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@@ -16,6 +16,63 @@ ideas' witlessness;
ideas' witnesses;
ideas-
+2022-12-31
+
+2022-04-19
+
+Snippets from /home/trinity/homepage/computer.html
+
+ Hello and welcome to the world of computing.
+ This guide is intended to take you from a cursory or completely
+nonexistent knowledge of how computers work or even what a computer is to an
+understanding with which you're comfortable.
+ As this guide will go on the manner of language will shift from
+conversational and casual to more formal and technical; this is because these
+earlier sections are more like learning to ride a bike, where you won't easily
+forget the basics, but the later sections are more like learning to build a
+bike, where you may need to reference the manual later.
+ This is also a perpetually unfinished document, please refer to the
+<I>updated</I> date as its version if your citation format permits it.
+ To start, let's run over some basic terminology.
+ Many of these terms are ambiguous and will be better specified later.
+The Monitor
+ The monitor (term taken from the verb <I>monitor</I>), or screen
+(term taken from the verb <I>screen</I>), is a raster display unit your
+computer controls. In some manner, which depends on the technology your monitor
+uses, there is being displayed some sort of content that your computer has
+generated. It may be these very words. Monitors are usually interchangeable but
+sometimes entire computers can be included in the monitor unit itself, the
+concept of which is known as <I>all-in-one computer units</I> because
+all components of the computer except input devices are in the same place (the
+monitor assembly).
+ It's possible your computer doesn't have a monitor. Possibly, you're
+using a teletypewriter, which prints text output onto paper using ink, though
+this is unlikely as they were obsoleted fifty years ago in favor of "glass
+teletypes" (<I>glass</I> here refers to the glass tube of a cathode ray
+tube monitor). Possibly, you're using assistive technologies and aren't sighted.
+Or maybe you're making this entire document up and are in a dream. There are
+many ways to use computers that <I>don't</I> involve monitors but seeing
+as they're so common-place there's a very good likelihood you are indeed using
+one.
+The Key-board
+ The keyboard is how many people input text into their computer. There
+are many types of keyboards. Most people use standard QWERTY (named such after
+the first five alphabetical runes that appear on the board) keyboards, where
+each button is one symbol and perhaps there are special buttons that change the
+meaning of the other buttons. There are also <I>chorded</I> keyboards,
+where each <I>combination</I> (or chord, like on a piano) of keys
+represents a symbol.
+ Possibly, you're not using a keyboard at all, and are instead using
+assistive technologies such as speech recognition.
+
+ My intent with the computer guide was to emphasize atypical but
+important interfaces between user and machine, to make the guide relevant to
+every single person who would read the guide. Making a guide only for those who
+are sighted, hearing, have feeling in their fingertips, can read small text, is
+ridiculous and limits the audience far too much. Accessibility is the future
+absolutely.
+
+
2022-12-30
I occasionally write blahposts a day in advance. And who will stop me?