TomViolenz wrote:
BTW what is a hipster?!
In short they passively protest current times by celebrating fashion and technology of the past.
TomViolenz wrote:
BTW what is a hipster?!
Like Macbooks and iPads?beats me wrote:... and technology of the past.









Tom, mein freund, you're totally overthinking this.TomViolenz wrote:Well if anything, you didn't get the keen observation I made
Try reading every negative (is there any other type?) mention of them and substitute "younger people I don't like" and it never changes the meaning of the phrase.
Try it out
Yes, I got the 'keen observation' you made, but since you didn't get the definition of a hipster, you don't know that that actually does change the meaning of the phrase.TomViolenz wrote:Well if anything, you didn't get the keen observation I made
Try reading every negative (is there any other type?) mention of them and substitute "younger people I don't like" and it never changes the meaning of the phrase.
Try it out
That sort of thing could be done with an easy algorithm, actually. Just think of using a gate that makes the cuts; so it'd be automatic. The volume of speech passes the threshold and the cut is made when the threshold is passed. You could whip that up in max in like an hour or less. No, I'm not going to do it, but I have heard an interview of a guy who did something similar but way more in depth.eyeknow wrote:Clearly too many people with too much time on their hands.
Ok, then explain to me what else have "Scandinavians on welfare, who have Macs and make beats" (LoopstationZ) and NASA engineers (beats) in commonstringtapper wrote:Tom, mein freund, you're totally overthinking this.TomViolenz wrote:Well if anything, you didn't get the keen observation I made
Try reading every negative (is there any other type?) mention of them and substitute "younger people I don't like" and it never changes the meaning of the phrase.
Try it out