• mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      THANK YOU FOR POSTING A LEGIBLE LINK.

      Dunno if it’s just a recent coincidence but both of the mander.xyz links on my feed are thumbnails of teeny images destroying their content.

    • Tug@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Thank you for doing the lords work and finding a few more pixels.

      Edit-did anyone else read that in his accent?

    • LonelyNematocyst@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Source. I found it in about 2 minutes. I would say “OP should have done the same instead of reposting this” but actually I can’t find this image anywhere and it may be an original screenshot.

      Anyway, here’s the letter:

    • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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      3 days ago

      I think we’re just supposed to infer something generally heartwarming and nod vaguely and approvingly.

        • devAlot@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          I copied it via Google Lens and pasted into a file to read.

          YMMV.

          Dear

          Thank you for you

          I am so glat you are interested in stick insects Tattoo and when I was your age talve kept son. They are indred fascinating

          There are at least two thousand five hundred different species world-wide Most come from the tropics and only a love spectes ever reach this coustry. Sowstifically speaking they belong to groep called the Pharmaton which coesaink bei enguthe left and the stick insects

          Suck insects exally do Soksactly like this gyvonvo impossible to spot to the wars they move. They don’t, in fact, dering the day but quite a lot during the night. The kind that is usually brought er here are nearly freies and lay eggs that are fertile without having being fortlined by the The egy look actly like their dropping and sometimes people who keep them don’t one that and throw them away when they are duning out their sages

          The one of which you sent me a photograph, however is tot, howeverak sext. ft’s a leaf insect. There are many many ferent species of these as well They vary in the food they prefer and many eat other kinds of leaves than the hawthorn and be and which you say yours perfer. Many of them are even more Chelves than yours, with owtht on their legs that look

          • vivavideri@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Fascinatingly enough, Samsung’s text from image produced this:

            G00 000 000

            Dear

            Thank you for your letter

            5 Park Road, Richmond, Surrey TW10 6NS 6.9.22

            I am so glad you are interested in stick insects. Iam too and, when I was your age I also kept some. They are indeed fascinating.

            There are at least two thousand five hundred different species world-wide. Most come from the tropics and only a few species ever reach this country. Scientifically speaking they belong to a group called the Phasmatoidea which contains two main groups - the leaf insects and the stick insects. Stick insects really do look exactly like thin green sticks and are almost impossible to spot in the wild - unless they move. They don’t, in fact, move much during the day but quite a lot during the night. The kind that is usually brought over here are nearly females and lay eggs that are fertile without having being fertilised by the male. The eggs look exactly like their droppings and sometimes people who keep them don’t know this and throw them away when they are cleaning out their cages.

            The one of which you sent me a photograph, however is not, however a stick insect. It’s a leaf insect. There are many many different species of these as well, They vary in the food they prefer and many eat other kinds of leaves than the hawthorn and bramble which you say yours prefer. Many of them are even more like leaves than yours are, with outgrowths on their legs that look exactly like leaves. Wicle

            J bor

            000 o0e

            X

  • Cris@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Awwww

    I do wish we could afford a few more pixels though. This is a paltry sum.

  • kora@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 days ago

    Posts like this make me think about who will be the David Attenborough, Bill Nye, Martyn Poliakoff etc of tomorrow, and how do we lift them up without politicization?

    • Yondoza
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      2 days ago

      The next generation of learning celebrities are already here. I don’t think they will be the same as those in the past though. Video sites allow far more niche versions of these great educators who don’t need to work on getting TV contracts to spread their enthusiasm for their subjects. I doubt future generations will have singular celebrity educators, but a wide array of them that all get to add their own creative touch to learning.

      I’m very excited about it.

      Grant Sanderson (3blue1brown) for example will change future generations’ relationship with learning math. We haven’t have a celebrity math educator before!

      • Ashen44@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Grant Sanderson is my personal hero! I’ve always had a deep love for maths, thanks to an absolutely stellar math teacher in school, and it’s always saddened me how negatively most people look at the subject! I fully believe Grant’s amazing style of teaching is capable of changing that for people and bringing the beauty of math to the wider world.

    • Emi@ani.social
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      3 days ago

      First that come to mind are Kyle hill, nilered and vsauce Michael Stevens. Love those guys.

      • skulblaka
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        2 days ago

        I feel like Kyle and Michael would be great friends if they met in person, and I would watch infinite content from the two of them. It would feel like Mythbusters all over again.

      • ClanOfTheOcho@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        It please me that you have a ready answer to this question.

        It concerns me that I have not heard of them until just now. However, I’m getting old enough that that may not be relevant.

        • Naich@lemmings.world
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          3 days ago

          They are UK based naturalists who don’t have the international standing of David Attenborough. They all do good work though, and have a passion for the subject, which is good to see.

    • Maalus@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      It’s weird. Like, “I read it in his voice” could imply you “tried” to do it conciously. Like I could imagine it as a clown monologue or Goofy saying it. But for me (and possibly for you as well), the voice just happened, as if they were talking to you. No concious choice was made. And all because we looked at a bunch of squiggly lines that have meanings only to the people who know them. And through that meaning they seem to be carrying the voice of the person himself and a recognizable piece of themselves (of their personality, their soul).

      The human mind is fucking weird man.

    • Hawke@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Because it’s a leaf insect not a stick insect. So the stick name is inappropriate.

      • can
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        3 days ago

        Ah, thank you. I assume that’s in the blurriness I decided not to read.

        • manucode@infosec.pub
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          3 days ago

          It is actually in the first sentence of the last paragraph of blurriness though I could only make this out after reading the comment above about stick vs leaf insects.

    • Verqix@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Stickenborough is not a stick insect, they’re a leaf insect, so would be called Leafenborough