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i'm sure i have some mutual who will enjoy a sword post
Gripping a sword overview
he's gonna regret this isn't he.
this is where ill post quirky, relatable posts about love, life and shame.
just after pigs fly, hell freezes over, and i go to therapy.
@bluestarlett
Me when I see a picture of ✨The Character™✨:
giving all 5 of you colorful leaves
enjoy your leaves :)
rb this post to give the person u rbed it from a pretty fall leaf :]
if i made a cccc ask blog but it's more my HMSonas(...?) would that be weird or no i need opinions
do you like how i walk?
do you like how i walk?
do you like how my face disintegrates into walk?
There’s a scientific journal called “Get me off Your Fucking Mailing List”.
In 2005, computer scientists David Mazières and Eddie Kohler created this highly profane ten-page paper as a joke, to send in replying to unwanted conference invitations. It literally just contains that seven-word phrase over and over, along with a nice flow chart and scatter-plot graph.
An Australian computer scientist named Peter Vamplew sent it to the International Journal of Advanced Computer Technology in response to spam from the journal. Apparently, he thought the editors might simply open and read it.
Instead, they automatically accepted the paper — with an anonymous reviewer rating it as “excellent” — and requested a fee of $150. While this incident is pretty hilarious, it’s a sign of a bigger problem in science publishing. This journal is one of many online-only, for-profit operations that take advantage of inexperienced researchers under pressure to publish their work in any outlet that seems superficially legitimate.