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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 2 months ago by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

Check the link for a full-size version (3600 x 4800).

2
submitted 6 months ago by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

This notice was found last summer (July 2023) on St. Clair W., after the Salsa on St. Clair festival.

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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

Photo taken from the west side in late December 2023.

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Eye of Sauron public art in Toronto (ia800501.us.archive.org)
submitted 10 months ago by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/tolkien@lemmy.world

Made using discarded parking tickets, among other things. More images here: https://archive.org/details/lawful-evil-hwmb-03-009

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/greenspace@beehaw.org

There are so many local names for this insect: water strider, water skipper, water skimmer, water bug... got any more?

1
submitted 1 year ago by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/art@lemmy.ca

Short documentary focusing on a few of the artists living in Dafen, China. This village hosts both independent artist studios and fascimilie factories with various connections between the people working in them. The short documentary is subtitled in English (sometimes hard to read), but good production quality. Much of the conversation revolves around the tension between reproduction and originality, and the professional lives of working artists in the village.

19
submitted 1 year ago by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

If you ever want more info about a transit delay than what you get from official communications, or if you want a better sense of daily issues on trains and buses (most of which are never reported to the police/press), check out this unofficial feed: https://www.broadcastify.com/listen/feed/31629

Here's a 1-minute video showing the Transit Control centre where many of these calls are received: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQoKVmNJlSs

[-] huiccewudu@lemmy.ca 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Just a reminder that many former government staff, ex-elected officials, family members and acquaintances of current politicians, etc. are now lobbyists and/or investors in the commercial cannabis sector. For example, Smitherman (CEO of CCC) worked for 4 decades in Ontario politics before becoming a lobbyist. As the retailer quoted in this article says, these politically-connected producers are the intended beneficiaries of pricing changes, not the retailers or customers.

Unfortunately, this is standard business practice in Canada: now that they have achieved market dominance over less-connected peers, they look to the government to help protect their profits, which they will use to purchase struggling competitors to further consolidate the industry and allow them to raise wholesale prices in the future. Once only 2-3 major producers remain in the country, they will have spent two decades lobbying the government and can look forward to protectionist government intervention, price collusion, and guaranteed profits, not unlike Rogers/Bell/Telus enjoy today.

[-] huiccewudu@lemmy.ca 53 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

"In my view, a lot of the general associations we have with drinking in public are negative, like drunkenness in public, drinking and driving, like drunken hoodlums, all of these things — which make the news, but aren't necessarily the only way people consume alcohol in public."

Dr. Malleck quoted here gets close to the source of the problem, which is classism.

Most mayors, city councilors, etc. are doing well financially and they own their own houses (as well as cottages, investment properties, etc.), so the idea of going to a public park to drink outside with friends seems unusual to them. They view public parks as community spaces, but only within their personal perspectives as homeowners, and therefore what is allowed in parks is restricted to class-based moral sensibilities. It's easy for Councilor So-and-So to bring her laptop to her backyard garden patio for another Zoom meeting. The line worker who just wants to sit outside with her family after 12 hours inside sorting chicken meat for Councilor So-and-So's BBQ that weekend... she was an afterthought when it comes to these kinds of public space bylaws.

This disconnect between how municipal leaders and many apartment/condo-dwelling constituents live also explains the conflicts during the pandemic when people wanted to leave the isolation of their apartments for fresh air, but homeowner leaders (with their backyards, cottage retreats, 'working' holidays, etc.) told them to go back inside and threatened them with fines.

We do we have these bylaws? Ignorance rooted in class.

[-] huiccewudu@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Just wanted to add that The Verge article quotes from the source document, but does not include its links, etc. Here's a hyperlinked version, including some specific open source resources, which the author calls 'third faction' content: https://www.semianalysis.com/p/google-we-have-no-moat-and-neither

[-] huiccewudu@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I just reconnected with a friend yesterday afternoon. We ended up talking for two hours and are making plans to meet in a few weeks. The 'sorry-we-lost-touch' part was brushed aside. It felt just like good old times again.

Try sending a text. Maybe your friend misses you too.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/art@lemmy.ca

How can it feel so dry and be so humid at the same time? These days, even the dryads need a better skincare product...

The hand is made from coffee filter. The bottle and 'Dryad' logo are product packaging. The sun is yellow tissue paper, while the haze background is washi paper.

[-] huiccewudu@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 year ago

Hello neighbour. Happy Canada Day to you too. It's going to be a hot one!

[-] huiccewudu@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
  • Significant increase in non-human/bot accounts makes it difficult to know whether you're actually talking to a real person anymore.

  • I was not personally affected by API changes and do not sympathize with for-profit 3rd party developers, however reddit's withdrawal of support for communities like Transcribers of Reddit is mean-spirited and marginalizes our friends and neighbours who want to enjoy social media like everyone else.

  • Nothing good ever happens for an existing userbase when an organization/product joins the zombie death-march of publicly-traded assets. Capitalism will inevitably ruin everything it encounters, and reddit will not be spared from this outcome.

4

Our most productive plant is K. laetivirens, an unusual succulent that yields many plantlets around the edges of its leaves. There are varieties: ours is bright green, resilient, and likes small pots.

We grew a large one (to truly become a mother of thousands). We cultivate its many plantlets in glass pots and anonymously leave them for others in our neighbourhood in Toronto.

More photos of adopted plantlets, etc.

[-] huiccewudu@lemmy.ca 22 points 1 year ago

What I mostly remember is the sense of hard work and discovery.

In the mid-to-late 1990s, after the internet became a public phenomenon, but before it totally dominated our lives, spending time on the web felt very different than it does today. There was no publicly-accessible index of websites, search was in its infancy, and link aggregators as we know them today just didn't exist. For the first time, you didn't need to be a tech-savvy person to experience the WWW, but it was still pretty incomprehensible to most people, who didn't understand what the internet was for.

New "homesteaders" developed websites on free hosts like GeoCities/Tripod/Angelfire; the former host organized itself into "neighbourhoods" of sites because we still thought about the internet as a physical space. Web rings served as pilgrimage routes that connected websites together, irrespective of domain or host, into self-selected communities. They organized around subjects/themes, like Lemmy communities, subreddits, hashtags, etc. are today. They emerged around the same time as public bulletin boards which, for people who were not familiar with BBS, were also a transformative technology, and also the source of life-changing memories.

I am so privileged to have been around to explore the early internet.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by huiccewudu@lemmy.ca to c/art@lemmy.ca
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huiccewudu

joined 1 year ago