Kuro5hin.org: technology and culture, from the trenches
create account | help/FAQ | contact | links | search | IRC | site news
[ Everything | Diaries | Technology | Science | Culture | Politics | Media | News | Internet | Op-Ed | Fiction | Meta | MLP ]
We need your support: buy an ad | premium membership | k5 store

Advertisement
Sponsor: rf0
UK Dedicated servers from £45/mo
Choice of OS. Hosted in the UK
comments?
discussions | active | buy ad

Who's Online? (43)
o Robert Acton
o lostincali
o Delirium
o alevin
o Infe
o mikelist
o Hana Yori Dango
o Morally Inflexible
o Anonymous Heroes: 35

Note: You may cloak yourself from appearing here in your Display Preferences.

Culture The world we live in: Discuss.


[P]
You've got to be brain damaged (Culture)

By mfeltman
Thu Dec 22nd, 2005 at 06:08:31 AM EST

You Know...

I guess you've got to be brain damaged to not worry about stigmatizing yourself by being a decent human being. How embarrassing it is to be friendly and companionable with someone you don't know. What shameful behavior that is.

Full Story (53 comments, 1300 words in story)


[P]
Taking a short flight? (Culture)

By Enlarged to Show Texture
Wed Dec 14th, 2005 at 03:48:26 PM EST

/etc

In this day and age, flying to cities not served by an airline hub (especially to smaller communities) often requires a flight on an aircraft of 70 seats or less. This type of aircraft can also be used for flights where frequent service is required, such as the northeastern United States or short hops within Europe. Although these types of aircraft normally fly trips of 700 nautical miles (NM; 1300km) or less, a few regional jet routes can cover up to 1100 NM (2000km).

Several aircraft companies make (or used to make, in some cases) such aircraft; the most popular ones are made by Bombardier, British Aerospace, Dornier, Embraer, Fokker, Raytheon, and Saab. Seat map sites such as Seatguru can tell you where on the plane to sit for maximum comfort, but don't really provide much information about which planes are the most comfortable. Also, Seatguru can be miserably inconsistent, as some types of aircraft have different recommendations for identically configured aircraft being flown by two different airlines. With that in mind, I will provide my insight in this area on those planes on which I've flown.

Full Story (43 comments, 2001 words in story)


[P]
10,001 Chalmatians (Culture)

By localroger
Sat Nov 19th, 2005 at 09:58:40 AM EST

Culture

I find it a convenient shorthand to tell people I live in New Orleans, but since 1992 I've actually lived in the nearby bedroom community of Mandeville. As many people who actually do live in New Orleans will tell you, though, Mandeville isn't New Orleans. It isn't even close, no matter how easy it is to drive here from there.

The movies would have you think the culture of New Orleans is Cajun French, but that's not so. Cajun culture is centered almost 150 miles from here, in the Acadian parishes surrounding the city of Lafayette. If you want a culture that belongs uniquely to New Orleans, you'd find it in Chalmette and the Ninth Ward, where the language, food, and customs are like no place else on Earth.

Full Story (123 comments, 3291 words in story)


[P]
My North of the Desolate Sea: Travels in Eastern Greenland and Svalbard (Culture)

By oceanbourne
Wed Nov 9th, 2005 at 09:43:40 AM EST

Culture

While visiting my native land--the Faroe Islands--this summer, I became bored and looked for somewhere even more remote and isolated to venture to: somewhere in the Arctic I'd never visited. Having seen most of Scandinavia and much of northern Russia, my choices were limited but had to be apt. I ended up going to Scoresbysund, Greenland and then to Longyearbyen, Svalbard. These are some of the most remote parts of the world and their isolation and insular situation both makes them spellbinding places to visit and also reflections of broader Nordic culture.

This is the story of my journey.

Full Story (84 comments, 5135 words in story)


[P]
Denver Legalizes the Reefer (Culture)

By mtrisk
Sun Nov 6th, 2005 at 07:12:29 PM EST

Focus On...

On November 2, the residents of Denver, Colorado passed the Alcohol-Marijuana Equalization Initiative. With 100% of precincts reporting, the final tally for the vote was 56,001 YES votes to 48,632 NO votes, approximately 54% - 46%. The measure changed city law to allow for possession of up to an ounce of marijuana for adults 21 and over. The act is largely symbolic, though, as state and federal laws supersede local law, and authorities have already stated that state possession laws would be applied. However hope remains, for the passage of the initiative marks Denver as the first area in the nation to legalize private use of marijuana, for recreational as well as medical use. Is the legalization of marijuana at the federal level now within our reach?

Full Story (352 comments, 745 words in story)


[P]
Modern Day Ghouls: The Estate Sale (Culture)

By LilDebbie
Fri Nov 4th, 2005 at 03:39:01 PM EST

/etc

The phone is ringing. It's still dark out. Who the hell calls at this hour? What hour is it anyway?

Waking up is never easy. Waking up at 0620 on a Saturday is especially difficult. The confusion dissipates as I recognize the number on the phone. It's my mom, calling to wake me for the estate sale.

So that's why I slept in my clothes.

Full Story (98 comments, 1295 words in story)


[P]
Lessons from the Hive (Culture)

By xC0000005
Fri Oct 28th, 2005 at 07:37:19 AM EST

/etc

Life, I've been told, is a school. I've always thought that it was more like a college, where your participation determines what you get out of it. I never made it through college, but I've learned a lot in life, and over the past year, I've been engaged in a sort of group learning experience - one of me, thousands of them. They are honeybees, and they teach the lessons of the hive.

Full Story (93 comments, 1697 words in story)


[P]
The Meaning of Punk: A Memoir (Culture)

By Psycho Dave
Wed Oct 26th, 2005 at 08:18:40 AM EST

You Know...

During the spring semester of my sophomore year at the University of Colorado Boulder, I took an entry-level sociology class called Deviance in Society. I registered for the course after a long pot smoking session with this sociology major named Ruthie who'd taken it her freshman year.

"Is that class really as cool as it sounds?" I said, passing the green plastic bong down to where she was sitting barefoot on the rug. I'd been burned before on courses that had cool sounding names, like the Chaos Theory and Non Linear-Systems class that actually expected you to do some pretty intense math.

"Hell yeah," Ruthie said before taking a hit. I watched the brown bong-water bubble at the bottom and realized I really needed to change it. "I loved that class. You learn a lot of neat stuff," she said as she exhaled.

Full Story (115 comments, 6770 words in story)


[P]
Childhood readings (Culture)

By mirleid
Sun Oct 23rd, 2005 at 08:23:55 PM EST

Culture

There comes a time in everybody's life when you realise that you've accumulated too much crap over the years, and that some of it just got to go. You need to make room for the new crap, especially if you are like me and a bit anal about keeping every single thing that you ever bought/got as a gift/found in the street. So, I decided to go through a few boxes filled with assorted stuff. And I found some books that I last read when I was 8.

Full Story (70 comments, 584 words in story)


[P]
Which is the Better Classroom? (Culture)

By uriah923
Sun Oct 9th, 2005 at 11:44:52 AM EST

Technology

Homeschooling came into focus in the late 20th century but is still a relatively seldom used method of educating children. As of 2003, 1.1 million children in the United States are were homeschooled (2.2% of the school age population), up from approximately 850,000 in 1999 (only 1.7% of the school-age population). Those who have been through the homeschooling experience, however, are usually firm defenders of its educational merits and sometimes even have the documentation to back it up. There are those who oppose the homeschool movement, though. Some argue that a responsible citizen should participate in the improvement of the public school system instead of "taking the easy way out" and abandoning it, while others emphasize the professional qualifications of public school instructors.

As both the public/private and homeschool environments implement more of today's technology, which classroom has the upper hand?

Full Story (141 comments, 706 words in story)


Next 10 >>
Sponsors
Voxel dot net
o Managed Servers
o Managed Clusters
o Virtual Hosting


www.johncompanies.com
www.johncompanies.com

Looking for a hosted server? We provide Dedicated, Managed and Virtual servers with unparalleled tech support and world-class network connections.

Starting as low as $15/month
o Linux and FreeBSD
o No set-up fees and no hidden costs
o Tier-one provider bandwidth connections

Login
Make a new account
Username:
Password:

Note: You must accept a cookie to log in.

Poll
On the new servers, K5 seems
o Faster 55%
o Not as fast 0%
o The same 24%
o Broken 4%
o Curious (yellow) 15%

Votes: 309 | Comments: 35
Results | Other Polls

Culture

Wednesday October 5th
o Free software art (44 comments)
o Best Buy or Best Lie? (287 comments)

Sunday September 25th
o The Joy of Conkers (56 comments)

Friday September 23rd
o Devastation (122 comments)

Thursday September 15th
o Niche sport of the day - slalom skateboarding (43 comments)

Wednesday September 14th
o How To Shuffle and Cut a Deck of Cards One-Handed (54 comments)

Friday September 2nd
o Hi, my name is Roger and I am a New Orleanian (253 comments)

Wednesday August 24th
o Displacing America: A New Chinese Empire? (145 comments)

Sunday August 14th
o Two Different Kinds of Faith: A Rant. (232 comments)

Tuesday August 9th
o Our Walled Gardens (102 comments)
o The most beautiful feeling in the world (79 comments)
o Jake the Nazi: A Memoir (72 comments)
o MMOGS: Abandon hope all ye who enter (148 comments)

Friday August 5th
o The Cruelest Cut (981 comments)

Thursday August 4th
o "Murder Simulators" East/West (117 comments)

Older Stories...

Section Stories
Browse all the newest headlines by section >>

Welsh Flout School Prayer Law
by mr strange
MLP::News

On the Validity of War, from a Liberal POV
by circletimessquare
Op-Ed::Freedom

You've got to be brain damaged
by mfeltman
Culture::You Know...

New "voice chat" feature proposed for mobile phones
by David Gerard
Technology::Humour

Miller Time 12/25
by jolly st nick
Fiction::Culture

Taking a short flight?
by Enlarged to Show Texture
Culture::/etc

Christmas Lights for Celiac Disease
by hulkster
Internet::News

New Diaries
Being Anonymous on the Internet
by IncubatedVitamin

my favorite computer games
by faggoth

Total Fragmentation
by abegetchell

Ahh, right wingers
by So Very Tired

lol Merry Christmas K5
by some nerd

I really hope kitten coded a script...
by bighappyface

lol what
by levesque

Paladin vs. Priest for my reroll
by Paulsweblog

Tubbies on tap, or lemon sauces guide to getting laid
by ankarbass

Happy Birthday Jesus!
by LilDebbie

Merry Christmas All
by Grayworld

Holiday dinner
by Enlarged to Show Texture

I haven't seen a fat girl for ages..
by RandomAction

Help with a physics simulation.
by My Other Account Is A Heterosexual

happy holidays
by mariahkillschickens

kuro5hin.org

[XML]
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies. The Rest © 2000 - 2005 Kuro5hin.org Inc.
See our legalese page for copyright policies. Please also read our Privacy Policy.
Kuro5hin.org is powered by Free Software, including Apache, Perl, and Linux, The Scoop Engine that runs this site is freely available, under the terms of the GPL.
Need some help? Email help@kuro5hin.org.
If you can read this, you are sitting too close to your screen.

Powered by Scoop create account | help/FAQ | mission | links | search | IRC | YOU choose the stories! K5 Store by Jinx Hackwear Syndication Supported by NewsIsFree