• @RolandoOP
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      72 days ago

      Partly because it describes a longstanding tension: the needs of the drivers (to see as much as possible at night) vs the needs of pedestrians (to not be blinded.)

      And also because of selection bias: for every relatable cartoon, there are 3-4 that rely on obsolete details, 2-3 where the joke falls flat, etc. When we pick a cartoon to post, we tend to favor those that are still relatable.

      • @Skullgrid
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        32 days ago

        any of the shitty ones to share just to let us know how much awesome work you are doing for curation?

        • @RolandoOP
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          41 day ago

          Here are a couple that have amusing lore, but that I didn’t think were worth posting. I wouldn’ call them “shitty”, just not as relateable and because of that they’re not as amusing. For example, the first one involves mailing a photo, which isn’t something we do much any more; the equivalent would be maybe something like sending a friend request:

          • Everett True has a nephew called “J. Basil True”, who is pictured in the Daily East Oregonian on Sept 27 1919.
          • there’s a comic from The Day Book of September 27 1915 that doesn’t seem to show Everett at all… unless Everett is the baby! This is one of Everett’s earliest Outbursts.
          • Everett True was skinny when he got married, according to The Seattle Star of Oct 1, 1916.
          • Evertt True has a cousin from Kokomo, according to The Daily East Oregonian of October 7, 1919.
    • @Jesus_666
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      172 days ago

      Ah, the good old scientific days when every product had to be marketed as scientific, using that exact word. Like this scientific ad, which scientifically repeats how scientific the headlight is because scientific readers demand science scientifically.

      • @[email protected]
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        162 days ago

        No worse than the “atomic” or “space-age” days that followed, and way better than “block-chain” or “AI” of today.

        • @Jesus_666
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          82 days ago

          True, just like “online” and “.com” in the 2000s. Marketing loves to pointlessly toss around fad words. I will mock this specific ad for overusing the word to a comical degree, though.

          • @[email protected]
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            52 days ago

            I will mock this specific ad for overusing the word to a comical degree, though.

            Don’t get me wrong. I agree. Mock away. I was just commenting on how this is something we can’t seem to get away from.

  • @DarkCloud
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    72 days ago

    How has this not been properly regulated in over 100 years?!?!? WHY! WHY! WHY!

    …well actually I know partially why there’s been a recent uptick, because China sells LED lights that are harder to get right when installing and are less directional, because rather than using lenses the brightness or rise of the light is defined by which LEDs get powered, so lots of people are wiring them incorrect just getting them to work on a basic on/off level then moving on… Meaning drivers may set the headlights correctly but due to wiring they’re actually on the highbeam setting. Welcome to the digital age.

  • @ThatWeirdGuy1001
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    102 days ago

    As someone who drives early in the morning before the sun is up I relate to this on a spiritual level.

  • @[email protected]
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    112 days ago

    Back from a time when you could stand in front of a driving car with a hand raised, and the driver would stop.

  • @[email protected]
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    112 days ago

    Imagine driving around and suddenly Everett True is standing in front of your car. Nightmare fuel. Better watch those headlights, kids!

  • @RolandoOP
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    112 days ago

    Interesting article on the source page about the arms build-up of Japan, and the people behind it.