• @[email protected]
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    2 hours ago
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    ╏I WOULD LIKE TO KNOW MORE╏
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  • Constant Pain
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    204 hours ago

    I was there Gandalf, I was there three thousand years ago…

    • Miles O'Brien
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      133 hours ago

      I’ve never seen this specific photo, but it absolutely was popular ~2010.

      Tubas and trombones were popular choices among band students

    • @FauxLiving
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      2 hours ago

      Yeah, it has real ‘Early 00s Smartphone Cameraphone’ vibes

        • @thesystemisdown
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          22 hours ago

          There were plenty low quality digital point and shoot cameras though.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 hours ago

          This dude’s never heard of Symbian or Blackberry I guess. Or Sony Ericsson and Nokia N*** phones.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 hour ago

            Yeah, I was thinking about Symbian too. The basic functionality of an Android phone today, Symbian already had with the limitations of its time. In 2003, you could use your Symbian to share internet to a PC, navigate maps, edit documents, take pictures, edit pictures, browse the web, etc. There was a good amount of third party apps too, including browsers like Opera and games like Chessmaster. And this was a shitty OS for this, Maemo was way better, but it came later.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 hour ago

              I used a Symbian phone to find a cafe in Providence once while working there in winter 2005/6 or so. And got charged like $2 from Cingular for loading one yelp page listing. I was so cold, and had to shit so bad I didn’t care.

        • @FauxLiving
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          12 hours ago

          Fair enough, the first blackberry with a camera was 2006 (the Blackberry Pearl). So mid-00s smartphone.

  • @aeronmelon
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    107 hours ago

    Is this the next Hibiki Euphonium series?

      • @[email protected]
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        4 hours ago

        In America.

        Here in Australia, Nip (Nippon being old spelling of Nihon which is Japan in Japanese) is the slur.

        • Owl
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          114 minutes ago

          Chad Australian teaches American that other dialects of english exist

      • Engywuck
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        247 hours ago

        I’m italian and in Italy that’s not considered a slur. It’s more telling someone they’re funny or amusing.

        • dohpaz42
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          225 hours ago

          You really need to use your hands more so we know you’re Italian. 🤌

        • @idiomaddict
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          56 hours ago

          Not the sentiment, the word used for Japanese people. Saying “if Japanese people didn’t exist, they should be invented” would be totally acceptable.

          It can be hard to avoid slurs in other languages though, especially when English has so many. My husband’s not a native English speaker and it comes up maybe every other month that he’ll say something and I’ll have to tell him to avoid that word or only use it in one specific usage. I’ve only been corrected/gaped at for inadvertently using slurs twice in over five years living in Germany, for comparison.

          • Engywuck
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            136 hours ago

            Ok, now I get it. I didn’t use “japs” as derogatory, obviously.

          • @[email protected]
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            106 hours ago

            Do Japanese people consider this a slur? To me it seems like one instance of people using a word with negative connotations doesnt make it a slur or our list of slurs would be far greater. In most instances its just an english shortened version of Japanese.

            I looked it up and it seems there is debate over this with mostly Japanese Americans finding the word offensive due to historical context with most others just viewing it as a shortened version of Japanese. (I’m mostly making this comment because Jap is censored in one of my favourite RTS games where the Japanese are a highly used nation and I hate having to use the full word over a 3 letter abv)

            • sp3ctr4l
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              5 hours ago

              I’m from Seattle, a place where many Japanese Americans immigrated to before the war.

              … During the war, they were rounded up, shipped to concentration camps on the other side of the state (in a desert), and basically all of their homes and business property/possessions were seized and sold off during the war, and while they were released aome years after the war ended, they were seriously discriminated against for decades afterward.

              I obviously can’t speak for all Japanese people, but yeah, Japanese Americans I’ve known find ‘Jap’ to be a slur. There’s a good amount of newspapers and even US propaganda films shown to either the military and/or the public, and other media, that use the term ‘Jap’ alongside rascist cariacatures…

              Dr Seuss, more widely known as an author/illustrator of childrens books, actually drew a good amount of these racist cariacatures.

              A likely NSFW example

              This was a poster, an advertisement for a war bond, drawn by Dr Seuss

              The even worse slur… is something I’m not even comfortable typing out… basically, similarly shorten Nippon (which is a name of ‘Japan’ in Japanese, along with Nihon) to only the first syllable.

              That one is an even more severe slur and was commonly used during the war. It’s basically as severe, rude and disrespectful as the n-word with a hard r to refer to Black people.

              If you want to use a 3 letter abbreviation for Japan, I’d suggest JPN.

              • @[email protected]
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                45 hours ago

                The shortened version of Nippon is also considered an unusable slur where im from as well since its only ever used with negative intent. Its interesting to read about the different perspectives of this word around the world. Since the word is offensive to some Japanese people I should refrain from using the world online.

            • @[email protected]
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              86 hours ago

              Worth pointing out that for the rest of the world this is often hard to navigate. Americans have a reputation for excessive self-censorship based on pearl-clutching, with “the F word” or “p*rn” or censoring nipples.

              So sometimes actual strongly hateful or dehumanising language gets dismissed as another example of oversensitity.

              • @daggermoon
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                25 hours ago

                Just to clarify, I didn’t think OP was being insensitive. My question was genuine, and I didn’t think they knew. And yes, there is a lot of unnecessary censorship in the US. You can’t say fuck on TV or the radio. I was listening to a station from New Zealand and that made me realize we’re the only Country that does that. Censoring nipples is fucking stupid too. I really don’t censor myself. I’m told I’m a very outspoken person. The only words I won’t say are slurs because I believe they are actually harmful and disrespectful.