merde

/s

notated as

☞ "Information wants to be free"

No. 14 chair - Wikipedia

1d 54m ago in wikipedia@sh.itjust.works from en.wikipedia.org

France to ditch Palantir’s AI data tools in favour of domestic provider

1d 1h ago in privacy@lemmy.dbzer0.com from www.theguardian.com

Food should not be a commodity

3d 2h ago in flippanarchy@lemmy.dbzer0.com from lemmy.dbzer0.com

when you read/listen/watch about inventors from the industrialisation period, they were often—if not always—motivated by profit and not philanthropy.

was "civilisation" ever a goal or just something that happened? A hypocrite idea of moral progression?

We gotta teach history more

4d 1h ago in flippanarchy@lemmy.dbzer0.com from lemmy.dbzer0.com

In ancient Greece, publicly owned slaves were used by magistrates as police.

?

In Babylonia, law enforcement tasks were initially entrusted to individuals with military backgrounds or imperial magnates during the Old Babylonian period, but eventually, law enforcement was delegated to officers known as paqūdus, who were present in both cities and rural settlements. A paqūdu was responsible for investigating petty crimes and carrying out arrests.

In ancient Egypt evidence of law enforcement exists as far back as the Old Kingdom period. There are records of an office known as "Judge Commandant of the Police" dating to the fourth dynasty. During the fifth dynasty at the end of the Old Kingdom period, warriors armed with wooden sticks were tasked with guarding public places such as markets, temples, and parks, and apprehending criminals. …

all from easily accessible https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police

Struggling with portraits.

8d 1h ago in watercolor@lemmy.ml from i.imgur.com

if i was invited to give you an advice, i would ask you to stop searching for lines and try to draw forms instead. A face is just a consolidation of different volumes

Stealth rule

8d 1h ago in onehundredninetysix@lemmy.blahaj.zone from lemmy.dbzer0.com

Statistically, cows pose a much greater threat to Americans than bears and sharks combined. Cattle reportedly kill roughly 20 people each year in the United States, while fatal bear and shark attacks average about two per year for each species.

Map of Byzantium/Constantinople/Istanbul, 16th century AD (Franz Hogenberg)

11d 5h ago in traditional_art from media.piefed.social

This is a classical oriented map. As in "the orient (the east) is up".

are you sure about that?

27938

Qui que quod, cujus cujus cujus…

11d 6h ago in latin@piefed.social from sh.itjust.works

cat and mouse by Günter Grass

thanks for the reply

when i saw this, it had only 2 downclicks. sorry, but i had to get it to 3

Aloha

12d 20h ago in wikipedia@sh.itjust.works from en.wikipedia.org

Quote ppl you answer.

indeed

out on a bike you see much easier than when you're sitting in a box on wheels.

when i'm driving i don't even consider "not adhering to Stop signs", when i'm on a bike slowing down is enough to look and consider stopping or continuing

i should also remind that bikes do not weigh a ton and don't kill a million people every year

Shooting and crying

16d 8h ago in wikipedia@sh.itjust.works from en.wikipedia.org

Sarah Benton described it as "an act through which the soldier cleans his conscience (at least somewhat), without taking personal responsibility or any practical steps, either to prevent 'inappropriate behaviour by soldiers in the field' as it occurs or to redress injustice and prosecute criminals later."

also linked from the article page
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltz_with_Bashir

toom uch

19d 2m ago in imageai@sh.itjust.works from sh.itjust.works

behind the dohyo

20d 23h ago in sumo from sh.itjust.works

jean pads

21d 8m ago in diy@lemmy.ml from lemmy.ml

Cuscuta

23d 23h ago in wikipedia@sh.itjust.works from en.wikipedia.org

from the wikipedia page for origami

24d 23h ago in origami@feddit.org from sh.itjust.works

20240308

28d 55m ago in imageai@sh.itjust.works from sh.itjust.works