arbe

turing-complete cretin

Short for Argon Beryllium.

I program and occasionally make 3D art.

My autism didn't come with any superpowers, I want a refund.


personal site
arbe.neocities.org/

blackle
@blackle
  1. https://www.sciencemediacentre.org/
    It seems like most of science reporting are lines verbatim from a lab/org's press release. This organization asks experts for comments on these releases so that journalists can have secondary opinions to pull quotes from.

  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Perennial_sources
    This is wikipedia's list of sources whose reliability is not immediately obvious. Includes links to discussions for each source.

  3. http://cs.gettysburg.edu/~duncjo01/archive/icons/iconolog/giffed/archives.html
    The Iconolog is a set of old 32x32 pixel icons from a variety of categories. Click on the links in the "Online Display" column. Useful for theming

  4. https://josephrocca.github.io/clip-image-sorter/
    CLIP image search engine for your own files (entirely in the browser!) Chrome only unfortunately

  5. https://www.are.na/evan-collins-1522646491
    Evan Collin's massive collection of different aesthetics. very fun to browse around stuff like "bubbleglam" and "wacky pomo"

  6. https://www.crowdsupply.com/
    Crowdfunding website just for cool hobby electronics


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in reply to @blackle's post:

Hell yeah, I use the Perennial Sources list all the time when determining if some site I've never seen before carries any sort of clout. Sometimes, I find that a site that looks legit and professional is actually user-submitted and has little to no editorial or fact-checking policy (e.g. "Forbes Staff" vs. "Forbes Contributors").