• 406 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 24th, 2023

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  • If we’re going to wildly speculate, hey, isn’t this what we have AI for nowadays?

    I asked ChatGPT: “give me ideas what the abbreviation WLBR might stand for if that is the name of a piece of image editing software”. Here’s the result:

    🧠 Professional / technical-sounding

    • Wide Layer Blending & Rendering
    • Workflow Layer-Based Retoucher
    • Weighted Light Balance Renderer
    • Wavelet-Based Light & Blur Reconstruction
    • White-Level Balance & Retouch

    🎨 Creative / artistic branding

    • We Love Better Retouching
    • Wild Light & Bold Retouch
    • Wavelength Brush
    • Wonder Lens: Blur & Refine
    • Whitelight Brush

    ⚡ Modern / software-product style

    • WizLayer Build & Render
    • WarpLab: Blend & Refine
    • Web-Level Bitmap Renderer
    • Workflow Lens & Brush Renderer
    • WLB Renderer (treat WLBR as a stylized acronym)

    🧩 Slightly abstract (like many real apps)

    • Wavelength-Based Rasterizer
    • Layered Bitmask Refinement
    • Light Balance Reconstruction Engine
    • Wideband Luminosity Brush & Retouch

    🧠 If you want it to feel like real software naming

    Most image tools (like Photoshop, GIMP, etc.) don’t strictly spell out acronyms anymore—they use:

    • suggestive tech words (Layer, Light, Render, Brush)
    • or abstract brand terms

    So something like:

    WLBR = “WaveLight Brush & Render”

    feels believable without being overly literal.

    (end of ChatGPT response)

    Out of these, I think “Workflow Layer-Based Retoucher” works best. But interesting that ChatGPT thinks “GIMP” doesn’t “strictly spell out” an acronym anymore, or that “Photoshop” ever did?!





  • Mid 2000s. Web forums based on UBB, WBB, vBulletin, phpBB, etc.

    Went on to discover wikis at age 11, IRC at age 12, most of my social contacts in my teen years were with people I met online because they were generally a lot nicer than people I met IRL.

    I would see nothing wrong with people born after me doing the same, although admittedly those years would have been a lot better if my school hadn’t been full of people I had nothing in common with and I hadn’t needed to use the Internet to socialize.





  • I first became active on web forums at the age of 10 and didn’t keep my age secret at the time. Not once (!) did I encounter anyone who appeared to be a child predator or anything like that. So forgive me if I don’t see a lot wrong with “kids talking to strangers online” although it certainly depends on the kid’s age and maturity level and also what kind of online space it is.


  • We shouldn’t do either nor do we need to. Billionaire-owned social media can continue to exist if people want it. The important thing is that there must be alternatives to it.

    And the result of literally any new government regulation of “social media” (I still don’t like that term, but if everyone is using it, so am I) at all, including but not limited to age verification, is to make that harder.



  • That is the central problem with all of this.

    Oh, you want the government to regulate “social media”, like requiring age verification and such things? Because you are noticing young people being “addicted” (what you mean is having a habit, or hobby, that you don’t like) to TikTok or Instagram or what?

    OK, have fun without wikis, public git repos, public tech support forums that aren’t financially able to comply with any of these regulations. What do you mean that’s not what you meant! You said social media, social media is any website that allows the general public to publish information and read information published on it, so clearly that’s exactly what you meant!

    This https://www.eff.org/cyberspace-independence needs to be widely remembered again, and quickly before it’s too late to undo the damage.