• AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    1225 days ago

    Exactly. Plus, you can see the dirt being thrown from the tires and the wind in their hair. Some people online just don’t know that people actually do stuff in real life.

    • @RestrictedAccount
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      125 days ago

      I think you are right.

      However I can’t get over a camera from back in the day with a shutter speed fast enough to capture the spokes that clearly.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 days ago

          The safetyism today is sad.

          And it’s combined with this sort of “condemnation culture” - as if everything anyone else does is wrong. It reeks of arrogance, of hubris.

          Life is fatal. Unfortunately some people go through life so afraid of everything, and want to make others afraid of everything as well. They’d bubble wrap the world if they could.

          Many people would be horrified at the stuff I’ve done (and my friends). And yes, I’ve lost friends and family along the way. It happens. Growing up and learning to deal with loss is part of life.

          Is what this guy is doing the smartest thing? Maybe not. But maybe he was also minimizing risk as best he could (for all we know he was going around the yard, at speeds a kid would find exhilarating, we just don’t know).

          I’ve been that kid. We rode in the back of pickups, on the backs of motorcycles (with no helmet! GASP!)

          Save me from bloody pearl-clutching do-gooders.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 days ago

            Yup. My neighbor called the cops on me because my 4yo was riding a scooter at night on the sidewalk (like 9:30 PM). We’re pretty sure we know who the neighbor is, and we know everyone on our street (and they know us, and our phone numbers), so there was absolutely no reason to get the police involved. I was out there within 10 min (I had just put the kids to bed and was double-checking that they’re still there), and my kid was still on the sidewalk (we teach our kids as much).

            This was an isolated incident as well, and our street is incredibly quiet (half the people are retired), so the actual danger is incredibly low.

            I get that safety is important, but it’s also important to let people make their own decisions. I don’t want to be a helicopter parent, yet my neighbor seem intent that I do. It’s incredibly frustrating. I’m trying to raise independent kids who aren’t reliant on mommy and daddy to constantly be there to catch them, and I want them to learn the hard things in life as early as possible while the stakes are low. If they’re going to get hurt on their bike, it should be at 5-10mph near our house instead of 30-40mph bombing down a hill as a teenager. If they’re going to get into a fight, it better be as a 10yo with fists instead of a teenager with knives. We have rules, but it’s on them to follow them, I just explain why the rules exist (i.e. it’s not me being mean). Sometimes they get hurt, but they learn quickly.

          • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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            124 days ago

            It reeks of arrogance, of hubris.

            It reeks of cowardice to me, and I see so much of it on this platform.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 days ago

        It appears to be a 1970s bike (I would take a stab at a Yamaha LT3) and by that period shutter speeds of 1/500 or 1/1000 were readily available amongst better quality cameras. That would be plenty to get a clear shot of the spokes on what would be a relatively slow moving bike (I would assume <40km/h, likely noticeably less). I’ve got several 50s era cameras that have 1/500 top speeds, so even if the bike was new at the time of the photo it didn’t require a new camera to take the shot.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 days ago

        Really? So high ISO and fast shutter was just tech beyond those Luddites?

        🤦🏼‍♂️

        I have a 16mm Minolta from 1960 that’s smaller than a pack of cigarettes that us fully adjustable for f-stop and shutter speed (far faster than catching these spokes), plus it has multiple lenses.

        The Polaroid instant cameras had shutter speeds up to 1/200.