from clogging up feeds.

- Content Warnings should be used more liberally here. If you haven't gotten the impression yet, much of Mastodon was built and populated by marginalized groups who were harassed/bullied off of other platforms. This is the culture they built, to respect each other's mental health. It's not a rule, but it's well-appreciated.

- Consider chipping a few bucks towards whomever runs the server you're on; the strain is real, and most server admins were likely paying out of pocket before so don't have an existing donation base. The growth here has been extremely fast, and that means money's needed.

- DMs are just posts with privacy settings. So if you @ someone in a DM, you pull them into the thread. That could be embarrassing.

- Also, no, DMs aren't end-to-end encrypted, but they aren't on Twitter either. Don't use either if you want true privacy.

- Including your Mastodon handle in your birdsite profile will help people find you here; there's a tool (pruvisto.org/debirdify/ is one of them that's used) people can use to pull Mastodon handles from Twitter profile.

- Use the blocking and reporting features liberally, if needed. This should go without saying, but they work, and work well!

- If there's an entire Mastodon server you don't want to hear from, you can block the whole thing too.

- Preferences -> Appearance -> "Slow Mode": this can make larger "Local" feeds and any "Federated" feed much more readable.

I'll reply with some more as I see them, or reply here too. I've only been here 4 days but I'm loving it so far.

@mikegalsworthy Not a place for fighting, do that on the bird site, a place to share info, jokes, discuss - what the bird site was to some extent except for all the unpleasant folk there. This is not an echo chamber, just a lot more fun and also when necessary, serious.

@stephenfry follow @davidallengreen who is assembling a lot of extremely useful info on matters proboscidean. I find relearning very rejuvenating!

Code is up now and seems functional. Still a few internal rough edges I’d like to polish..

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@doc The reward system is twisted, that is well established. The divisions seen by the change of publication system by eLife demonstrates this nicely.

You expect me to present the summary of the current research projects, doing what we always do; blowing the little work we could do way out of proportion again. Taking credit for what others could achieve. Blowing that out of proportion too. Every year just a little more fantastic, until even we can’t tell fact from fiction anymore. More papers, more grants, more shine.

1/2

A short account of a recent paper led by Steve Butler on the development of a europium (III) radiometric sensor for PAP/PAPS. Of interest to ferniglab.wordpress.com/2022/1

You'd think that a class of drugs that sells in truckloads would be understood a lot better than antidepressants are. Commentary here: nytimes.com/2022/11/08/well/mi
But it doesn't even mention regression to the mean: dcscience.net/2015/12/11/place
The problem is that it's very hard to say whether or not a drug works in some people but not in others.

BTW - I’m absolutely delighted that we smashed our £90K crowdfunder target to make our 90-min documentary on Brexit.

This will be THE authoritative analysis. And it was funded by over 3,000 of you and counting (broke through 3,000 just now - 3,005 now!).

We’re also getting what we call “hive research” rolling to support the info-gathering. So if you know some key case studies/ data/ resources, please email: BrexitDoc@Byline.TV

byline.tv/brexitdocumentary/

I saw that it was Aaron Swartz’ 36th birthday, and looked back at what I wrote about his case, and his suicide, almost ten years ago.

It all holds up, but it’s kind of darkly amusing to figure out that when I was writing this about how well people mask their depression I was profoundly depressed and nobody knew. So, QED, I guess?

popehat.com/2013/03/24/three-t

@richvn Which likely is why GoP supporters have become so profoundly anti science, as shown by @jburnmurdoch recent analysis

I forgot the captions so here it is

Elon Musk did not found Tesla, nor did he invent the car.

Tesla was founded and built originally by Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning.

Elon Musk isn't why SpaceX is successful, either.

That would be the real genius behind the rocket.

His name is Tom Mueller.

And Tom Mueller designed the successful rocket.

Elon Musk is not a genius, and he invents nothing.

He just buys companies and steals all the credit.

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Sci Am on being told to 'stay in your lane':
"Science is relevant to every element of society, including policy and politics.
As a publication committed to explaining the world around us, that means that every lane is our lane."
scientificamerican.com/article

PhD studentship available for research on pregnancy and early childhood using Understanding Society
@iseressex
Can be MSc + Phd, or just PhD
Fully funded!
Full details: understandingsociety.ac.uk/res
Apply by 28 Feb

UK Politics; Brexit; Law 

“A plan by ministers to review or repeal all EU laws on the UK statute book by the end of 2023 has suffered another setback after the discovery of 1,400 additional pieces of legislation”

I’ll save the political analysis for someone else because all I have is: LOL 😆

#EURetainedLawBill #UKPolitics #JacobReesMogg #Brexit #RishiSunak

on.ft.com/3EdpVP7

I think one thing that bothers me a lot with anything tech related is that while, yes, a lot of things can definitely have improved UX that is more user friendly, a lot of other things already have great UX that has been polished for years but gets a lot of undeserved criticism simply for being different from the status quo and/or requiring even the smallest amount of learning or effort

and I honestly entirely blame corporations that over the last 20 years have done everything to create walled gardens with the promise of "we do everything for you, if you have to think while using a computer that means it's bad"
and it's terrifying how well that worked on so so so many people

sometimes things just require you to sit down for half an hour, read something, learn something, try something you're not used to. that's normal. that is simply how anything even remotely advanced has worked for the thousands of years. you don't pick up an electric drill and throw a tantrum because it doesn't work exactly like a screwdriver. computers are a tool that let you do things, and just like any other tool, may require putting at least the smallest amount of effort into learning something

it's honestly frustrating how normalized "nuh uh i got adopted by [corporation's walled garden] and this is where i live for the rest of my life. anything even slightly different is just bad. why would I ever consider anything else, that's effort and effort is bad" has become

I understand that habits can be very strong, and I get it, adjusting to new things takes time, but it's not the end of the world. "more complex" doesn't necessarily mean "worse", it just means you would need to learn and adjust. teaching math at school doesn't stop at pre-algebra, it goes all the way to trigonometry and calculus because there's a good reason for it to be more complicated than the basics. learn something new, it's good for you.

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