in reply to Tamas G

also something new I learned: In Canada, "reading socks" are cozy, thick, often fleece-lined slipper socks designed for warmth and comfort while reading, popular in bookstores like Chapters/Indigo and sold by various Canadian retailers and artisans, featuring styles from simple fleece to Canadian-themed designs using wool or synthetic blends. Until now I have not heard the term "reading socks" used, but it makes perfect sense!

Wow, so excited! My replacement Cadence arrived today. Tactile Engineering were kind enough to also include for us four hard-shell cases, so both Jess and myself get two of them, one for each Braille display unit. These cases are rectangular and pocketable, with a nice pocket for a charging cable on the inside, and a strap that you can secure over the display whilst it is in the case to keep it from moving around. Really like them, it'll really be useful for my international travels.
New display works perfect, no uncalibrated pins causing troubles on it.
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I was asked by a family member why it was taking so long to paste something large into a new Microsoft Word document on their computer, I sarcastically replied it was because it takes a while to upload it all to the copilot AI nonense first. And then I realized accidentally I might be right...I disabled copilot in Word and it went back to being instant again

So that's cool that Microsoft seems uploading everything you paste into a new Word doc to their servers now.

“‘If a fire occurs in the cabin, if we land on water, don’t check on the immigrants. Just make sure that you and the guards and the people that work for the government get off," one flight attendant was told.

“It was as if the detainees’ lives were worthless,’” said another.

Revisit our #3 most-read story of 2025: propublica.org/article/inside-…

#ICE #Immigration #Deportation #Immigrants #Aviation #Journalism

How is the English word “detergent” pronounced where you live?

#poll #pronunciation #regionalism

  • / dɪˈtɜr gənt / a hard “g”; as in “get” (0%, 0 votes)
  • / dɪˈtɜr dʒənt / a softer “g”; like “jet” (100%, 14 votes)
  • Use both pronunciations (0%, 0 votes)
  • Neither — just call it soap (0%, 0 votes)
14 voters. Poll end: in 22 hours

From Facebook: 🤣 Embarrassing Medical Exams – Doctor Stories You Can’t Make Up
1. The Wrong Cab

A man bursts into the ER shouting, “My wife’s having a baby in the cab!”

I grab my kit, dash outside, fling open a taxi door, lift the woman’s dress, and start pulling off her underwear.

That’s when I realize—there are six cabs lined up.

I was in the wrong one.

— Dr. Mark MacDonald
2. Big Breaths

During rounds, I place my stethoscope on an elderly woman’s chest.

“Big breaths,” I instruct.

She sighs and replies, “Yes… they used to be.”

— Dr. Richard Byrnes
3. The Internal Fart

I had to deliver the worst news: “I’m so sorry. Your husband has passed away from a massive myocardial infarction.”

Minutes later, I overhear her telling the family, “He died of a massive internal fart.”

— Dr. Susan Steinberg
4. The Patch Problem

At a check-up, a man complains about one of his medications.

“Which one?” I ask.

“The patch,” he says. “The nurse told me to put on a new one every six hours. Now I’m running out of places to stick it!”

I ask him to undress.

He has over fifty patches plastered on his body.

(Instructions now clearly say: remove old patch first.)

— Dr. Rebecca St. Clair
5. Bedridden?

While meeting a new elderly patient, I ask gently, “How long have you been bedridden?”

She looks puzzled and says, “Not since my husband died—about 20 years.”

— Dr. Steven Swanson
6. Kentucky Jelly

Checking on a patient one morning, I ask, “How’s breakfast?”

“Good,” he says, “except for the Kentucky Jelly. Can’t get used to the taste.”

Curious, I ask to see it. He hands me a foil packet of KY Jelly.

— Dr. Leonard Kransdorf
7. Keep Off the Grass

A punky young woman comes in with appendicitis—purple Mohawk, tattoos, piercings.

On the operating table, we discover green-dyed pubic hair and a tattoo above it that says: “Keep off the grass.”

After surgery, the surgeon couldn’t resist writing on the bandage: “Sorry… had to mow the lawn.”

— Anonymous RN
8. The Whistling Exam

As a young OB resident, I was embarrassed doing pelvic exams, so I developed a nervous habit—whistling.

One day, mid-exam, a patient bursts out laughing.

Blushing, I ask, “Sorry… did I tickle you?”

Through tears she gasps, “No, doctor… but the song you were whistling was ‘I Wish I Was an Oscar Mayer Wiener.’”

— Name withheld for obvious reasons
9. Baby’s First Visit

At a baby’s first check-up, I ask the mother if he’s breastfed or bottle-fed.

“Breastfed,” she says.

“Alright,” I reply. “Strip down to your waist.”

She complies. I carefully pinch, knead, and examine, then shake my head.

“No wonder this baby’s underweight—you don’t have any milk!”

She calmly replies, “I know. I’m his grandmother. But thanks for checking.”

😂
🔥

in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 Yes, I also heard much positive about Iranians as people. BTW, if you don't know, I highly recommend you Farya Faraji on YouTube. He lives in Canada for a long time now and he makes lots of songs in different languages, but what I like about him especially is his epic talks where he tells about Oriental music from a native perspective, not from a Westerner's view. Absolutely must watch for someone interested in music theory.

I have felt annoyed and aggrieved by the 'let's be honest: we had no idea how bad this was gonna be- it's SHOCKING' year in review posts.

Motherfuckers, this is because you live in willful denial. Many of us told you and we aren't fucking Nostradamus- we knew because we simply **listened to what they said they planned to do** **knew and cared about people and communities who had been horrifically impacted last time** and **maintained a basic awareness of the last 100 years of Western history and noticed the places it rhymed**

This is not rocket science and I'm fucking pissed that amnesia and stupidity get to meme 'reality.'

I have been holding that in for weeks; whew.

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#SelfHost week 0.
Phase 1:
in the end I've chosen hostinger. As a first approach. It has a very frustrating interface on adding records when referring to DNS, and even in state/province while registering domain's contact info.
They are combo boxes, detected as edit boxes through #accessibility equipments.
Now waiting for it to propagate dns on #YunoHost 's admin interface on a subdomain.
Installed yuno host via terminal, then even post-installation done via terminal: yunohost tools postinstall or whatever it was.
Had some trouble with letsencrypt in the end, but now they should be solved.
Phase 2 will be installing an app, I'll get to it as soon as everything's on track.
Even thinking of placing #WordPress English speaking blog there. Let's see.

I don't know why I've been seeing this pop up around me regularly lately, but I have. So apparently this needs to be said: it is never, *never* okay to pick and choose who you use the right pronouns, name, and terminology for. You are not allowed to use one person's preferred pronouns, but then refuse to use another's preferred name or pronouns. You are not allowed to make excuses as to why one person's chosen name is too hard, but another person's is not. You use the chosen name and pronouns of anyone and everyone around you. Nobody has any right to pick and choose whose identity is valid and whose is not. Just. Support. Everyone. Who. Is. Identifying. In. Good. Faith. And. Not. Harming. Anyone. Else. Fuck sake.