Pezza ◱ ◱ (@pezza) • Hey
Engineer hero - fighting for the future!
Publications
- *°:⋆ₓₒ╰(◡‿◡✿╰)
- Looks delicious 🥰🍓do we have a foodie club on Orb?
- $BONSAI x P00LS🌳
This is the first ever $ 00 tipping grant - exclusive for our community!
The top 500 $BONSAI holders are eligible for this tipping grant.
Mirror this post to earn 00 tokens!
Learn more 👇
https://mirror.xyz/zerozero.eth/TVZqiT5FGsdSbA48pSzGOwy96s97YkjmwiWF7RYnR8I
- In LA eating food us European’s don’t have
- You’ve got mail
- Mirroring images is one of my favorite things to do. Who else loves to do this?
- My collab with @lens/dubdelay for the track "Ether" has visuals now ;) From Vegas all the way to Ireland, we managed to send stems back and forth and make this in a couple months or so. Dubdelay did the visuals, I added a few sprinkles. We both made the music.
50/50 between the two of us.
Enjoy. 🔊
- Same to you 🎈
- Beyond the mist
- Today's Single Edition 🌸
- Meta Incentivizes Successful Threads Posts with Bonuses
Meta is rolling out a new bonus program to reward creators for successful posts on its social networking platform Threads. The initiative, currently aimed at invited influencers, could pay out thousands of dollars based on the performance of individual posts. However, the exact conditions may vary for each participant.
By incentivizing engaging content, Meta hopes to attract more users to Threads and establish it as a thriving social media app. The bonus program is a strategic move to compete with rival platforms and encourage influencers to prioritize Threads for their content creation.
As Threads continues to evolve, Meta's focus on rewarding high-performing posts showcases its commitment to building a vibrant and active user community. The bonus program has the potential to shape the future of content creation on the platform and attract a diverse range of influential voices.
- 12 hours and 80 k in matic in revenue.
- Please dump BTC....I'm not ready!!
- Very informative post for everyone who is new on Lens Protocol
And btw, @lens/definn is a must follow ❤️
- $BTC absolutely pumping crazy and we are all asking the same question.
Our alts will pump next after #BTC right? Right?
- #BTC
- gm gm
Have a blessed week!!🌹🧬
- Look something
- “The legend of time” by Badi Coloreando in Algeciras, Spain.
#streetart #art #lensprotocol
- This beautiful oak tree was a seedling the year Thomas Jefferson was born and is estimated to be 281 years old. Photo taken at Trout Lake Nature Center, Eustis, Florida. #tree
- coming soon
- my dear friend olga elegantly holding a daiquiri in new hollywood 💗
- 🔥🔥🔥🔥
- GM ✌🏾😌✌🏾
Happy Friday, let's finish the week off strong 🥳
- One amethyst left! 💜
- Bitcoin ETF fees
http://coinmarketcal.com/en/news/vaneck-slashes-spot-bitcoin-etf-fee-to-0-20-fidelity-cuts-eu-etp-fee-to-0-35
- Which festivals are you looking forward to this year ? 😎 🔈
- - More innovation. Plugging smart contract calls directly into social interactions (follow/reference/open action modules)
- network resilience
- censorship resistance
- About 66mio years ago a meteorite of the size of Mt. Everest crashed into the ocean, north of the Yucatan Peninsula 🦖💀
Obviously, I only learned that fact while being there, but what’s more interesting is how the crater of the impact beautifully aligns with an astonishing amount of Cenotes. I don’t understand the hypotheses around why that is, but what I can tell for sure is that these sinkholes, dotted throughout the thick Jungle of Yucatan, are absolutely wonderful to look at (and swim in) 👙
- Hank, a cat from the complex.
- we just updated it bc "mint" sounds cooler!
we take all our business decisions on the scale of coolness.
- **Opening the garden**
art by @lens/notgonnamakeit
Limited Collect for 1 MATIC
80% going to the artist, and 20% going to @lens/creators to collect and tip more creators on Lens.
- I think in 2021 BTC crossed silver?
- 2 hurricanes 🌀 these weee deadly btw 🤣
- 💀Maren x grillz by Alligator Jesus.
private studio sesh ✨
He’s done Madonna, Beyoncé, Kourtney Kardashian, Doja Cat, and more. 💎
- Welcome to the My Lens Journey series!
Next up in our series, we're sharing @lens/iamtherealyakuza ’s journey in the Lens ecosystem.
Check out his story below 👇
👉 When did your Lens journey start?
I joined Lens on September 23, 2022. Back then, the Lens community was still in its early stages, with only a few of us actively posting and engaging. Despite this, there was a unique sense of community that made me feel welcomed right from the start.
👉 What’s your favorite thing about the Lens ecosystem?
What I like the most about Lens, tech-wise, is its portability and the ownership it grants you over your profile and social graph. But let's be real, my absolute favorite thing is the community itself.
People here are friendly and supportive, and there's none of that rug-pulling drama you might find elsewhere. On Lens, banter and serious topics walk side by side in a healthy way.
👉 Your favorite @lens/lens app?
Talking about portability, my go-to apps to use are @lens/buttrfly & @lens/orbapp .
👉 What are your expectations for the Lens ecosystem in 2024?
The new smart posts and community features are going to make it awesome for existing Lens users and bring in those looking for a real web3 social vibe.
I'm expecting to see a bunch of cool projects popping up, adding more social features and utility to the ecosystem. Hoping these projects will provide more support for Creators.
- Is it yoga?🧘
- Todays colour palette: raspberry milkshake
5 editions
- hey everyone - is this still working??
- **MEMES: psychology, philosophy and art.**
The word MEME was coined for the first time in 1977 by Richard Dawson in his book "the selfish gene", where he states that a meme is "the smallest unit of cultural reproduction" that is, the equivalent of a gene but at a sociological level. Now one of the main characteristics of a meme is its decontextualization, the ability to take an event or image and take it out of context to the point of absurdity, therefore, what we know today as a meme in the digital world becomes a meme with respect to what Richard Dawson referred to, some examples that he mentions are: tunes or sounds, ideas, slogans, fashions in terms of clothing, ways of making pots or building bows.
Before continuing let's talk about the primordial memes, which are the archetypes, an archetype is a universal idea that we can only intuit from its forms and expressions in myths, religions and stories, for example, the idea of the son of god and his resurrection, we find it in the story of Jesus in Christianity, Dionysus in the Greeks and Balder in the Norse, all are children of the primordial god, they die and resurrect. Another quite popular is the archetype of the hero, the character lives a normal and quiet life, something happens that forces him to go on a journey to overcome himself and defeat the "evil" and then ends the journey being a completely new man (or woman), these archetypes are so popular and long-lived because they speak to us at an unconscious level, they describe as a metaphor stages through which every human being goes through at a certain time of his life.
A meme is also a virus that spreads like an idea from brain to brain, a neural network that is reproduced in each brain circuit, Deleuze said in postulates of linguistics that language only needs to transmit a minimum of information to achieve its true purpose which is "to designate a discourse", which means in other words that the function of language is to transmit ways of thinking, behaviors and slogans. How many of us, when seeing a meme that makes us laugh, have commented "literally me"?
Now, memes always have a component of subversion, sometimes morally, although these are not the most propagated, but of subversion of logic, that is to say, they have a component of absurdism. Absurdism is a philosophy proposed by Albert Camus who stated that life had no meaning, therefore it was our job to find that meaning. A meme by reproducing a certain pattern of absurdity generates a code, and every culture needs codes, therein lies much of its power because communities are identified from their ability to decode certain codes, like that inside joke between your group of 5 friends that only understand each other and when there is another person present is excluded from the joke.
They also function as rituals in the sense that they are charged with affects, emotions and psychic energy as they spread and thus become symbols to the level where you don't know where they came from or what they meant in the first place, a more literal extrapolation of this is memecoins, people put their money (energy) there in the hope of being able to double their investment quickly, and since most of the time a meme is fast food media, it is natural that memecoins are also fast food "investments" to a large extent, but their power is undeniable and it is worth asking why some of these survive, just as certain memes last longer than others.
Finally, can memes work as social engineering? Definitely yes, just look at how an agency like Brand Fire has dedicated itself to the creation of memes to market its clients' products or how a Russian website created a meme comparing CNN with North Korea's political propaganda. The question then arises, can these mechanisms be used in a positive or favorable way for society? We will see.
Share your favorite MEME below!
You can also collect for 1 wMatic, tip and mirror🌞
- posted this to show a senior in high school at da patti how lens works!!! don’t 💤
- When someone mints your NFT in 2024
- Love those lazy Sundays....keep em coming....
- MEMES: psicología, filosofía y arte.
La palabra MEME fue acuñada por primera vez en 1977 por Richard Dawson en su libro "el gen egoísta", donde afirma que un meme es "la unidad más pequeña de reproducción cultural" es decir, el equivalente a un gen pero a nivel sociológico. Ahora una de las características principales de un meme es su descontextualización, la capacidad de tomar un evento o imagen y sacarla de contexto hasta llevarla al absurdo, por lo tanto, lo que hoy conocemos como meme en el mundo digital viene a ser un meme respecto a lo que Richard Dawson se refería, algunos ejemplos que este menciona son: tonadas o sones, ideas, consignas, modas en cuanto a vestimenta, formas de fabricar vasijas o de construir arcos.
Antes de seguir hablemos de los memes primordiales, que son los arquetipos, un arquetipo es una idea universal que solo podemos intuir a partir de sus formas y expresiones en mitos, religiones e historias, por ejemplo, la idea de el hijo de dios y su resurrección, la encontramos en la historia de Jesus en el cristianismo, de Dionisos en los griegos y en Balder en los nórdicos, todos son hijos del dios primordial, mueren y resucitan. Otro bastante popularizado es el arquetipo del héroe, el personaje vive una vida normal y tranquila, algo ocurre que le obliga a ir en una travesía para superarse a si mismo y vencer al "mal" y luego termina el viajo siendo un hombre completamente nuevo (o mujer), estos arquetipos son tan populares y longevos porque nos hablan a nivel inconsciente, describen a manera de metáfora etapas por las que cada ser humano atraviesa en determinado momento de su vida.
Un meme es también un virus que se esparce como una idea de cerebro en cerebro, una red neuronal que se reproduce en cada circuito cerebral, Deleuze decía en postulados de la lingüística que el lenguaje solo necesita transmitir un mínimo de información para lograr su verdadero cometido que es "designar un discurso", lo cual significa en otras palabras que la función del lenguaje es transmitir formas de pensar, conductas y consignas. Cuántos de nosotros al ver un meme que nos hace reír hemos comentado "yo literal"?
Ahora los memes siempre tienen un componente de subversión, a veces moralmente, aunque estos no son los que mas se propagan, si no de subversión de la lógica, es decir, tienen un componente de absurdismo. El absurdismo es una filosofía propuesta por Albert Camus que afirmaba que la vida no tenía sentido, por tanto era nuestro trabajo encontrarle dicho sentido. Un meme al reproducir determinado patrón de absurdo se genera un código, y toda cultura necesita de códigos, ahí yace gran parte de su potencia porque las comunidades se identifican a partir de su capacidad para decodificar determinados códigos, como ese chiste interno entre tu grupo de 5 amigos que solo entienden entre ustedes y que cuando hay otra persona presente se queda excluida del chiste.
También funcionan como rituales en el sentido de que son cargados con afectos, emociones y energía psíquica a medida que se esparcen y así se van convirtiendo en símbolos al nivel en que no se sabe de donde surgieron ni qué significaban en principio, una extrapolación más literal de esto son las memecoins, la gente pone su dinero (energía) ahí con la esperanza de poder duplicar su inversión de forma rápida, y como la mayoría de las veces un meme es fast food media, es natural que las memecoins también lo sean en gran medida, pero su poder es innegable y vale la pena preguntarse porque sobreviven algunas de estas, así como ciertos memes perduran más que otros.
Por último, pueden los memes funcionar como ingeniería social? Definitivamente sí, basta ver como una agencia como Brand Fire se ha dedicado a la creación de memes para marketear los productos de sus clientes o como una página Rusa creó un meme comparando a CNN con la propaganda política de Corea del Norte. Surge entonces la interrogante, pueden ser estos mecanismos usados de forma positiva o favorable para la sociedad? Ya veremos.
- Weekly Recap: Chapter Two pre-orders, BTC eclipses Silver
https://www.bankless.com/solana-strikes-back
- @lens/shassi thanks for collecting! You’re now entered into the 1/1 giveaway 😁
- Enjoyed some sun today 😍✨
- Good morning!
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- What did I miss?