charitybimbo
Virgin
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2023
- Posts
- 159
A boner of a boner.
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I was just teasing, hunI'm just saying that your threads tend to get the creative juices flowing... titillate the muse... feed the plotbunnies
The funny thing is that is more of a return to its roots. Hacking apparently originally referred to the act of modifying model railway engines to add new functionality - coincidentally at the MIT Tech model railway club:Somebody already pointed it out, but the word "hack" comes to mind because suddenly it's omnipresent. I'm not a computer aficionado but I've been familiar with its use in the sense of "computer hacking" for decades. But now it seems to be the go-to phrase in all types of media for "handy solution" or something like that.
The things you learn on Lit!The funny thing is that is more of a return to its roots. Hacking apparently originally referred to the act of modifying model railway engines to add new functionality - coincidentally at the MIT Tech model railway club:
https://theworld.org/stories/2017-01-04/what-hack
from there I guess it bled into programming, and from there into criminal enterprise, and from there it's circled back to its original engineering term.
Unfortunately the "like" emoticons don't have... You don’t need to be Doctor Spock from Star Trek to work that out! (You see what I did there?).
I also use Frankenstein as a verb, the act of putting together a whole from parts.And the king of them all…
FRANKENSTEIN!
Gets used as the monster/creature, when Frankenstein was the Scientist. You don’t need to be Doctor Spock from Star Trek to work that out! (You see what I did there?).
I love teaching you things.The things you learn on Lit!
Em
You're giving birth to a new usage.And the king of them all…
FRANKENSTEIN!
Gets used as the monster/creature, when Frankenstein was the Scientist. You don’t need to be Doctor Spock from Star Trek to work that out! (You see what I did there?).
That…would be an acceptable variation and a good use of an existing word.I also use Frankenstein as a verb, the act of putting together a whole from parts.
The original hacks were the latter definition - getting a computer to do something outside the original specification. Over time one subcategory of hacks became ways to break into or otherwise misuse a computer. This became popularized. At one point (IIRC, in the 80’s), there was an attempt to rebrand malicious activity as cracking instead of hacking. It didn’t work.It had a dual meaning of trying to break into a system you don't have access to, and to make the computer do something through clever manipulation.
I call Frankfurters Frankenfurters. It gets me odd looks.That…would be an acceptable variation and a good use of an existing word.
Cracking is whitehat isn't it?The original hacks were the latter definition - getting a computer to do something outside the original specification. Over time one subcategory of hacks became ways to break into or otherwise misuse a computer. This became popularized. At one point (IIRC, in the 80’s), there was an attempt to rebrand malicious activity as cracking instead of hacking. It didn’t work.
Speaking of insults derived from disability, "dumb" was a term for mute. Hence "dumb animals" etc.That’s really odd. I don’t use spaz, but I say lame all the time. Never made the connection, how dumb am I?
It feels totally disconnected from a disability.
Em
Both white- and black-hat types hack & crack. It’s all in how the result is used. White hats try to improve security, black hats to get around, break, or otherwise make security useless.Cracking is whitehat isn't it?
Batman #66, 1951:Boner used to be slang for a mistake.
This way lies madness. Language changes.Speaking of insults derived from disability, "dumb" was a term for mute. Hence "dumb animals" etc.
This way lies madness. Language changes.
Em
My comment is around the fact that it has already changed.It does, but that's an "is" statement which doesn't offer us guidance on the specifics of how it ought to change.
Is it reasonable to expect that such a thing is possible to accomplish? Unless you're going for massive surveillance *cough*China*cough* I'm not sure it is, and even so that only works for areas you can surveil to a high degree.It does, but that's an "is" statement which doesn't offer us guidance on the specifics of how it ought to change.
Graveyards used to associated with churches, which is probably how most people used to be buried. Some wealthy families had their own family plots. Cemetery is still used a lot in the United States, although memorial park is creeping in.The first 'life hacks' might be clever, but yeah, now it includes listicles of ideas only worthy of Viz Top Twips. Avoid the embarrassment of shouting out the wrong name in bed by having flings only with girls who have the same name as your wife.
Passed away I've heard for years - not just from Americans - and sometimes 'passing on' to mean the actual dying bit, but the new one on me is using just 'passed' by itself, which confused me no end when a cousin told me their sibling had passed. Passed their driving test (UK newsworthy announcement, not for an American nearly 50)? Got another degree? Oh, killed themselves. Great.
I understand the need for euphemism especially when it's someone very close to you, but clarity really matters, folks!
In English usage it's only a graveyard if it's around a church, otherwise it's a cemetery. I've not heard memorial park to mean either, only a park with a memorial in it. Yet.
You are of course right. I generally find myself on the opposite side of such arguments - I’m a bisexual millennial / zoomer (I’m kinda in the gray area where one blends into the other) after all.Is it reasonable to expect that such a thing is possible to accomplish? Unless you're going for massive surveillance *cough*China*cough* I'm not sure it is, and even so that only works for areas you can surveil to a high degree.