• deranger@sh.itjust.works
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    5 hours ago

    Why aren’t there volume marks on the graduated cylinder? That’s what makes it graduated, not the bottom stand piece.

    • quacky@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Imo, it is because those jobs are gatekept for specific kinds of people. It is not about the difficulty. In fact, the more education, the easier the jobs get because the lowest class is assigned all the hard manual labor like farming, cleaning, etc. The credentialist system is designed specificaly for inequality and exclusion

      • expr@programming.dev
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        10 hours ago

        It’s just a different kind of difficulty, and of course not all jobs are created equal. But ultimately this rhetoric is the kind of thing the capitalists want. They want to pit “lower class” against “upper class”, when in reality, these distinctions are entirely irrelevant and it’s actually “the billionaire oligarchy squeezing every last drop out of the rest of us”. If you work for a living, you are “low class”.

        • quacky@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          Read “Caste: the origin of our discontents” and you’ll see that income stratification has always been about class, race, sex, and other arbitrary traits. There are “pink collar jobs” assigned only to women. I’ve witnessed anti-male discrimination in Direct Support & Nursing jobs for example and this is because that is not their “place” in the caste system. It’s not a rhetoric; it’s observation, evidence, and an accurate model of soceity

    • Damaskox@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      I can barely deal with anything more complicated after dividing and percent, I think. (I last studied math at trade school like 15 years ago, in Europe)

        • tpyo@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          Hey that’s really awesome! My dad showed me how to use one a long time ago. Those things are pure magic

          • Zerush@lemmy.ml
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            14 hours ago

            I know, with it you can calculate everything, exept adition and substraction, this you must do still by hand. But it shows only the number value, not if it 13,48 or 1348. Later with the electronic calculators it was easier, more if they are programmable. Sadly when these appears I already finished my studies.

            • tpyo@lemmy.world
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              12 hours ago

              Electronic calculators have their own magic but with slide rules you conjure it yourself and it’s beautiful. I like seeing the how behind the why

              Next time I visit I’ll ask to be shown again. I miss the long, boring explanations about how every single part of a keyboard works and how they all mechanically and electronically mesh to put our finger taps into words on a screen

              I’m sorry for waxing nostalgia, it just kinda dawned on me I haven’t let him know I appreciated being taught those things because nowadays we just expect things to work and don’t question the “magic”

              • Zerush@lemmy.ml
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                5 hours ago

                In essence is very easy to understand, you can eg. multiplicate adding to logarrithm numbers, as said too rulers with logarrithm scale serve to multiplicate two numbers, same as two rulers with a normal cm scale can serve to add two numbers, putting the zero of one on eg. 4,5 cm of the other ruler and youll see that under the 3 cm of the first ruler, appears 7,5 cm. so you have calculed 4,5 + 3=7,5. The slide rulers work the same way, only that they use different logarithmm scales, whith which you can multiplicate, calculate angles, square roots and other, depending on the used scale. Thr magic of logarrithms-

  • fckreddit@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    On earning my masters, my life really went to shit. Not that it wasn’t shit before. It just became shittier.