CougTek
Hairy Aussie
Almost Chewy. Now it's 10000. I wonder how many forums have a thread that large on the Net.
Almost Chewy. Now it's 10000. I wonder how many forums have a thread that large on the Net.
Awww...I looked at the number of replies to the thread. So he posted the 10000th post and me the 10000th reply. Whatever. My post is at the top of the page and his is burried at the bottom of last page. No one will see his, but all can admire mine
Do you guys know if there are many other bigger threads in the other forums you visit?
There's a thread with over 148,000 replies on one forum I visit.Do you guys know if there are many other bigger threads in the other forums you visit?
There's a thread with over 148,000 replies on one forum I visit.
Nope, wouldn't even dream of it. The thread is bound to be 99.999% trash.Care to read that thread from scratch?
I just spent about 90 minutes deciding on and then looking for the books I want to take to my son's classroom tomorrow. I'm the 'secret reader' that will show up by surprise tomorrow and read to the class. Funny how things change when you become a parent! :study:
My father read aloud a chapter or two a night until he judged that I was old enough to read those books myself, probably until I was about six or seven years old. Doing so undoubtedly instilled a particular relationship with books that I didn't observe in other children.
We borrowed Gorganzola from our library not that long ago, certainly a good book. Will keep an eye out for the other one at the library - thanks for the tip. (We tend to borrow 20 books each fortnight for our two - they love their books that much).Couple of my son's favorites that I'll be reading (he's 4):
Gorganzola: A Very Stinky Saurus
Mr. Tuggle's Troubles
If it shoots, blows up, has swords, or has lasers, Brendan likes that too but that's not appropriate for the class room.
At any rate, being read to is unquestionably my fondest memory of childhood, even moreso that I knew that what was being read were grown-up books with long and intricate plots and no (or almost no) pictures.
I remember seeing that posted on reddit not too long back.
Yeah probably. The link is from imgur, which basically exists to be a place for redditors to put pictures.
I don't get reddit. It's complete and utter chaos that seems to be lacking in any greater sense of community.
One of the reasons I appreciated my time on TotalFark is that it's a wider community made of up of people coming from different backgrounds with varied interests. It's really the only place I've spent communicating with non-nerds and/or women who aren't queer. The community is such that there's a broad idea that most people at least know of most people while at the same time being large enough to support a widely varied population. The larger population of Fark is itself too large to support much of a real community; being able to have an actual discussion about a topic is difficult because of the nature (i.e. comments are not threaded) of their forum system.
With Slashdot, the amazing thing is the availability of expert-level comments. There's tons of trolls too, but with plenty of folks mixed in who legitimately know their stuff. Slashdot discussions tend to send me off on tangents of reading and exploration.
Digg just looks to me like Youtube commentators trying to ape Fark by way of Down's Syndrome and Four Loko.
Reddit (yes, I register my normal username there) looks from the outside like a big self-segregating mass. I don't see any evidence of a wider community. I'm sure there's some sort of something in larger boards, but because it appears to be unmoderated (in terms of both topics and in discussions), and readership is so self-selecting, I generally think I've seen better discussion elsewhere. The few folks I know who do use reddit have said they tend to stick to local or regional sub-forums or have one highly specific interest that keeps them there.