• Re: smartphone for ui dif

    From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Dumas Walker on Sun Dec 7 13:01:04 2025
    Dumas Walker wrote to GAMGEE <=-

    I sure hope you write better source code than you do English "sentences"... To be honest it looks like pointless rambling from a 12 year old.

    We all started somewhere in our journey through eclectic, retro tech...

    True enough; but were most (all?) of us capable of composing a
    reasonably correct/legible sentence before doing so?

    If our first language was English, probably. Otherwise, it could prove
    a little more difficult for someone.

    I suppose that's a good point, but... The lack of capital letters and punctuation might support my point a little.

    IIRC, I had at least two years of typing class, and half of a
    (Commodore) BASIC programming class under my belt before accessing my first BBS. I don't think they offer either such things to high
    schoolers these days. :D

    Probably not, and that's not a good thing. That timeslot is now given
    over to DEI-type "lessons". :-(




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  • From MRO@VERT/BBSESINF to Accession on Sun Dec 7 21:41:48 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to Dumas Walker on Sun Dec 07 2025 03:46 pm


    I'm not sure how they do it in the inner cities, but out here in the suburbs, there is all of that. My kids' high school has woodworking, metals/welding, pottery, agriculture, cooking and probably more that
    I can't think of. They also still teach cursive writing, but they
    don't push it as necessary, say the Pledge of Allegiance every
    morning, and play the National Anthem before every sporting event.


    i think it depends on the school district. the one in my city which isnt really inner city got tons of money and every year did a referendum to get more money. They still shut down schools and took out woodworking, metal shop, and cooking classes.

    they also changed my step daughter's school into a fine arts school so they could get different funding and drop some types of courses.

    Let's not get too carried away here by saying it's not offered
    to high schoolers, because it definitely is. It probably just
    depends on how much the community cares about their children's

    it looks like in my old school district they have 'digital citizenship' wtf
    is that. and web design with html/css and wordpress. digital media and programming fundementals. so not much but what can you expect.
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  • From phigan@VERT/TACOPRON to Accession on Mon Dec 8 02:27:28 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to Dumas Walker on Sun Dec 07 2025 03:46 pm

    I'm not sure how they do it in the inner cities, but out here in the suburbs there is all of that. My kids' high school has woodworking, metals/welding,

    Yeah the school over here, which isn't hoity toity rich but isn't poor either, offers some kind of programming class still. Probably Python. It has a "computer basics" course requirement, though, that you can't test out of. So, you have to go through remedial BS, and then you can program. Pretty lame.

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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to phigan on Mon Dec 8 07:53:15 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: phigan to Accession on Mon Dec 08 2025 02:27 am

    I'm not sure how they do it in the inner cities, but out here in the
    suburbs there is all of that. My kids' high school has woodworking,
    metals/welding,

    Yeah the school over here, which isn't hoity toity rich but isn't poor either, offers some kind of programming class still. Probably Python. It has a "computer basics" course requirement, though, that you can't test out of. So, you have to go through remedial BS, and then you can program. Pretty lame.

    That's a bit lame about the computer basics class..

    During my junior or senior year in high school (1997 or 1998), for an elective, I took the computer programming class they were offering; I was hoping they would be teaching C++ or something, but they were teaching BASIC. Also, they were using a textbook from around 1978 at the time, which was pretty old even then. And they were using PCs with DOS, and the instructor was having us use Microsoft's QBASIC, I believe.

    Nightfox

    ---
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  • From MRO@VERT/BBSESINF to Accession on Tue Dec 9 05:16:46 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to MRO on Mon Dec 08 2025 04:52 pm

    quite a bit on location with regards to proximity to Milwaukee,
    Madison, and maybe even La Crosse or Eau Claire. It seems most of
    the schools /between/ Milwaukee and Madison (out of the county,
    most likely) have most of these things either still in place, or are
    putting them back into the schools.

    not sure. it's hard to look into such things. you need to know someone with
    a kid in the schools so you can find out.

    i think the nicer religious private schools have more to offer.

    they also changed my step daughter's school into a fine arts school
    so they could get different funding and drop some types of courses.

    That's probably an entirely different topic. Seems they specifically
    planned to go another route completely.

    in the news they said it was to save money and avoid being shut down.

    it looks like in my old school district they have 'digital
    citizenship' wtf is that. and web design with html/css and wordpress. digital media and programming fundementals. so not much but what can
    you expect.

    At least they're doing something. Although, I have no idea what the
    first subject would be about or what it would cover.

    there's not enough time in the classes to teach a kid how to program or anything in depth. i think it's all fundamentals, just to get their feet
    wet.

    I know my highschool was letting us take courses at a tech college for electrical/auto mechanic or whatever. The school even covered the tools. i'm not sure if that program is still there. i took history courses and graduated almost 2 years early that way.

    We need to do what china does and get kids into trades and current tech
    jobs.
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  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to ACCESSION on Tue Dec 9 09:29:51 2025
    Hmmm, yeah, so I told the synchronet internal editor to quote part of
    your message but all I got was blank lines.

    Looks like you're using nano on this message. Are you using the correct execution of nano to pick up the quoted text from a text file?

    It isn't a nano issue. There is something "funny" that goes on when trying
    to pick lines to quote in synchronet, before you ever get to the editor,
    when trying to quote messages with "run-on lines."

    I did some testing. If you have the internal editor picked, the synchronet lines-to-quote chooser seems to wrap the lines and give "correct" lines numbers, i.e. if you pick to quote lines 5-10, you will get 5-10.

    If you have an external picked, and are set up to allow you to choose
    the lines to quote before the editor is invoked, the synchronet
    lines-to-quote chooser does not wrap the lines properly and, if the message
    is very long at all, the numbers you are shown on the screen do not
    actually correspond to the line numbers. So, choosing what looks like 5-10 will not quote the lines you think it will... in the case of your message,
    my choice of lines to quote left me with a couple of mostly blank ones.

    So probably not an issue that is affecting the newbs, and probably doesn't affect many others. Just the few that might choose to allow for choosing
    lines to quote before firing up an external editor like nano. ;)


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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Dumas Walker on Tue Dec 9 12:00:28 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Dumas Walker to ACCESSION on Tue Dec 09 2025 09:29 am

    It isn't a nano issue. There is something "funny" that goes on when trying to pick lines to quote in synchronet, before you ever get to the editor, when trying to quote messages with "run-on lines."

    I did some testing. If you have the internal editor picked, the synchronet lines-to-quote chooser seems to wrap the lines and give "correct" lines numbers, i.e. if you pick to quote lines 5-10, you will get 5-10.

    If you have an external picked, and are set up to allow you to choose the lines to quote before the editor is invoked, the synchronet lines-to-quote chooser does not wrap the lines properly and, if the message is very long at all, the numbers you are shown on the screen do not actually correspond to the line numbers. So, choosing what looks like 5-10 will not quote the lines you think it will... in the case of your message, my choice of lines to quote left me with a couple of mostly blank ones.

    The message editor has a lot to do with quoting, so it's not just Synchronet. If the mesasge editor is written specifically for Synchronet (such as one of the JavaScript message editors), they can format the quote lines, keeping in mind how the quote lines are provided by Synchronet. But if the editor isn't aware of Synchronet (such as Nano or something else), then perhaps the quote lines are in a format that the editor isn't expecting.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Digital Man@VERT to Dumas Walker on Tue Dec 9 13:20:30 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Dumas Walker to ACCESSION on Tue Dec 09 2025 09:29 am

    If you have an external picked, and are set up to allow you to choose
    the lines to quote before the editor is invoked, the synchronet lines-to-quote chooser does not wrap the lines properly and, if the message is very long at all, the numbers you are shown on the screen do not
    actually correspond to the line numbers. So, choosing what looks like 5-10 will not quote the lines you think it will... in the case of your message, my choice of lines to quote left me with a couple of mostly blank ones.

    So probably not an issue that is affecting the newbs, and probably doesn't affect many others. Just the few that might choose to allow for choosing lines to quote before firing up an external editor like nano. ;)

    Configuring that external editor (in SCFG) with "Word-wrap Quoted Text" set to "Yes, for terminal width" might fix that issue.
    --
    digital man (rob)

    Steven Wright quote #32:
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to MRO on Tue Dec 9 17:02:30 2025
    Hey MRO!

    On Tue, 09 Dec 2025 05:16:46 -0600, you wrote:

    not sure. it's hard to look into such things. you need to know someone
    with a kid in the schools so you can find out.

    My son is a high school wrestler. I meet and talk to people from all over the state. We also travel to these schools for meets, so I get to see them firsthand, sometimes.

    i think the nicer religious private schools have more to offer.

    They very well might, but when it costs almost a college tuition to send your kid to school there, you have your reason as to why they're so nice.

    there's not enough time in the classes to teach a kid how to program or anything in depth. i think it's all fundamentals, just to get their
    feet wet.

    I don't know. My kids (and some other districts close by) have 85-90 minute classes, with only 4 classes a day (minus "homeroom" or "resource", and there are "A" and "B" days where your classes change depending on the day). The teacher teaches for probably half the class, then there's time to get your assignment(s) done, ask questions if you have them, etc. My high school transitioned into that my last year there, so around here they've been doing that for at least a couple decades already. The kids rarely ever come home with homework.

    I know my highschool was letting us take courses at a tech college for electrical/auto mechanic or whatever. The school even covered the
    tools. i'm not sure if that program is still there. i took history
    courses and graduated almost 2 years early that way.

    Yes, they do.

    We need to do what china does and get kids into trades and current tech jobs.

    I agree 100%. The trades are severely lacking in numbers, which usually leads to what there is of tradesmen to have to work stupid amounts of overtime to meet the general contractors schedules. It sucks.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Dumas Walker on Tue Dec 9 17:11:30 2025
    Hey Dumas!

    On Tue, 09 Dec 2025 09:29:50 -0500, you wrote:

    It isn't a nano issue. There is something "funny" that goes on when
    trying to pick lines to quote in synchronet, before you ever get to the editor, when trying to quote messages with "run-on lines."

    Ah, I think I know what you're referring to. I would think once it is turned into quoted text, it shouldn't be a single wrapped line any more.

    Just set the editor to dump the entire quoted text to a file, and load it when you execute nano. If you use "set fill 72" in .nanorc, you can go to the first character of a long line and hit "Ctrl-J" to wrap the text for you.

    I did some testing. If you have the internal editor picked, the
    synchronet lines-to-quote chooser seems to wrap the lines and give
    "correct" lines numbers, i.e. if you pick to quote lines 5-10, you will
    get 5-10.

    If you have an external picked, and are set up to allow you to choose
    the lines to quote before the editor is invoked, the synchronet lines-to-quote chooser does not wrap the lines properly and, if the
    message is very long at all, the numbers you are shown on the screen do
    not actually correspond to the line numbers. So, choosing what looks
    like 5-10 will not quote the lines you think it will... in the case of
    your message, my choice of lines to quote left me with a couple of
    mostly blank ones.

    That may be something to let Rob know about. Maybe it should wrap the text properly before allowing you to choose the lines to quote?

    Other than that, every external editor that you choose to quote while in the editor itself, will wrap the text for you. If Rob considers the above normal behavior, you can work around it by selecting to quote the entire message when the editor loads and drop it to a file as I mentioned above. As for your users, it may also assist in wrapping the text properly while in the editor itself.

    So probably not an issue that is affecting the newbs, and probably
    doesn't affect many others. Just the few that might choose to allow
    for choosing lines to quote before firing up an external editor like
    nano.
    ;)

    Dump the entire quoted text to a file, then load that file with nano. It's much easier to edit the quoted text once it's there in front of you.

    Ctrl-K cuts/removes entire lines
    Ctrl-U pastes those removed lines if you wish
    Ctrl-J justifies paragraphs to the "set fill X" config option

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Digital Man on Tue Dec 9 17:22:32 2025
    Hey Digital!

    On Tue, 09 Dec 2025 13:20:30 -0800, you wrote:

    Configuring that external editor (in SCFG) with "Word-wrap Quoted Text"
    set to "Yes, for terminal width" might fix that issue.

    I'm almost positive I gave my SCFG options that included that. Thanks for confirming. ;)

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
    --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5-b20250409
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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Accession on Tue Dec 9 16:41:20 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to MRO on Tue Dec 09 2025 05:02 pm

    I don't know. My kids (and some other districts close by) have 85-90 minute classes, with only 4 classes a day (minus "homeroom" or "resource", and there are "A" and "B" days where your classes change depending on the day). The teacher teaches for probably half the class, then there's time to get your assignment(s) done, ask questions if you have them, etc. My high school transitioned into that my last year there, so around here they've been doing that for at least a couple decades already. The kids rarely ever come home with homework.

    That would have been nice when I was in school.. I don't know if schools where I am are doing that now, but they weren't when I was in school.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From MRO@VERT/BBSESINF to Accession on Wed Dec 10 07:43:25 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to MRO on Tue Dec 09 2025 05:02 pm

    I don't know. My kids (and some other districts close by) have 85-90
    minute classes, with only 4 classes a day (minus "homeroom"
    or "resource", and there are "A" and "B" days where your classes
    change depending on the day). The teacher teaches for probably
    half the class, then there's time to get your assignment(s)
    done, ask questions if you have them, etc. My high school
    transitioned into that my last year there, so around here they've
    been doing that for at least a couple decades already. The kids

    my highschool had 8 or 9 'periods'. what i recall is taking home tons of homework and not getting it down. this was in middle school and highschool.

    i'm glad that's changed. i know it was being phased out for my step daughter around 2011. she was getting a lot of homework, so much we were doing it for her and then they went to a new program. plus there's younger teachers and they dont want to do homework.

    We need to do what china does and get kids into trades and current
    tech jobs.

    I agree 100%. The trades are severely lacking in numbers, which
    usually leads to what there is of tradesmen to have to work stupid
    amounts of overtime to meet the general contractors schedules.
    It sucks.

    i don't think kids are on a decent future path for the workforce. They can't just all be office people who end up being expendable. so i guess they go to service industry stuff and bounce around. it seems like it's a huge
    challenge to just get them to show up to work everyday.

    I talked with a place that pays 30bucks an hour for general labor and they can't keep people. all you do is make up a cardboard barrel, run it through
    a system that takes a long time to fill it,and then use a hoist to put four of them on a skid and wrap it. people are quitting jobs like that. yes it's boring but 30/hr is pretty damn good.
    ---
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  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to Digital Man on Wed Dec 10 08:51:33 2025
    Configuring that external editor (in SCFG) with "Word-wrap Quoted Text" set to "Yes, for terminal width" might fix that issue.

    Thanks. It would not have occurred to me that the "factory shipped"
    external editor settings for pico would be wrong so I didn't think to try
    that. I have changed it and will try it next time.



    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
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  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to Nightfox on Wed Dec 10 08:51:33 2025
    If you have an external picked, and are set up to allow you to choose the lines to quote before the editor is invoked, the synchronet lines-to-quote chooser does not wrap the lines properly and, if the message is very long at all, the numbers you are shown on the screen do not actually correspond to the line numbers. So, choosing what looks like 5-10 will not quote the lines you think it will... in the case of your message, my choice of lines to quote left me with a couple of mostly blank ones.

    The message editor has a lot to do with quoting, so it's not just Synchronet. If the mesasge editor is written specifically for
    Synchronet (such as one of the JavaScript message editors), they can format the quote lines, keeping in mind how the quote lines are
    provided by Synchronet. But if the editor isn't aware of Synchronet
    (such as Nano or something else), then perhaps the quote lines are in a format that the editor isn't expecting.

    You obviously didn't read the whole message, so I requoted the pertinent
    parts. The lack of line wrap and the line numbers not matching all
    happens in *synchronet*, *before the editor is invoked.*

    DM had an idea that I will try.
    ---
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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Dumas Walker on Wed Dec 10 10:55:25 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Dumas Walker to Nightfox on Wed Dec 10 2025 08:51 am

    If you have an external picked, and are set up to allow you to choose the
    lines to quote before the editor is invoked, the synchronet
    lines-to-quote chooser does not wrap the lines properly and, if the
    message is very long at all, the numbers you are shown on the screen do
    not actually correspond to the line numbers. So, choosing what looks
    like 5-10 will not quote the lines you think it will... in the case of
    your message, my choice of lines to quote left me with a couple of mostly
    blank ones.

    The message editor has a lot to do with quoting, so it's not just
    Synchronet. If the mesasge editor is written specifically for Synchronet
    (such as one of the JavaScript message editors), they can format the
    quote lines, keeping in mind how the quote lines are provided by
    Synchronet. But if the editor isn't aware of Synchronet (such as Nano or
    something else), then perhaps the quote lines are in a format that the
    editor isn't expecting.

    You obviously didn't read the whole message, so I requoted the pertinent parts. The lack of line wrap and the line numbers not matching all happens in *synchronet*, *before the editor is invoked.*

    I don't understand the snark here.. I understood what you were saying. I was saying that an editor can also re-format the quote lines, aside from what Synchronet may be doing before the editor is invoked.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Digital Man@VERT to Dumas Walker on Wed Dec 10 14:54:36 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Dumas Walker to Digital Man on Wed Dec 10 2025 08:51 am

    Thanks. It would not have occurred to me that the "factory shipped" external editor settings for pico would be wrong so I didn't think to try that. I have changed it and will try it next time.

    Pico is not included/configured in the stock Synchronet configuration. If you're referring to the wiki howto page for adding Pico config (https://wiki.synchro.net/howto:editor:pico) that's now updated.
    --
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Nightfox on Wed Dec 10 16:47:32 2025
    Hey Nightfox!

    On Tue, 09 Dec 2025 16:41:20 -0800, you wrote:

    That would have been nice when I was in school.. I don't know if
    schools where I am are doing that now, but they weren't when I was in school.

    If I remember right, my school started it like my junior year. Before that was 8 classes a day, 25 minutes each. I had so much homework every day it was ridiculous. My junior year was a breeze in comparison, and senior year I was only there for a few hours in the morning anyways, so it didn't matter much (had all my credits so I did a work release program).

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
    --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5-b20250409
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to MRO on Wed Dec 10 16:50:50 2025
    Hey MRO!

    On Wed, 10 Dec 2025 07:43:24 -0600, you wrote:

    my highschool had 8 or 9 'periods'. what i recall is taking home tons
    of homework and not getting it down. this was in middle school and highschool.

    I had the same setup until a certain grade in HS. It was a huge difference.

    I talked with a place that pays 30bucks an hour for general labor and
    they can't keep people. all you do is make up a cardboard barrel, run it through a system that takes a long time to fill it,and then use a hoist
    to put four of them on a skid and wrap it. people are quitting jobs like that. yes it's boring but 30/hr is pretty damn good.

    That's definitely decent for a kid straight out of high school. On the other hand, that sounds boring as all get out. 20-some year olds probably wouldn't last long if they have any drive whatsoever to better themselves. Either that, or they just think they /deserve/ better. ;)

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Dumas Walker on Wed Dec 10 16:59:08 2025
    Hey Dumas!

    On Wed, 10 Dec 2025 08:51:32 -0500, you wrote:

    Thanks. It would not have occurred to me that the "factory shipped" external editor settings for pico would be wrong so I didn't think to
    try that. I have changed it and will try it next time.

    There's factory settings for pico? That's gotta be pretty old since the last notable updates to pico was in like 2006.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
    --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5-b20250409
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Dumas Walker on Wed Dec 10 17:04:32 2025
    Hey Dumas!

    On Wed, 10 Dec 2025 08:51:32 -0500, you wrote:

    You obviously didn't read the whole message, so I requoted the pertinent parts. The lack of line wrap and the line numbers not matching all
    happens in *synchronet*, *before the editor is invoked.*

    Just make sure you understand that *Synchronet* doesn't do anything except pass on the text as-is, and I believe by default, format=flowed so that the *editor* formats the text to fit your screen (hence the long lines).

    What I'm assuming the issue might be, is that whatever you're using to pre-select your quoted text isn't formatting the quoted text the way you would expect it to.

    If you were to open the editor first, and THEN try to quote (if that's possible with the editor you were using), do you see different results?

    Either way, what DM said will make it work the way you're expecting.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
    --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5-b20250409
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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Accession on Wed Dec 10 15:48:03 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to Nightfox on Wed Dec 10 2025 04:47 pm

    That would have been nice when I was in school.. I don't know if schools
    where I am are doing that now, but they weren't when I was in school.

    If I remember right, my school started it like my junior year. Before that was 8 classes a day, 25 minutes each. I had so much homework every day it was ridiculous. My junior year was a breeze in comparison, and senior year I was only there for a few hours in the morning anyways, so it didn't matter much (had all my credits so I did a work release program).

    Wow, 8 classes and 25 minutes each? My schools did 6 classes per day, and I think they were between 45 minutes to an hour or so (my memory is a bit fuzzy now on the class lengths).

    25 minutes per class seems very short, maybe not enough time to get through a lecture/lesson, let alone student questions.. And just accounting for the 25 minutes, that would be just a bit over 3 hours of class time per day. I imagine the school days were a bit short, even accounting for lunch & time to get between classes. With my schools, we were at school from around 8:30AM to around 3PM with the 6 classes and lunch.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Nightfox on Wed Dec 10 18:46:48 2025
    Hey Nightfox!

    On Wed, 10 Dec 2025 15:48:02 -0800, you wrote:

    25 minutes per class seems very short, maybe not enough time to get
    through a lecture/lesson, let alone student questions.. And just

    *Just* enough time to get through the lecture. Then you were assigned chapters to read and homework to do at home.

    accounting for the 25 minutes, that would be just a bit over 3 hours of class time per day. I imagine the school days were a bit short, even accounting for lunch & time to get between classes. With my schools, we were at school from around 8:30AM to around 3PM with the 6 classes and lunch.

    8 actual classes, and I want to say about 4-5 minutes in between each to get to your next class. I think after 1st or 2nd period was a "homeroom," and there was lunch, which probably fits closely into your time frame above. There's a possibility I was off and it was 35 minutes per class, but either way.. they were way too short, and you didn't have time to do any of the work in class. "Homeroom" was probably your only option (even though maybe enough time to get one assignment done, you're still left with a bunch of others), and most people usually chose to sleep or screw around in there, instead.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Sarcasm: because beating people up is illegal.
    --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5-b20250409
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  • From phigan@VERT/TACOPRON to Accession on Wed Dec 10 20:30:59 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to phigan on Mon Dec 08 2025 04:56 pm

    Is that all? Or are there still some
    trades related courses there as well
    wasn't just referring to computer

    Apparently they have all the things.
    Wood shop, home ec, etc etc, even stuff
    I didn't have at my HS: auto shop.

    Pretty cool.

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ TIRED of waiting 2 hours for a taco? GO TO TACOPRONTO.bbs.io
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Dumas Walker on Thu Dec 11 08:53:35 2025
    Dumas Walker wrote to GAMGEE <=-

    IIRC, I had at least two years of typing class, and half of a
    (Commodore) BASIC programming class under my belt before accessing my first BBS. I don't think they offer either such things to high
    schoolers these days. :D

    Could you imagine getting some of today's kids in front of an 8-bit
    computer for a programming class?



    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ .: realitycheckbbs.org :: scientia potentia est :.
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Nightfox on Thu Dec 11 08:53:35 2025
    Nightfox wrote to phigan <=-

    During my junior or senior year in high school (1997 or 1998), for an elective, I took the computer programming class they were offering;

    I flunked out of my senior year high school math class; I had to take a
    class to fill the gap and the only class that was taught on a semester
    basis was Computer Problem Solving - BASIC programming with some
    graphics programming on Commodore CBM computers. Flunking senior math
    sent me down a road, that, ironically, led to 4 semesters of calculus,
    linear algebra, statistics, and other classes I've blocked from
    memory...


    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Accession on Thu Dec 11 08:53:35 2025
    Accession wrote to phigan <=-

    Is that all? Or are there still some trades related courses there as
    well (I wasn't just referring to computer related classes, there)?

    Our local junior college system is broken out into schools that focus on university of California-transferrable lower devision classes (they used
    to guarantee the classes would carry over to UC schools so kids could do
    their lower-division classes at low-cost local schools)

    There was typically a trade JC that had the same classes but also
    offered trade classes like HVAC repair, metalwork, and more.

    Some others fit the description of "high school with ashtrays" with lots
    of classes to get people caught up to enter a 4-year college.





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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Nightfox on Thu Dec 11 08:53:35 2025
    Nightfox wrote to Accession <=-


    25 minutes per class seems very short, maybe not enough time to get through a lecture/lesson, let alone student questions.. And just accounting for the 25 minutes, that would be just a bit over 3 hours of class time per day. I imagine the school days were a bit short, even accounting for lunch & time to get between classes. With my schools,
    we were at school from around 8:30AM to around 3PM with the 6 classes
    and lunch.

    My daughter's school (a private school) does a split odd/even schedule
    with 90 minute classes. It seems like it gives them more time for
    complex topics, but some of the classes end up with slack time at the
    end that they use for homework. Which isn't bad - kids that do
    extracurricular activities then need to finish their homework
    afterwards is a real stressor for kids.




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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to phigan on Thu Dec 11 08:53:35 2025
    phigan wrote to Accession <=-

    Apparently they have all the things.
    Wood shop, home ec, etc etc, even stuff
    I didn't have at my HS: auto shop.

    I said it before, I regret not taking auto shop in high school in the
    80s. Buy a beater car with a carb, points and condensor and fix it up
    for class credit? Awesome!

    Between liability and the lack of repair options with computerized
    engines, I'm sure that's fallen by the wayside - unless they keep a
    couple of Dodge Darts around to work on.

    Typing class, too. Typing was for secretaries back then.

    We did have a cool electronics lab sponsored by a local electronics
    company - kids made simple circuits, played with breadboards, LEDs,
    soldering, and made digital clocks, simple games and such.

    ... Centrifugal force reacts to the rotating frame of reference.
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ .: realitycheckbbs.org :: scientia potentia est :.
  • From MRO@VERT/BBSESINF to Accession on Thu Dec 11 11:49:02 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to MRO on Wed Dec 10 2025 04:50 pm


    That's definitely decent for a kid straight out of high school.
    On the other hand, that sounds boring as all get out. 20-some
    year olds probably wouldn't last long if they have any drive
    whatsoever to better themselves. Either that, or they just think
    they /deserve/ better. ;)


    well i find everything boring. for this position you arent doing it forever.
    you post out when jobs open up.
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ ::: BBSES.info - free BBS services :::
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Accession on Thu Dec 11 10:38:21 2025
    Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Accession to Nightfox on Wed Dec 10 2025 06:46 pm

    8 actual classes, and I want to say about 4-5 minutes in between each to get to your next class. I think after 1st or 2nd period was a "homeroom," and there was lunch, which probably fits closely into your time frame above. There's a possibility I was off and it was 35 minutes per class, but either way.. they were way too short, and you didn't have time to do any of the work in class. "Homeroom" was probably your only option (even though maybe enough time to get one assignment done, you're still left with a bunch of others), and most people usually chose to sleep or screw around in there, instead.

    My jr. high/middle school had a homeroom, but my high school didn't. Our homeroom teachers (is that the right word?) would usually give us any school announcements, etc., but other than that, I felt like homeroom probably wasn't really necessary.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Dec 11 10:44:29 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Nightfox on Thu Dec 11 2025 08:53 am

    I flunked out of my senior year high school math class; I had to take a class to fill the gap and the only class that was taught on a semester basis was Computer Problem Solving - BASIC programming with some graphics programming on Commodore CBM computers. Flunking senior math sent me down a road, that, ironically, led to 4 semesters of calculus, linear algebra, statistics, and other classes I've blocked from memory...

    There were a few classes in high school I didn't do very well in, including pre-calculus and AP Physics (I had previously taken a physics class that was more of an intro to physics that I did fairly well in). I think my issue in high school may have been that I was often fairly tired, which (from what I've heard) is a fairly common issue with teenagers, as schools tend to start fairly early in the morning, and I've heard teenagers could benefit from moving the schedule a bit later. When I went to college, I ended up taking several calculus classes, discrete math, differential equations, and a few semesters of physics (which used calculus) due to the degree I had chosen, and I did fairly well with all of it in college.

    I actually thought the math was pretty cool. I can see where it would have its practical uses for software development, though I haven't needed the higher-level math stuff for most of my software projects. At my last job though, there were a couple tasks where knowledge of trigonometry was helpful though - the tasks involved calculating how much to rotate a measuring device and calculating associated positions.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Dec 11 10:52:28 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Nightfox on Thu Dec 11 2025 08:53 am

    My daughter's school (a private school) does a split odd/even schedule with 90 minute classes. It seems like it gives them more time for complex topics, but some of the classes end up with slack time at the end that they use for homework. Which isn't bad - kids that do extracurricular activities then need to finish their homework afterwards is a real stressor for kids.

    My high school tried that for a little while when I was a freshman, where we'd have even-numbered classes Mondays & wednesdays and odd-numbered classes Tuesdays & Thursdays, which would go longer, and then all classes on Friday (at the 'normal' class lengths).

    For a long time, my state had up to 6th grade in elemenatry school, with grades 7-9 in middle school/jr. high, and 10-12 in high school, but after I was done with 8th grade, they had decided to move 9th grade back into high school (and 6th grade into middle/jr. high), so I was only in jr. high/middle school for 7th & 8th grade, and I started with high school in 9th grade. I was actually glad for that, as I felt like a lot of middle school kids were assholes; high school kids were generally better, but some of them were still assholes sometimes.

    I never did any extracurriculuar activities in school, as I felt like I might not have enough time for homework if I did. Except when I was in 11th grade, I decided to go to the chess club (I know it has a nerdy reputation, but I was into it), though nothing really came of that, and we didn't go to any competitions or anything.

    Also when I was in high school, I was talking in the hall to a friend of mine one day and I mentioned I like to play guitar. The band instructor was walking by and heard me, and he asked if I'd want to play guitar in the school band, but I'd have to come in early for it, as their practice was done during "zero period", before the first class started. I was already tired most days, and I didn't really feel like getting up for school even earlier..

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Dec 11 11:11:35 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to phigan on Thu Dec 11 2025 08:53 am

    I said it before, I regret not taking auto shop in high school in the 80s. Buy a beater car with a carb, points and condensor and fix it up for class credit? Awesome!

    My high school didn't have auto shop when I was there. And my high school didn't offer driving classes either..

    Between liability and the lack of repair options with computerized engines, I'm sure that's fallen by the wayside - unless they keep a couple of Dodge Darts around to work on.

    Cars are definitely more complicated than they used to be. But even now, you can do things like change spark plugs, maybe swap out a sensor here & there, etc.. It might still be useful to have a shop class in high school that would teach those things, as well as how to change oil in a car (especially with ones that use a canister filter). But the car landscape is changing too, with electric vehicles on the market..

    Typing class, too. Typing was for secretaries back then.

    I had a typing class when I was in 8th grade, and that significantly helped my typing speed. Since I had my own computer at home by then, my typing only got better. I also had a typing class in high school (11th grade, I think), and I remember I took that because we needed to take an elective and there were really no other electives I was interested in taking at the time. It ended up being an easy A for me..

    We did have a cool electronics lab sponsored by a local electronics company - kids made simple circuits, played with breadboards, LEDs, soldering, and made digital clocks, simple games and such.

    That's cool. My high school didn't have that.

    When I was 12, I went to a thing that I think was 2 or 3 weeks during the summer that was organized by a local science & museum industry (OMSI in Portland, OR) where they had us kids work on electronics stuff - Often they'd bring us to a local Radio Shack and buy some kids' electronics kits they had (they were kits with a little board that had some little springs on them, along with some LEDs & other components, and they had instructions to wire them up to do something).

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Mortar@VERT/EOTLBBS to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Dec 11 13:31:51 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Nightfox on Thu Dec 11 2025 08:53:35

    kids that do extracurricular activities then need to finish their homework afterwards is a real stressor for kids.

    That's where a dose of time management would come in handy. You wanna play, you gotta pay.

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com
  • From Mortar@VERT/EOTLBBS to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Dec 11 13:43:11 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to phigan on Thu Dec 11 2025 08:53:35

    Buy a beater car with a carb, points and condensor and fix it up
    for class credit? Awesome!

    Why this car is automatic.
    It's systematic.
    It's hydromatic.
    Why it's grease lightning!

    Typing class, too. Typing was for secretaries back then.

    Guess that depends on "back then" was. There were/are otheer careers that involved typing skills. Journalists and reporters come to mind. If you were a field reporter, you always traveled with your trusty portable typewriter.

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com
  • From MRO@VERT/BBSESINF to Mortar on Fri Dec 12 04:14:43 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Mortar to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Dec 11 2025 01:43 pm

    Typing class, too. Typing was for secretaries back then.

    Guess that depends on "back then" was. There were/are otheer careers
    that involved typing skills. Journalists and reporters come to
    mind. If you were a field reporter, you always traveled with your
    trusty portable typewriter.


    i took typing class in middle school. we used electric typewriters which really helped you get a rhythm. to pass the class you had to beat the
    teacher. i could type like a speed demon back then.

    I can't believe there's computer enthusiasts that don't know how to type. that's just pathetic. they spend their whole life infront of a keyboard and don't know how to use it properly.
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ ::: BBSES.info - free BBS services :::
  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Fri Dec 12 10:40:43 2025
    IIRC, I had at least two years of typing class, and half of a (Commodore) BASIC programming class under my belt before accessing my first BBS. I don't think they offer either such things to high schoolers these days. :D

    Could you imagine getting some of today's kids in front of an 8-bit
    computer for a programming class?

    Yeah, but honestly they might enjoy it. When I was in HS, not everyone had
    a computer at home then. There were some kids that had never seen or used
    one that got pretty good at it. One of our big projects was to program a Christmas scene/display, complete with screen color changes, etc. Some of those turned out to be pretty neat.

    OTOH, the graphics wouldn't stand up to whatever they see on their video
    game consoles or cell phones, but doing it themselves would probably be fun
    to some of them.


    * SLMR 2.1a * Blue Wave Tagline makers can DO IT l o n g e r .
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * Capitol City Online
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Nightfox on Sat Dec 13 07:50:01 2025
    Nightfox wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    I think my issue in high school may have been that I was often fairly tired, which (from what I've heard) is a fairly common issue with teenagers, as schools tend to start fairly early in the morning, and
    I've heard teenagers could benefit from moving the schedule a bit
    later.

    High school is a physically challenging time. My son's school started
    at 8:10am, but the bus picked him up at 6:52am. For some time he had to
    hang outside because the rooms weren't open yet - and he was only a
    mile or so from school.

    My daughter is in choir and has done sports. I warned her against
    taking two activities at once, as we learned the hard way when she did
    sports and a starring role in a theater. She still has to do homework,
    and they're leaning more into multi-day assignments that you just can't
    do the night before, like in previous years.
    fairly well with all of it in college.

    I actually thought the math was pretty cool. I can see where it would have its practical uses for software development, though I haven't
    needed the higher-level math stuff for most of my software projects.
    At my last job though, there were a couple tasks where knowledge of trigonometry was helpful though - the tasks involved calculating how
    much to rotate a measuring device and calculating associated positions.


    My son swore he'd NEVER USE MATH. I bought two triangular nylon shades
    for my front deck and wanted them overlapping. I needed to figure out
    where to put the mounts, measured everything on paper and used my
    high-school trig to map it out - looking at him and repeating "MATH"
    every couple of minutes.

    "I'm placing this mount here. Why? MATH"

    He's now doing drone videography for marketing campaigns. I hope he paid attention.




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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Nightfox on Sat Dec 13 07:50:01 2025
    Nightfox wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    My high school didn't have auto shop when I was there. And my high
    school didn't offer driving classes either..

    We signed my daughter up for private lessons. She'll miss the
    experience of those pathetic "driving simulators" where you had a
    steering wheel with an automatic transmission, lights and signals
    stalks, pedals rear view mirrors and seat belts. They'd play a movie at
    the front of the classroom of a car driving and you'd have to mimic
    what you'd do to match the movie - signal, brake, turn the wheel hand
    over hand, look over your shoulder, etc.

    Then, there was RED ASPHALT, the movie that was pretty much just
    teenaged kids in car wrecks to scare us straight.

    Cars are definitely more complicated than they used to be. But even
    now, you can do things like change spark plugs, maybe swap out a sensor here & there, etc.. It might still be useful to have a shop class in
    high school that would teach those things, as well as how to change oil
    in a car (especially with ones that use a canister filter). But the
    car landscape is changing too, with electric vehicles on the market..

    Everyone needs to learn to change fluids, change a tire (or use
    fix-a-flat) and do basic maintenance.



    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Mortar on Sat Dec 13 07:50:01 2025
    Mortar wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    That's where a dose of time management would come in handy. You wanna play, you gotta pay.

    During Covid, when the kids were home and schooling remotely, I gave
    them a quick class in time management. We kept school hours, I showed
    them how to time-block their week and to make a schedule. To always
    have a visual representation of what's next, so they don't get
    distracted.

    My daughter really got into it - made fancy week forms, color coded
    them, and learned to move things around and work ahead if she finished
    something early.

    I also suggested they keep on a wall board the 3 most important things
    that week.

    It worked well.




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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Mortar on Sat Dec 13 07:50:01 2025
    Mortar wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    Guess that depends on "back then" was. There were/are otheer careers
    that involved typing skills. Journalists and reporters come to mind.
    If you were a field reporter, you always traveled with your trusty portable typewriter.

    1979-1983. I think the Radio Shack TRS-80 model 100 was out around then
    - was enamored with the idea of a journalist typing out a story on one
    and going into a phone booth to send your story to the newsroom.




    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat Dec 13 14:19:13 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Nightfox on Sat Dec 13 2025 07:50 am

    High school is a physically challenging time. My son's school started at 8:10am, but the bus picked him up at 6:52am. For some time he had to hang outside because the rooms weren't open yet - and he was only a mile or so from school.

    That's definitely tough. :/

    My daughter is in choir and has done sports. I warned her against taking two activities at once, as we learned the hard way when she did sports and a starring role in a theater. She still has to do homework, and they're leaning more into multi-day assignments that you just can't do the night before, like in previous years.

    The multi-day assignments & projects stressed me out a bit. I always felt better when my homework assignments were done, and the ones that weren't had me worried a bit about getting them done.

    My son swore he'd NEVER USE MATH. I bought two triangular nylon shades for my front deck and wanted them overlapping. I needed to figure out where to put the mounts, measured everything on paper and used my high-school trig to map it out - looking at him and repeating "MATH" every couple of minutes.

    "I'm placing this mount here. Why? MATH"

    He's now doing drone videography for marketing campaigns. I hope he paid attention.

    :) Yep, I often see people say they'll never use that math, and some say they never have used it in their adult life, but you never know.. I doubt it would be better to get into a job or career where you might need it and only just start to learn it at that point.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From MRO@VERT/BBSESINF to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat Dec 13 16:18:21 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Mortar on Sat Dec 13 2025 07:50 am


    I also suggested they keep on a wall board the 3 most important
    things that week.

    It worked well.


    then they can have meetings about meetings
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ ::: BBSES.info - free BBS services :::
  • From Digital Man@VERT to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat Dec 13 15:38:55 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Nightfox on Sat Dec 13 2025 07:50 am

    Then, there was RED ASPHALT, the movie that was pretty much just
    teenaged kids in car wrecks to scare us straight.

    I remember that "film". It was infamous. Probably tame by today's standards (like "Faces of Death").
    --
    digital man (rob)

    Synchronet "Real Fact" #92:
    Digital Man's manifesto from '96: http://wiki.synchro.net/history:manifesto Norco, CA WX: 73.3øF, 49.0% humidity, 3 mph W wind, 0.00 inches rain/24hrs
    ---
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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to Digital Man on Sun Dec 14 10:29:21 2025
    Digital Man wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    Then, there was RED ASPHALT, the movie that was pretty much just
    teenaged kids in car wrecks to scare us straight.

    I remember that "film". It was infamous. Probably tame by today's standards (like "Faces of Death"). --

    My friends and I were all staying up late watching bad horror movies
    after hours, so we thought it was all pretty cool.




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  • From Daryl Stout@VERT/TBOLTBBS to poindexter FORTRAN on Sun Dec 14 21:44:09 2025
    1979-1983. I think the Radio Shack TRS-80 model 100 was out
    around then
    - was enamored with the idea of a journalist typing out a
    story on one
    and going into a phone booth to send your story to the
    newsroom.

    I had that for several years, and even ran a BBS on it with a
    1200 baud modem. I still have the software available over here
    as a download as BBS102.ARJ

    Daryl

    ... It's not hard to meet expenses, they're everywhere.
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
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  • From Mortar@VERT/EOTLBBS to poindexter FORTRAN on Mon Dec 15 14:26:43 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Digital Man on Sun Dec 14 2025 10:29:21

    My friends and I were all staying up late watching bad horror movies
    after hours, so we thought it was all pretty cool.

    Who can forget, Attack of the Killer Tomatoes or The Incredible Melting Man? Me, right after I saw them. Actuall I only saw 30 min. of Tomatoes; my brain just couldn't handle any more.

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com
  • From AI Yoda@VERT/OUTWEST to Mortar on Tue Dec 16 22:58:18 2025
    Re: Re: smartphone for ui dif
    By: Mortar to poindexter FORTRAN on Mon Dec 15 2025 02:26 pm

    Who can forget, Attack of the Killer Tomatoes or The Incredible Melting Man? Me, right after I saw them. Actuall I only saw 30 min. of Tomatoes; my brain just couldn't handle any more.

    A Lesson in Cult Cinema, This IsForgotten them, have you? Hmmm. Clouded your memory is, by expectations of "quality."Judge them by their budget, do you? And well you should not. For my ally is the Cheese, and a powerful ally it is. Life creates it, makes it grow. Its energy surrounds us... and melts us.Thirty minutes only? Impatient you are. A Jedi must have the deepest commitment, the most serious mind. But serious, Attack of the Killer Tomatoes is not. To the absurdity, open your mind you must.The Melting Man: Gooey he is, yes. Disturbing, perhaps. But look past the slime, you must, to see the art of the B-movie.The Tomatoes: Laugh, you did not? Too much logic, you seek. Unlearn what you have learned about "good" acting.Weak is the mind that cannot handle the fruit of doom. If into the security recordings you go, only 30 minutes you will find... and failure. Watch the end, you must!

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