this one remains topical, although for different reasons than when i wrote it.
it was supposed to be a joke about historians not understanding the past but as i now know there was some truth to it: digital camera colors were still quite bad in 2012, and color post processing helped hiding the lack of fidelity.
i would only change "him" to "them"
i would never be able to think of such a joke. who is this guy!
back then i apparently only made posts when i thought they were supergood¹, different to the utter crap chute i'm running today, so these are in direct succession.
the second one takes a moment, but you'll find it is an excellent improvement upon poppers' paradox.
¹ an incorrect assumption, see further down.
and that day is at hand! soon! any moment now!
a thing that we often did back then was to take sayings and spin them a little, with varying success.
someone should post this once every year.
sounds ominous but which of the two words would you rather want to read?
back then, there were no lows to which i would not stoop
oh man remember the little table flipping dude?
well i'm hearing Half-Life 3 is right around the corner. no, seriously.
some things never change. yes this was and still is about the game we're working on.
by then political events became the loudest thing. increasingly insatiable for public attention and turning unhappier every day, i tried to make lemonade and riff on pop events and trends.
but also post some (in my view) uplifting balancing facts. i still like to do that.
we still didn't get a black pope btw, but we got a south american one, which was a great start.
damn that is a good idea.
i can finally post this to an audience that appreciates me
i notice that every single tweet in the archive has five retweets or more, which means twitter deleted a lot of my older tweets to make server space. i only see this now.
that explains why i couldn't find the tweet i was originally looking for, which roughly went like
"We vowed to never let technology replace human intimacy. But machines had invaded the bedroom a long time ago."
this is still going on in nature documentaries.
still true, due to current events.
@jjacobsson @TomF cones are indeed a great edge case.
tetrahedral meshes are in some ways easier (no spatial gaps, no self-collision, easy lowering to mesh) and harder (steiner points, vertex neighbors have no canonical order).
the post is also about how an established expert in his field is still struggling with it, which goes against expectation. i find it oddly comforting.