Grrl Power #1315 – Gotta caption ’em all
Happy almost Xmas! For those of you who partake.
I guess I jumped the gun talking about subtitles under the last page. Oh well. I do personally find it almost impossible not to read subtitles… or just captioning really, when they’re on the screen. When I’m at my parent’s house, the captioning is always on, cause my dad had a cochlear implant, and my mom needs hearing aids now too. So does my sister. I seemed to dodge the worst of it. My hearing seems to be about average for my age, with one or two frequencies being weaker than others. I kind of want to go get hearing aids though. I’ve been wearing glasses since early high school, so why not add to my gear. Plus I’m an audiophile in the sense that I appreciate really good audio, but refuse to be a twat about the supposed superiority of vinyl and am also unwilling to spend proper audiophile money on gear. The problem with audio gear, and probably literally any gear oriented hobby is that there’s cheap gear that gets the job done but is obviously inferior but costs like $8-20, good gear that lacks any obvious drawbacks that usually lands in the $40-$90 range, “pro” gear that’s quite good and jumps up to the $250-400 area, and then there’s a vast gulf to the “phile” gear, that starts costing like $8,000 up to, and let’s be honest, there’s virtually no upper limit. I saw an audio setup for listening to computer audio that was around $45,000 dollars. The thing is, most people can tell the difference between the $40 pair of headphones and the $250. Fewer people can tell the difference between the $250 and the $400. Sure, maybe the build quality is nicer, but I’m talking about just the audio. Above that, you have to spend excessively to really, actually tell the difference, and some of that is just going to be placebo. Diminishing returns and all that. I once got a subscription to Tidal, which is basically Spotify, but they offer studio master quality uncompressed audio, and whether it was my admittedly quite nice gaming headphones (but not $4,000 headphones running through a $10,000 DAC) or my Mark 1 earballs, I just couldn’t hear the difference.
What the hell was I talking about. Oh, hearing aids. I might look into a pair, because honestly it’s hard to know what you’re missing.
I’m positive you could make a shirt with modern doodads that did what Dabbler’s do. They’ve invented pretty flexible screens. I don’t think it’d look like fabric, but maybe some ziplock pouch on the front of the shirt with a removable screen for easy washing? Hook that up to a smartphone listening and doing text to speech? I’ve also seen hats and shirts that have led lights on them. I don’t mean flashlights, but low res screens. Or just general illumination, like this. Easy. The trick would be making it only TtS the person wearing the shirt, so you don’t have a jumble of overlapping nonsense on the shirt or people sneaking up behind the person and saying stuff like “I planned 9/11.” or “My dad can molest your dad.” or whatever. Restricting it to the wearer probably wouldn’t be too hard, really. If they have AI that can kind of blandly imitate voices, someone should be able to rig up an AI that can filter and identify voices pretty well. Failing that, some sort of mouth bilocation tracking could work. I think most smartphones only have one mic, but speakers and mics are basically the same thing. I’d be surprised if someone couldn’t figure out a way to use the speakers and mic in concert to echolocate. And failing that, the shirt could have a built in lavalier mic that plugs into the phone via the same cable that runs the screen. It’d be great if you had a friend who was hard of hearing and always forgot to put in his hearing aids. But then you could much more easily just have a hand gesture that meant “Put in your ears, Steve.”
The new vote incentive is up!
Dabbler went somewhere tropical, in a very small bikini. As you might guess, it doesn’t stay on for long, which of course, you can see over at Patreon. Also she has an incident with “lotion,” and there’s a bonus comic page as well.
Double res version will be posted over at Patreon. Feel free to contribute as much as you like.
I am not the slightest bit surprised that Dabbler has that shirt. I would also not be surprised if the shirt can auto-translate as it would provide another reason for people to stare at her boobs.
More like subtities….
She seems a bit more dommy than subby to me honestly.
Subtittles. Subtle subtittles.
You beat me to it!!! At first glance I thought that was what it said.
Gotta admit, first thing I saw when the page loaded was “on my shirt, no one needs an excuse to stare at my boobs!”, phone screen perfectly positioned to show me THAT panel and little of the rest. My first thought?
“……Now what is Dabbler doing?….”
The answer doesn’t surprise me one bit….
lmao kinda got sidetracked here
All “…phile” gear is priced to take money from stupid people.
One “advantage” of hearing aids is being able to listen to other things. My sister in law says that whenever my brother has a vague faraway look on his face it is because he is listening to sport on his hearing aids.
The old advantage was that you could not hear the person speaking to you but could hear 2 conversations away perfectly.
Has this persuaded you?
You can tell Maxima’s been hanging out with Sydney a lot. She jumps straight to “Just make with the leg.” without explaining why or what leg.
hearing aids are way better now then they were even only 10 years ago.
able to filter or enhance sounds very specific to the users exact needs.
to bad thier very expensive.
“Restricting it to the wearer probably wouldn’t be too hard, really.”
Any voice assistant that can place calls on a locked phone already restricts it to the owners voice.
And I am not sure AI voice cloning can beat it – it is there to trick human listeners, not AI listeners.
I wasn’t listening… but I know EXACTLY what you’re saying!
Since when does Cora have four arms?
Since Panel #2, you can see her holo-materializing them.
Panel 6 – Dabbler whenever any camera zooms in on her chest.
Hey, Dave? I have a question based on the last panel, By the time I figured this out, I figured it would just be easier to wait & post the question here.
You said that you hadn’t originally wanted Peggy to get her leg back, but you didn’t think it made sense for her to refuse the advantage of advanced technology replacing it.
My question is, why didn’t Cora do the same thing?
I’ll admit that I’m no scientist or biologist, but as I understand it, Humans born with defects like malformed or missing limbs still HAVE the DNA-coding for that limb fully intact in their genome, it simply does not ‘cut/paste’ correctly in certain people.
If they can clone a perfectly-identical leg for Peggy to be grafted to her body, they SHOULD be able to do the same with Cora, growing her cloned limbs & grafting them in place.
I assume that her Parents didn’t do this when she was a baby due to either moral or financial reasons (or possibly legal, depending on the world she grew up on), but why didn’t she do it herself when she got access to the funds, tech &/or travel arrangements herself, or when she met Dabbler?
It could be s simple as “she doesn’t want to”. I’m assuming that by this point Cora has gotten used to her artificial limbs, and since they’re currently generated by a hard-light projector (forecfields and holograms combined), that gives her significantly more flexibility in her arrangement of limbs than somebody with physical prosthetics. We’ve already seen that she can give herself parts that her genes DON’T code for (extra arms, snake tail instead of legs), and the ability to mix-and-match on the fly makes them even more useful.
If you have good hearing and get better audio gear, it becomes your new normal and you start hearing the problems with the lesser gear.
In panel 5: Is Max saying Whyyy.. with a rising tone or a falling one?
A rising tone would indicate she’s puzzled, while a falling one would say she doesn’t know what’s going on but she just knows she’s not going to like it when she does.
Honestly, I can’t tell which one.
My mother uses hearing aids, which are controlled via a phone app. But she also has memory problems, so remembering that she can control the various options e.g. watching a movie vs. having a conversation in a restaurant, is a challenge. Not to mention “How do I do this again?”
The first story I read where there was a shirt that is a display screen was a short story by Walter Jon Williams (he wrote Hardwired among other things). I think it was in the late 80s. Cyberpunk of course. The “subtitles” idea for the shirt is something I haven’t seen before though.
Y’know, speaking of the previous page I did have one comment- in the last panel I thought Dabbler looked too wholesome; more like “someone who just woke up from a very comfy nap” and not “someone who just had their bell punched in the broom closet”. Glad we’re back to the usual shenanigans.
>but refuse to be a twat about the supposed superiority of vinyl
Based. The only reason I’ve started collecting vinyl is because I like the aesthetics and there’s something about the physical process of putting on a record that’s more satisfying than just pressing play on a digital device. I guess that’s two reasons. Also the ritual of putting on the record helps focus me on the listening experience more. Three. Our three chief reasons are aesthetics, physicality, ritual, and an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope…wait no, that’s something else. Erm…anyway!
The good news about “audiophile gear” these days is that there has been an influx of Chinese and other east/southeast Asian manufacturers over the past few years who are offering headphones at the $20-50 price point which sound like $100-500 headphones used to. Of course, one might have concerns about the sourcing of their components and labor, but it’s been shown in many cases that the more expensive “Western” brands are actually the same headphones just with different casings. If you’re interested, check out brands like Moondrop and Anker for starters. There are other brands that are even newer and even cheaper, but I haven’t been in the market recently to know which ones are good.
This reminds me when my wife and I were married, she was complaining that everyone kept staring at her boobs. Well yeah, at 19 she was sporting a pair of C cups at 99lbs, who wouldn’t? So I ran across a t-shirt that read: “If you can read this, mind your own business, PERVERT!” which led to me teasing her and making a point of saying, “hold still, I can’t read” and her calling me a perv lol. She grew up in Kentucky, and was fond of tub-tops and Daisy-dukes, ALSO very distracting :D
TUBE-tops… where did I leave my coffee?
Yes, this shirt is possible and would possibly sell.
No, I’m not a fan of it.
It’s still just as socially acceptable to stare at that body area if there’s flashing text and it truly is hard to not read even non-flashing text when presented.
You could being a shirt include acceleration sensors to measure when the wearer is speaking.
Directional microphones could require the voice to come from the head area.
Voice recognition software could filter on tune.
One could even try to match the vibrations in the chest with those in the air.
The easiest way to display would probably just a screen mounted on the shirt with premium options available like bending screens.
Power storage is kind of hard, but I’m young and optimistic.
It’s not that intense, so maybe you could power it with on the spot harvesting and a small accu.
Body movement, surrounding radio waves, solar energy, etc.
As far as the hearing aids go, I had an inner ear infection almost 2 years ago that cost me my hearing in my left ear. I’m retired and Medicare sux when it comes to hearing aids, so I bought a $30 set from Amazon. It works ok, but even with it on, everything sounds tiny with no real quality.
The only reason I bothered is because everyone forgets to talk to my good ear, so I am always saying “HUH?” followed by my having to turn around and make a point to leaning in with my good ear to remind them. Biggest down-side is it’s an over-the-ear model, and tends to pull out if I take my glasses off.
no one *Does* need an excuse
feels like a weird sentence?.
There were shirts with scrolling LED text displays back in the 1990’s for a few years. The LED block was attached to a T-shirt, a wire ran down inside to a contoller/battery box on a waist belt. The display was 2-3 inches (50-75mm) high and 4-6 inches (100-150mm) wide, so you only got a few letters at a time – which would probably have been even better for making people stare at the wearer’s chest.
Also similar displays on ‘cowboy’ style belt buckles showed up on the same stands.
Eventually they seem to have disappeared, the displays probably couldn’t handle sweat and spilt drinks, or accidentally getting tossed in the washing machine.
When I read “H.R. videos”, I thought of high-resolution videos instead of human resources videos. My head is too much into the techie side of things. When Dabbler is watching the video on dealing with sexual harassment, she would be thinking of something along the lines of, “So is that why nobody wants to do those things with me? But it would not be unwanted.”
Running a hr department for any super hero team seems to me to be a special kind of hell.
They all get in super intense situations all the time rendering them emotionally unstable.
They get reminded all the time that they’re untouchable.
There’re huge power unbalances in the team.
Generalized training is basically unachievable.
You caught me, I was totally trying to read her shirt in the first panel.
When TVs were going from Standard Def to High Def, I couldn’t convince my brother to consider them because in his words, “I only have standard definition eyes, so what would be the point.”
ETA to a song and dance?
Boobs glorious boobs! to the tune of Food glorious food!
I have learned to ASK before I read a t-shirt. Most people forget what their chest is saying, which can lead to some embarrassing exchanges. I almost got slapped by a young lady who had major portions of Hamlet’s soliloquy on her front. For a while I owned a lapel button that said “If you don’t want me to stare at them, don’t print on them.”
I must say that, in that regard, I would find Dabbler’s,attitude refreshing.