Poe’s Law is that you can’t be sarcastic or over-the-top on the internet without clearly signaling because there’s no opinion so stupid it doesn’t have adherents.
She said she went to the store to buy salad dressing, and it ended up taking her twenty minutes to choose one bottle from an aisle full of different brands.
When she got home she realized that she could have made salad dressing at home in five minutes.
When shortcuts take longer than the thing they are supposed to replace, they become useless.
Poe’s Law is that you can’t be sarcastic or over-the-top on the internet without clearly signaling because there’s no opinion so stupid it doesn’t have adherents.
That’s why I added the tone-tag
/j
Welcome to the interwebs.
I’ve seen “/s” and never saw “/j” before.
/s
stands for "sarcastic,/j
for joking. Many people use/s
for jokes, which, always bugs me a bit, since there’s a difference.Here’s the masterlist
This reminds me of something Gail Collins wrote.
She said she went to the store to buy salad dressing, and it ended up taking her twenty minutes to choose one bottle from an aisle full of different brands.
When she got home she realized that she could have made salad dressing at home in five minutes.
When shortcuts take longer than the thing they are supposed to replace, they become useless.
I don’t really see how this is comparable.
/s
and/j
is decremental to that cause./s
has seen wider adoption, why not the rest of the tone-tags set?It takes less time to write something like “reference” or “joking” than it does to try and memorize the list.
You don’t need to memorize the full list. Most of the tags make mnemonic sense.
What did you think the “/j” meant?
Personally, I thought it was a typo of /s.
sarcastic is a long word, whereas ‘joke’ is only four letters; that’s two more than ‘/j.’
Like I said, your shortcut doesn’t really save time.