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How To Win Friends And Influence People On The Front Page Of The Internet

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new reddit meme fail

We could stand to learn a thing or two from Reddiquette, the (semi-official) code of conduct for Reddit users.

Reddit, the "front page of the Internet," is a social behemoth of a site that lets people instantly create or join a web community about any topic. Users submit links or text posts and others vote them up or down based on how interesting they find the content. This leaves you with a prioritized list of what people in a community find most interesting at any given moment.

If you didn't already know, Reddit's engagement is massive. In the whole of 2012, it saw 37 billion pages served to 400 million unique visitors. Redditors voted 4 billion times, an average of 133 per post.

We can't help but feel like the quality guidelines for how to behave on the site have quite a bit to do with these impressive statistics. Check them out – not only do many of them make good rules for your offline life, knowing them can keep you from getting your account banned.

Remember the human.

Behind every pseudonymous post is a breathing human being with a name and a blood type. Just like you! So be considerate.

This rule implies and includes almost all the others. No trolling, no flame wars, no posting other people's personal information. You get the idea.

Consider the famous "golden rule" in effect: Treat others the way you would want to be treated.



Use proper grammar and spelling.

Pick your reason, it doesn't matter – proper grammar and spelling matter because it's 1). better to be understood than misunderstood, 2). important to use a standardized system of communication with agreed-upon rules, 3). demonstrates a level of care and intelligence towards what you're writing.

Be receptive to polite corrections as well. It'll only make you a better communicator.



Search for duplicates before posting.

No one likes a visit to the Department of Redundancy Department. You add far more value when you share a brand new something than when you post a YouTube compilation of people falling down for the seventh time. (It's still hilarious after seven times, though.)

This also extends to posting hoaxes. Check Snopes.com first.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Reddit CEO Admits The Site Once Bowed To Pressure From Sears

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reddit expenses_vs_revenues

Reddit CEO Yishan Wong has made good on his promise to publish a chart of Reddit's revenues vs. expenses so that readers can see how profitable the company isn't.

Much of Reddit's revenues come from advertising.

He also made good on his promise not to put any numbers on the chart. "Numbers have been removed to thwart would-be Wall Street analysts," he wrote in a blog post about the progress of the corporate side of Reddit.

Wong also confirmed a hoary piece of early Reddit history: That Sears once successfully persuaded Reddit to remove a link mocking the company:

With the exceptions of a handful of incidents in very early years (e.g. Sears), none of reddit’s owners or investors have ever bothered to exercise influence over reddit’s operations or editorial decisions. Even reddit’s servers are controlled via an AWS account not shared with any other entity, only reddit administrators have access to it. Control of this account was also never transferred to or shared with Condé Nast during the period when they were owners of reddit.

The Sears incident occurred in 2009. Redditors figured it out, triggering a backlash and a "f--- Sears" campaign that drove anti-Sears links onto to the front page. Although the anti-Sears campaign claimed Sears was a Reddit advertiser, Wong did not say whether Sears advertised on Reddit at the time.

Lastly, Wong said Reddit was not preparing to go public:

reddit is not preparing to sell or do an IPO. We value our independence more than money, and the company was already acquired once before (by Condé Nast) and survived due to a rare instance of corporate benevolence/indifference. Other companies who sell themselves usually don’t end up so lucky, while going public (IPO) means having to answer to short-term shareholders and irrational market pressures. We don’t want to risk either of those.

Condé Nast / Advance also never wanted to sell reddit, and rejected offers to buy the site, instead electing to spin it out into an independent entity and take a lessened ownership position specifically because they felt that a standalone reddit would be far more successful, culturally significant, and (one day) profitable.

SEE ALSO: Reddit CEO Admits 'We're Still In The Red'

SEE ALSO: Help Us Fix Reddit By Showing Us How It Should Be Redesigned Read more:

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Twitter And Reddit Are Getting Too Big To Be Useful

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dick costolo

Site that help aggregate news, like Twitter, Hacker News, and Reddit, are a great way to keep informed on what other people think are the most important or interesting stories at any given time. 

But they have one major problem: as their communities get too big, their value for individual users actually decreases.

When a community is small, its users generally have many interests in common. That's why they join in the first place.

But as a community gets larger, the group gets more diverse. On a community site with an emphasis on news, the links that are shared will also become increasingly diverse.

Each site has its own way of deal with this, and each solution has its own problems.

On Twitter, the links and pictures you see come from the individuals you follow. Obviously, this means that if you want to hear about gaming news, you follow gaming news sites and journalists. Same thing for tech or politics.

But Twitter is also a social networking site. People use it to not only share links but also to discuss them in real-time. 

The problem with this stems from the insane number of followers that newsmakers have. If someone has 50,000+ followers and shares an interesting story, it could be replied to hundreds or even thousands of times. No one has the time to engage with that many people. 

So people follow their friends or other non-newsmakers so that they can actually have conversations with people. But then those people start sharing things involving their other interests.

This turns Twitter into a balancing act between following people they can converse with and people who share things they actually care about.

Reddit has a similar problem. Rather than following what individuals post, people subscribe to sections of the site dedicated to specific topics, called "subreddits." There are thousands of these subreddits, so to keep new users from being overwhelmed the site has created a set of curated "defaults" that new or unregistered users see when they go on the site.

As the subscriber counts for these subreddits increases, an ever-larger number of links and comments is submitted each day. On Reddit, this has created a system where certain cultures become dominant within a given subreddit. Since Reddit users only see what gets "upvoted" (liked) by other members of the community, people submit links and comments that they think greatest number of users will like.

That's why the politics subreddit turned into a left-leaning sounding board and atheism became a place for angsty atheist teenagers to make fun of their religious friends and family. And that's why Reddit had to remove those sections from the defaults people saw when they first started using the site: they just aren't good examples of what the site can be anymore. 

Like Twitter, Reddit has become a balancing act. If you don't want the content you see to become an endless stream of repetitive drivel, you have to always be looking for subreddits where people aren't self-conscious about posting things they're sure will be upvoted. If you want your links and comments to be seen, you have to post on subreddits that actually have subscribers.

It's for this reason that Rob Malda, the founder of Slashdot, doesn't think there will be another site like Hacker News or Reddit. In an interview with Timothy Lee at the Washington Post, he states that in the past, the issue with online news used to be finding stuff to read. Now, it's about finding the stuff that's actually relevant to you:

"This is why Hacker News would be better if I could get the 10 best items. I don’t care about a new version of CoffeeScript, but when tech culture stuff happens, the right story is there and it’s fast. But I have to click through a lot of stories that aren’t relevant to me.

Slashdot we kept bounded to 10 or 15 [posts per day in the early years] and by the end we kept it bounded by 20 or 25. At some point that 31st story isn’t really that much better. With more and more voices, you tend toward broader subjects. Eventually it becomes less and less interesting."

Providing interesting, relevant content for many people with many interests is a difficult problem to solve. For now, it seems that the best solution the biggest sites have is to let the users handle curating their own content to varying degrees and through vastly different methods.

If you want to "disrupt" something, why not try here?

Join the conversation about this story »

Top Chef Host Padma Lakshmi Reveals The Best Thing She's Ever Eaten

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padma lakshmi

"Top Chef" host and cookbook author Padma Lakshmi just finished doing a Reddit "Ask Me Anything" session today.

Though at times plugging her new online show "Padma's Picks" and her two cookbooks, the beloved Top Chef hostess spent most of her time giving eloquent and lengthy answers to her foodie fans.

She fielded questions ranging from the upcoming New Orleans season of "Top Chef" to her own favorite recipes and go-to meals.

She even refused to tell one Redditor to 'pack his knives and go,' explaining that she "never tell[s] anyone to pack their knives and go outside of the Top Chef kitchen!"

See some of her best answers below:

Who was your favorite guest judge?

I feel like Top Chef is such a part of popular culture that it's nice when we can incorporate other figures who are also in pop culture who are also in the zeitgeist at the moment. For instance, Pee-wee Herman (who had a TV show years and years ago before anyone had the idea to do a Top Chef) was — by the way — our single most popular celebrity guest judge. Even our crew was walking around like giggly teenage girls, and some of us even dressed like him in homage. For instance, my assistant Jason Duffy not only dressed himself in a white collar shirt with a red bowtie with slicked-back hair, he dressed my daughter like that too. Lucky for him, she was at an age where she didn't have a choice in the matter.

What's it like for you when contestants are eliminated?

I am the person who spends the most time with the chefs. I am in the kitchen with them every single day. And I know how hard they work, and I can see how passionate they are about being the best that they can be.
And to leave your family and friends and your work, and take that personal and professional battle on with cameras rolling and millions of people watching you is just plain hard sometimes. It's as wonderful when you do well as it is awful when you don't. And I physically feel that pain along with them. I can't help it, I never had much of a poker face.

What was the best dish you've ever eaten on "Top Chef"?

Ilan Hall made the best dish I've ever had on Top Chef. It was in the last episode in California, we went to Santa Barbara with Eric Ripert. Ilan made a beautiful spanish dish with noodles and seafood called Sedillos Con Chorizo.

It was divine. It's this beautiful baked bubbly dish with clams and spicy chorizo, and it was so good I finished my whole portion and half of Eric's portion. I think that was the point where I got the nickname Padma 'are you gonna eat that' Lakshmi.

What's your favorite curry to make at home?

That's a hard one, but my simplest curry is really just made with mirepoix, some protein, and coconut milk. There's a South Indian dish called Meean Moilee. Literally translated it means Fish for Molly. And it is a gentle version of an Indian curry that we believe was first made for an English woman during colonial times called Molly, who didn't like spicy food. It's basically a simple fish stew but the fiery curry powder is tempered by the addition of coconut milk. It's a nice dish to make for the whole family. It's a Keralan dish from the very deep South of India.

If you could only eat one food item for the rest of your life, what would it be?

Fried chicken.

You can check out the rest of Padma's Reddit AMA here.

SEE ALSO: The Sexiest Chefs Alive!

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TV Shows And Movies That Grossly Misinterpret Your Job

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Reddit user SteveTenants recently posed this question to the AskReddit community: "What film or show hilariously misinterprets something you have expertise in?"

Professionals and hobbyists responded in fury.

Here are some of the best responses:

Law

“Being an attorney, especially a trial attorney. Witnesses never crumble on the witness stand. In fact, with how liberal discovery is now, there are few if any surprises at all." Attorney_at_Aww

legally blonde witness stand elle woods

 

Nuclear Reactor Physics

“Any time people freak out when a nuclear reactor goes critical. You want your reactor critical.” — Country5

the china syndrome

 

Network Administration

“I work in IT, and am also a big fan of NCIS. Every single time McGee has to trace an IP or back trace a hacking attempt, they always end up at the same IP.. 192.168.0.1 ... Anyone who knows anything about networking gets a chuckle out of that.” — crazykilla

ncis mcgee

 

Aviation

“Sorry, but F-22 fighter jets are not going to by flying at 100 feet above the ground and getting within 100 feet of the target. They fly at airliner altitudes and fire missiles from 20 miles away.” — claymore5o6

“Pacific Rim would have been a lot shorter and less entertaining if they had just used jets to fire missiles from 20 miles away.” — ohwilson

pacific rim monster kaiju sydney

 

Obstetrics

“Giving birth. After doing my research, and watching my son be born, I realized that t.v. and movies misrepresent the birthing process so consistently.” — Neusbaum

“Once again Scrubs nails it:

Narrator: Congratulations! You're expecting! Don't worry -- your doctor will tell you everything you need to know.

<J.D. steps into camera shot in a lab coat and horn-rim glasses.>

Narrator: Hi, Doctor!

J.D.: You'll fart, pee, puke, and poop in front of ten complete strangers who'll be staring intently at your vagina -- which, by the way, has an eighty percent chance of tearing!” — Kayge

scrubs childbirth

 

Elevator Construction

“The way movies portray elevators, specially stunts on 'em it's just incredible. You cannot just cut the wire and the elevator will fall on the shaft. It has at least 3 safety measures that will prevent the elevator from falling, effectively locking it on the shaft.” — Electro_Syphilis

matrix elevator

 

Firefighting

“As a firefighter: Movies don't accurately portray fire behavior. They don't show how little time you have to get out of the building. They don't show how hard it is to see. Turn off the lights, and put a blindfold over your eyes, it's that bad. Thermal layering: if you stood up in a burning building you'd cook like a pop tart. Plus you'd suffocate.” — TheVoiceOfRiesen

"How did "Rescue Me" do? I know they had some professional consultants on the show."— koshercowboy

"Honestly it didn't do very well in a few areas. No SCBA (Self Contained Breathing Apparatus) while going in. A lot of "free lancing" (you go off solo without orders)"— TheVoiceOfRiesen

rescue me

 

Video Gaming

“In Charlie's Angels, there's a scene where Final Fantasy VIII, a text command driven single player RPG, is being played multiplayer and by button mashing. Check it out: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGSOJlW59wY” — Phormicidae

charlie's angels drew barrymore

 

Heating and Air Conditioning

“Every single show and movie that depicts somebody crawling through duct work and maintaining complete silence. I'm an HVAC engineer...” — therealswimshady

“I love the episode of Mythbusters where Jamie is climbing up duct work with his magnets and Adam is joking ‘Thor, the god of thunder is trying to sneak into my building.’” — Adn88

mythbusters vent hvac

 

Playing an Instrument

"As a cellist, watching Jamie Foxx fake playing cello in The Soloist was utter torture. He may be a great pianist, but oh god the cello was bad.

and on a related note, fuck School of Rock. A cello on its side != a bass. The strings are tuned different entirely. I almost rage quit the movie right then."— jennz

school of rock cello

 

Internship Supervising

"I manage summer internships for a software developer. I should have never gone to see The Internship."— catiebug

The Internship

 

Custom Paintwork

"Watching Megan Fox sitting on the motorcycle airbrushing upside down in Transformers 2 annoys me. You have no idea the prep work actually involved in custom paintwork."— SenseiT

megan fox transformers 2 

SEE ALSO: The 30 Sexiest People Behind The Scenes Of Hollywood

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The 'Shooter Sandwich' Is All The Rage And The Sandwich Of Your Dreams

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chicken parm shooter sandwich smashed

August is National Sandwich Month. Rejoice.

And while all sandwiches are awesome in their own special way, there's one sandwich that rules them all: 

The Shooter Sandwich.

Also known as a "smashed sandwich," the Shooter Sandwich is a layered masterpiece that has been gaining traction on Reddit.

All that needs doing is to cut the top off a loaf of bread and hollow out the inside. Then add layers of meat, cheese, and veggies into the loaf until it's ready to burst.

Wrap it up in butcher's paper and/or tinfoil, and place a cutting board on top weighed down with your heaviest household objects.

After a few hours, the result is a sandwich pie of sorts. Stick it in the oven to let the cheese melt, and cut it into slices for a dense, glorious meal.

There's some great smashed sandwich recipes on /r/food, but keep reading to see our favorites.

Have a shooter sandwich recipe we should include? Tell us about it in the comments below.

Let's start with a classic Steak Shooter Sandwich. Get a loaf of Italian bread, some rib eye steaks, a pound of mushrooms, an onion, and some bacon ready.

See more on the making of this Shooter Steak Sandwich here



After cooking up the steak and bacon and sautéing the mushrooms and onions, load everything into your hollowed-out Italian loaf. Add the sauces of your choice throughout.

See more on the making of this Shooter Steak Sandwich here



Wrap it up in butcher's paper and some tinfoil and place a cutting board with weights on top.

See more on the making of this Shooter Steak Sandwich here



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

7 Things We Learned From Aaron Paul's Awesome Reddit AMA

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aaron paul reddit

Following the epic season 5 return of AMC's "Breaking Bad," actor Aaron Paul (Jesse Pinkman) hosted a Reddit Ask Me Anything (AMA).

Previously, fellow co-star Bryan Cranston hosted an AMA back in June. We're pretty sure this one tops Cranston. 

Paul opened up about his favorite scenes, episode, and a time he blacked out on set.

We've compiled a few of his best responses.

If you have time, you should seriously consider checking out the AMA in its entirety.

He received a concussion and had to go to the ER while filming Season 2, Episode 2 "Grilled":

"Raymond Cruz who played Tuco gave me a concussion during the episode Grilled where Tuco takes Walt and Jesse to his shack in the middle of nowhere where we meet the famous Uncle Tio. Tuco takes Jesse and he throws him through the screen door outside, and if you watch it back you'll notice that my head gets caught inside the wooden screen door and it flips me around and lands me on my stomach and the door splinters into a million pieces. Raymond just thought I was acting so he continued and kicked me in the side and picked me up over his shoulder and threw me against the house, but in reality I was pretty much unconscious the other time. I kept pleading to him saying "stop". The next thing I know I guess I blacked out and I woke up to a flashlight in our eyes and it was our medic. And then I hopped up acting like nothing wrong, but it appeared like I was drunk, and I kept saying "let's finish the scene" but then my eye started swelling shut so they took me to the hospital. Just another fun day on the set of Breaking Bad!"

The most difficult scene for him from "Breaking Bad" was in Season 2, Episode 12 "Phoenix":

"I honestly think the hardest scene for me to do was when Jesse woke up and found Jane lying next to him dead. Looking at Jane through Jesse's eyes that day was very hard and emotional for all of us. When that day was over, I couldn't be happier that it was over because I really, truly felt I was living those tortured moments with Jesse."

His favorite episode of "Breaking Bad" is Season 2, Episode 9 "4 Days Out":

"I loved everything about that episode. I loved the dynamic between Walt and Jesse through the entire thing about how they were just desperately trying to find a way out of the predicament they were in. I loved shooting that episode. It was mainly just Bryan and myself for the entire thing. And that's always a good time. Plus that's the episode where Jesse truly thought deep down inside that they were about to build a robot to save them. That line was actually improvised. I remember that scene, it was a Friday night, and we had wrapped. In the scene I asked Walt "What are we going to build?". He says "you said it before" and then I was supposed to just supposed to stand there with a confused expression on my face. But then Nick, our focus puller, told me I should respond to Walt's question wit "A robot?". So we pretended there was something wrong with the initial shot so I could do it again.

Watch the scene:

Paul never had any acting classes. He's a natural:

"The only training I have is really trial and error. I never went to any sort of class. When I came out to LA I was 17 years old and I sat in on two different classes. What I saw during those classes was them doing these strange acting exercises which I didn't understand. I always just thought "hey, pretend like you're being someone else and that's all there is to it." I wasn't a fan of those classes so if I go into an audition and fail miserably, I just think to myself "well, let's not do that again" and "do better." So that's really it. I just force myself to truly believe that I am living the situation through the character."

His favorite scene from "Breaking Bad":

"I have so many favorites, but the first thing that comes to mind right now is the infamous dinner scene with Mr. and Mrs. White. I think the glass of water became Jesse's security blanket it in a way and I love that about that scene. But there's been so many fun scenes to shoot. So anytime I as Jesse Pinkman can release my pent up anger told Walt is always a good time. So the time that Jesse shows up to Walt's house and thinks that he found on that he poisoned Brock, and he puts a gun to his head. That was a lot of fun."

Bryan Cranston was always walking around set in his underwear.

"Another funny fact about Bryan Cranston - we all know that from Malcolm in the Middle to Breaking Bad, his characters tended to wear tidy whities, but what you don't know is that any close-up shot of Bryan on Breaking Bad where you didn't see the lower half of his body, his pants were always off. His pant were always off. True story, I'm not even joking. His pants are always off."

You can enter to win a chance to watch the "Breaking Bad" series finale with him and the cast!

"The final episode ever will be played at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery on Sept. 29 and the tickets will go on sale the day after Labor Day and all of the proceeds will go to benefit Kind Campaign. There will be a Q&A following the finale with myself and a few of the cast members.

But you can go to omaze.com/breakingbad now and enter for the chance to hang with me and the cast at the finale. Every entry supports Kind Campaign."

Paul filmed his favorite five moments from his Reddit AMA. Check them out below:

SEE ALSO: Get caught up with the season return of "Breaking Bad"

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Workers Spill The Dark Secrets Of Their Industries That Companies Don't Want You To Know About

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When you spend a few years working in a certain industry, you discover some dirty secrets that would have horrified you when you were applying (and still horrify the friends you tell to this day).

A recent Reddit thread asked people to name the "dirty little (or big) secret" about their industry they thought people ought to know. 

Some of these stories might even help you save some money from businesses that try to trick you.

Since we can't verify the identify of the Redditors or their employees, some stories should be taken with a grain of salt. 

Here are some of the best dirty industry secrets that came out: 

Bookstores

Big chain bookstores throw massive amounts of books away. Via Reddit user allosaur:

"Mass market paperbacks are cheap to manufacture and get shipped out in huge volumes. For some publishers (particularly ones that put out new mysteries or romances quarterly) when the bookstore wants it off the shelf to make room for something new, it's just not worth the cost of taking them back and finding someone else to sell it ... So as a bookstore employee I spent hours ripping the front and back covers off of books, then tearing the book at least in half so that no one could read it later. The covers get sent back to the publishers, and the books that could have been donated to a library or school get put in a locked recycling container out back. A manager had to come back and check my work to make sure the books were not left intact.

I almost cried the first time I had to rip up a load of kid's books (in a city with high child poverty rates and underfunded schools)." 

Discarded books

Funeral Parlors

If you have a strong stomach, it's worth reading this full (and graphic) comment from Redditor arrghbrians who argues that the mortuary business convinces many people to go through incredibly expensive procedures that aren't really needed.

From the answer:

"..in most states, the law only requires embalming if you are transporting a body across state lines or are not planning to inter for more than 72 hours and/or having a public viewing. It has not a single thing to do with public health. It’s a cash cow, plain and simple. It is barbaric, costly, and does not keep the body from deteriorating. But we’ll tell you just about anything you need to hear to get you to agree to it."

Funeral home casket

Horticulture/farming

Via Reddit user ShesMyJuliet:

"In the horticulture industry don't eat anything without washing it and (when) buying fresh plants ie tomato plants always wait at least 14 days before eating from the plant. Most with holding periods are around 14 days, the shit we spray for everything is quite nasty. We have regular blood tests to make sure we don't die pretty much." 

From Reddit user geekmuseNU:

"I work on a farm. When they say you should wash your produce thoroughly at home, they're not joking." 

north carolina farm strawberries

Oil Change

At a national chain like Jiffy Lube, there's going to be a huge variety in management and the level of service. 

However, according to Reddit user jmhoneycutt8, who claims to be a former manager, half of the services offered or charged for don't even get completed. There's incentive to tack on services that there isn't time to complete because employees' hours are determiend by "average ticket sales."

The thread has many more horror stories.  

Jiffy Lube

Hotels

Rates are not as set in stone as people think. From Reddit user schlotzy4:

"After working in the travel industry I can tell you that hotel room rates are often not fixed prices. If guests come to the front desk and ask the price we generally start at the high end. Most people accept this as fact and pay up. However, if a customer is hesitant or threatens to walk out we can sometimes drop the price to keep them there. Often there is a bottom line price set by the owners- we can't go any lower than that or we lose money."

And be wary of third party sites. Via Reddit user paintedroses:

"NEVER BOOK THROUGH A THIRD PARTY (Expedia, Hotels.com, Priceline, Orbitz, etc.). Hotels overbook all the time, and your reservation is the first to go in a "sold out" situation. Third parties guarantee you a room, but not necessarily the room you booked or even a room at the hotel. We can "walk" you to another hotel that has vacancy. Third party requests are also not something we have to honor or even try to honor. "

If you find a better rate on a third party site, your best bet is to call the hotel and ask if they can match it. 

Motel

Carpeting

Via Reddit user SlightlyStable:

Little secret. When you buy carpet you usually need less square footage of pad than carpet. But most companies bill you the same square footage for both and often send less pad than you paid for.

Some more color from the thread — carpet is usually ordered in excess of the square footage required for rooms that aren't the exact length/width of the rolls you order to minimize seams where pieces meet. People don't' see padding. It doesn't matter. 

Carpeting

Smaller award shows

Via Reddit user bridow

"I'm a celebrity event photographer in Hollywood. Most of the smaller award shows winners like the MTV VMAs, Teen Choice Awards, etc...already know they are going to win. This motivates the talent to come to the event. During the show they are backstage talking with friends and take a seat during a commercial break just before their award is announced. The few exceptions are the Oscars and Golden Globes where the audience is mostly celebrities."

kanye west 50 cent vma mtv

Internet service providers

Via Reddit user static74:

"Fiber Internet Service Provider here - bandwidth is not a scarce commodity like they want you to think it is. It is all about profit margins and over subscribing the network."

User bigdonkey adds " Most of the bottlenecks are the result of the ISPs not building out their local networks to meet demand." 

Comcast Truck

Catering

Via Reddit user bananabilector:

"When you order catering, we know we can't trust you to have your guest count right, so the kitchen massively over produces for your event. The staff then eats their shift meal from your order and the rest gets tossed. Sometimes it's only a little, sometimes it's 200 plated mains or 15 hotel pans full of potatoes and green beans. And at $13-35/plate depending on the menu, we still come out on top."

 Catering

Delivery

Via Reddit user JamesW89:

"I work for a UPS store. Here is a few things I have learned since working here...

Writing fragile on your package means nothing.

Your package WILL get thrown around, dropped, and beaten up; if it is breakable then according to our guidelines for properly packaged items it needs to withstand 1000lbs of pressure and a 4ft drop.

UPS capital claims is terrible as well they will do whatever they can to not pay you the amount you insure your package for."

UPS truck

Fine dining

Via Reddit user SG804:

"Fine dining cook here. 30% of your meal is butter. That's why it's so good." 

Chef butter

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6 'College Life Hacks' That Will Help You Succeed

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A recent thread on Reddit asked: what are your best college life hacks?

The answers covered everything from going to professors' office hours to scouting out the best bathrooms on campus to finding the right friends to spend your four years at college with. 

Here's some of the best advice we found:

Take advantage of the access you have to professors

"Find a professor that you like, and keep in touch with them often. Go to their office hours with questions, e-mail them, and keep them in the loop in regards to your academic career. When you are applying for grad school, medical school, etc. you will need at least one letter of recommendation from someone familiar with your work, and that can attest to your qualifications. And no, your mom cannot write one for you."— Wendy14618

"Go to office hours. 95% of the time, I'm sitting there on Reddit hoping someone will stop by. Every prof I know is in a similar state except the week before the test. We will absolutely help you out and you'll get more out of the class than just showing up to class."— Paraglad

"I volunteered to help my professors with research, by year 3 I was being paid $9 an hour. Year 4 I was published in an academic journal as an undergrad. It opened many doors."— Uploaded_by_iLurk

Professor Math Physics Office Andrei Linde

It's not that hard to keep your room as hot or cold as you like it

"Our air conditioning in our dorm would only go so low, so it was always hot in our room. We took a washrag and ran it under hot water, then laid it on top of the thermostat. Instant cool."— wisherg40

"Or, like I got most of my coaches to do in the sauna we called a high school, get an old desk lamp that gets really hot, and put it really close to the thermostat so the thermometer thinks it is really hot and doesn't ever stop cooling down."— DaMan11

College Dorm Student

Put some thought into who you're spending your time with

"Date and befriend incredibly smart and responsible people. Even if you aren't incredibly smart or responsible they'll rub off on you or at least they won't get you in trouble."— g123g012y

"Figure out who in your class works hard and is competent. Make friends with them. Do projects with them while pulling your weight. The next four years will be so much easier with built in group members and good study friends."— anaccidentalmemory

College Students Campus

Life will be easier if you actually do your work

"It takes the exact same amount of time to read the lecture notes before class or after class. It takes the exact same amount of time to sit through lecture prepared or unprepared. Read the lecture notes before class, think about it for a bit, and then go to the lecture."— stochasticMath

"College is not high school. Meaning you can't study for an exam the day before the test and expect an A. Try to study a week before a big test and you'll do great."— Thats_him

Students Studying College

Always be on the lookout for free stuff

"Join lots of clubs. Attend club meetings for free food. Better yet, start your own club, and then you can pick the food and have the school pay for it, depending on whether or not you get a budget."— Roketderp

"In my dorm, people would leave a bunch of sh-t in the lounge at the end of the year. Picked up good stuff like posters, racks, and sh-t. Lots of kids didn't want to bring that stuff home if they were flying."— HyperionCantos

Students Free Pizza

A clean and private restroom is more important that you might think

"Your goal is to find the bathroom on campus that's used infrequently and find out when they clean it. When you find the perfect time and location, don't tell anyone until you graduate."— Prototypexx

"The 2nd floor library bathroom at my school was built too small to accommodate the big bulk TP rolls. For that bathroom, and essentially that bathroom only, they have Charmin ultrasoft. It is a closely guarded secret."— matrixclown

Toilet Stall

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10 Annoying Lies That Movies And TV Shows Tell You

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Reddit user julestheteacher recently posted this question to the AskReddit community: "Hello, what 'lies' do you see on TV shows that annoy you the most?"

Redditers unleashed their fury.

Here are the best answers:

1. Extracting people's identities from security camera footage is easy

csi computer

"Enhance. Enhance. Enhance. Magnify by 800%.

That's not how photographs work."—andalucian_cat

"Ha ha- CSI then!! oh just go magnify in that persons eye... theres the licence plate!!!"—julestheteacher

2. Computer hacking happens instantaneously

PACIFIC RIM Burn Gorman Dr. Hermann Gottlieb

"Ramdomly punching keys on the keyboard as fast as you can, instantly hacks anything."—Red_Fist_Champion

"Pacific Rim was guilty of this when the over the top goofy British math scientist punched a bunch of keys randomly and spouted off some technobabble. It was so absurd it was jarring and destroyed my suspension of disbelief."—Nutz76

3. Men need women to run their lives —jimflaigle

according to jim belushi

"It seems like in almost every sitcom the main male character is a hopeless idiot who could barely remember to breathe without his wife reminding him.

I mean, somehow he always seems to have a good job and keep all the bills paid... but for some reason he desperately needs his wife's input on what to wear to a PTA meeting."—InPursuitOf

4. Arizona has moderate weather

medium patricia arquette

"I enjoy the show Medium because it's based out of my hometown Phoenix, but the more I watch it the more annoyed I get ... The thing that made me bust up recently was a radio show that said, 'Another beautiful day here in Phoenix, with a high of 85... That combination of words has never been uttered by any person in AZ history. Also, people are hopping in their cars and not burning their hands and legs on everything inside!"—54mu5

5. New York City is affordable

don't trust the b in apartment apt 23

"I live in NYC. It's really jarring when a story is taking place in NYC and the scenery they are showing is not even close to anything you'll actually find in NYC.

Also the lie that a couple of 20-somethings with relatively low paying jobs can afford a gorgeous, enormous apartment in Manhattan is really annoying."—acydetchx

6. Both parties know when to hang up the phone without saying good-bye first —Minolta13

mad men phone amc

"Mad Men is the worst for this. Myself and my girlfriend always say "Bye""Bye" every time someone hangs up in that program. Nobody ever says bye :("—Jestar342

"I thinks it's an american thing. The Englishman in me thinks that if I was in '24' I'd at least say 'cheers chap, all the best'..."—julestheteacher

7. Medical personnel treat their own relatives

grey's anatomy ellen pompeo patrick dempsey

"How residents/interns do rounds/treat their own family members.
Almost every hospital in the whole country wouldn't allow you to treat your own family."—owlbrowneyes

8. Gerard Butler is human

p.s. i love you gerard butler

"In the movie 'P.S. I Love You', Gerard Butler's character buttons his shirt up using one hand.

It's been years since I've seen the movie and I've attempted to do this as fast as he did in the movie and fallen minutes short. I'm now convinced that Gerard Butler is not human."—Justananomaly

9. People navigate by cardinal direction

The Hangover cop car

"'I'm heading South down T-------- Avenue'

or even worse, inside a building: 'I'm on the East side of this massive nondescript warehouse'

Who the f--- knows if they're going North or South down a road?"—yukyum

10. Democracy works —crotch_jenkins

Kevin Spacey House of Cards

SEE ALSO: TV Shows And Movies That Grossly Misinterpret Your Job

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8 Major Screwups That Have Lost Companies Business Forever

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frustrated manThose who have been mistreated by companies can now use social media channels to get their sweet revenge.

That makes companies more visible — and vulnerable to criticism — than ever. If your customer service isn't on point, the world will hear about it. Case in point, Redditor tueiq2 recently asked in a Reddit thread: What company has forever lost your business?

The responses are not confirmed but, if true, provide a cautionary tale. We pulled out the best replies, edited slightly for clarity:

PayPal

"I was on the board of a non-profit, and PayPal froze their donation account because they got a big ($5,000) donation from the UK. Wouldn't un-freeze it, wouldn't send the money back so the donor could wire it. Took six months and a lot of threats from our lawyers to get the cash. Their customer service is the worst I've ever dealt with."—user bigshmoo

Comcast

"I seriously hate Comcast more then any company I've ever had to deal with. Every month for the past year I have had to call them due to problems with my bill (which is supposed to be $29.99).

There were months where my bill would say $79.99 for no reason, so I called in to ask about it. Other months, it would say that I am a few months behind on payments when I clearly was not. On multiple occasions I got to a representative and was put on hold for over an hour (a couple of times, I was hung up on) until I finally was able to speak to someone who explained that the pricing was a mistake and assured me that it would not happen again. Google fiber, where are you?"—user peekabear

Expedia

"In my experience in working at a hotel, Expedia has a few bad habits such as selling rooms that we don't have, incorrectly describing room types (we have queen size beds, they say king), and not quickly or at all sending the reservations to our system."

"If a guest has a problem and they want a refund and they paid through Expedia, then they have to go through Expedia to get the refund, which includes them spending a large amount of time speaking to customer service. Then customer service calls us and angrily demands to know what we screwed up and sometimes after we've explained what happened, they refuse the refund. Try explaining THAT to a drunk guest at 3 a.m. Not fun. Especially when whatever is the cause of the refund is something that you messed up."—user codyg553

Greyhound

"Because they have such little competition they think they can get away with anything. And they can. I had a ticket once, but the bus was full and didn't accept anyone. And they wouldn't refund it, no matter how hard I tried. I basically gave them money for no service. Greyhound doesn't respect their customers at all."—user Caspira

GoDaddy

"Using their website has become one of the most painful experiences. You are constantly bombarded with their aggressive marketing campaigns. I had to discontinue a service, and I must have received at least 10 emails during my final month with 'LAST CHANCE TO CONTINUE THIS SERVICE.' "—user dave_za

Charter Communications

"Not only had I put up with incredibly unreliable service from them off and on for a decade throughout several states and locations — but a stand off with a tech ended it for good. We had some issues with our service, so they sent a tech to fix the issue. Apparently a neighbor of mine had somehow wired our line to his own house (it was Fall and leaves were everywhere, so we never saw anything awry). The tech proceeds to sit in my living room and threaten me with jail, accuse me of theft of services, and call me a liar when I denied involvement. If I were involved in that, why would I be stupid enough to have called them and risk being discovered? The tech scoffed at the logic, I told him to GTFO. Called Charter, filed a complaint, and told them to discontinue their service stat because I was done."—user Smokerella

British Airways

"I called prior to take off to say because of a train crash I'd miss the first flight of a 10-stop trip and would catch the following plane in Germany a few days later (I was in the UK)."

"They said it's company policy that if you miss one flight they cancel the whole ticket. And they did. Round the world holiday and all my money gone with no refund."—user Lemacc

Jiffy Lube

"Never take your vehicle there. JL are complete scammers. They will only put in about half the oil your car needs and charge you full price. While running their 'diagnostic check' on the other parts of your car (o2 sensor, cabin air filter, etc.), they don't always put them back in their place or back on the vehicle correctly. And on top of that, their mechanics are not trained properly at all. For the love of God, don't ever take your car there."—user Rico_Rizzo

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The Most Famous Case Reddit Ever Solved

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Reddit user shadybusiness15 posted pictures on Reddit in April showing his deconstructed extension cord. According to the post, he "violently blew a fuse" and took it apart to see the damage.

Inside, he noticed strange wires and a SIM card with a serial number on it. Through the subreddit /r/RBI, known as the Reddit Bureau of Investigation, users weighed in on the situation, eventually identifying the mysterious device as surveillance equipment.

RBI 1 with arrows

/r/RBI made the Subreddit of the Day page back in February 2012, only a few months after user DecidingToBeBetter created it. After reading about two other threads — one about a criminal who robbed a family blind, the other pleading for information about a student's disappearance — DecidingToBeBetter wanted to use Reddit to "solve crimes/mysteries and catch criminals."

The mystery surrounding shadybusiness15's modified extension cord stands as the subreddit's "famous" case,  with the most comments of any thread. Somewhere within these 875 comments, users identified the device as a microphone. Here's what went down:

1. Top commenter fryguy101 provided a link to a device on Amazon that looked like the one he found. Building on the observations of jetRink, fryguy101 also figured out that the device contained a microphone. It seemed somebody wanted a soundtrack of shadybusiness15's life.

RBI 2 with arrows

2. Shadybusiness15 also posted the pictures on subreddit /r/whatisthisthing. Top commentor Topher587 wrote, "Your extension cord is a room bug. Someone calls the phone number on that SIM and the extension cord auto answers and listen to the room. SPOOKY."

3. After landing a spot on Reddit's "Best Of" page, shadybusiness15 posted an update. He cross-referenced the number (not pictured) from the SIM card with his parents' call histories. Nothing. Then, he called the number himself. The number told him: "The service is now closed. If you have voicemail you can turn it on."

RBI 3 with arrows

4. Shadybusiness15 created an account with 02, the bug's manufacturer. When he called and asked for the incoming call log, the company told him he'd need a warrant.

Although Reddit never identified who bugged shadybusiness15, users on RBI definitely proved the existence of said bug. Shadybusiness15 began to wonder if his college wanted to spy on him. Other theories included  "helicopter parents," an obsessive mom and dad monitoring their son, and the police. Shadybusiness15 insists he's not doing anything all that interesting, especially to law enforcement.

Since the update, users have encouraged shadybusiness15 to, indeed, get a warrant.

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Cop Tells Reddit He Blew The Whistle On His Corrupt Boss And Was Forced To Resign

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police whistleA whistleblowing cop has posted an AMA on Reddit alleging a rogue captain harassed him after he told a prosecutor that police entered a suspected drug dealer's house without a warrant.

The Redditor, whistleblowing_cop, says he was forced to resign from the small sheriff's office in Oklahoma.

He wanted to remain nameless. While we couldn't confirm his identity, his story is very detailed.

According to whistleblowing_cop, his captain learned the whereabouts of an alleged drug dealer in March. Because he didn't have a search warrant, he enlisted whistleblowing_cop and two other deputies to do a "knock and talk," where police knock on the door and talk to the residents in an attempt to gain permission to search the house.

When a girl (who wasn't the dealer) opened the door, the captain just waltzed into the house, whistleblowing_cop said. He found weed in a room with a baby and threatened to charge her with child endangerment if she didn't call the dealer and ask him to come home.

She did. And when the dealer came home, the captain detained him at gunpoint and questioned him for two hours, forcing him to sign a release justifying the earlier search, whistleblowing_cop said.

Later that year, in June, Whistleblowing_cop received a subpoena regarding the incident.

Whistleblowing_cop spilled the truth. The DA dismissed the case against the alleged drug dealer. But the captain remained captain and "did all he could to make my life hell," whistleblowing_cop wrote. After humiliating him and accusing him of breaking protocol many times, the captain finally demoted the Reddit user, purportedly because of a shoulder injury.

Whistleblowing_cop refused the demotion and quit.

Commenters on the AMA mostly thanked whistleblowing_cop and compared his situation to a Dragnet episode. One user, Tiep0, asked: "If you were to apply for another law enforcement job, would your actions stand you in good stead and would you enter at a point that was similar to the level you were just at or would you have to start from the bottom again?"

"A dirty rookie again," whistleblowing_cop answered.

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Reddit Co-Founder: 'You Have To Suck At Something Before Being Successful'

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Alexis Ohanian

MALMÖ, Sweden–”If you’re not at least a little embarrassed by something you just launched, you probably waited too long to start it,” said superstar entrepreneur Alexis Ohanian to a large crowd at the 2013 Media Evolution conference yesterday.

An example he shared with the crowd was one of the earliest screenshots of Ohanian’s Reddit profile page, which had a really bland/basic web design, three submitted stories, and a negative 1 karma score. It’ a far cry from today’s Reddit that brings in 4.7 billion page views and 67.3 million unique visitors per month.

The presentation itself was billed as a sort of pep talk for innovators to “give a damn” and mean it when it comes to the people who use and consume what they create. It’s also a subject he’s more than qualified to speak about, too. In addition to Reddit, Ohanian has cofounded nifty travel planning startup Hipmunk and charitable online store of geeky gifts Breadpig.

“Don’t ever ask permission to be awesome,” Ohanian said. The statement (coined from his forthcoming book Without Permission) was in reference to the group of prominent people or old institutions that are adamantly against new media/communication creations, which are getting used or consumed enough to get mainstream acknowledgment. Basically, he explained that its counter productive to walk on eggshells while other people point out all the reasons why it shouldn’t or couldn’t work as efficiently as the current standard.

Ohanian used the example of prominent (but unnamed) friends in broadcast journalism, who regarded breaking news from Twitter as unverified, frequently wrong, and an unreliable inferior source of news. Yet, those same journalists admitted to reading and actively seeking new information on Twitter first during global events like 2010′s Arab Spring.

“The incumbents are the most clueless because they have the most to lose by change,” Ohanian said, adding that what people are actually doing/feeling/thinking when experiencing your creative work should be placed at a premium. “[But] Twitter didn’t start the Arab Spring any more than broadcast journalists won the civil rights movement. They certainly helped, but they did not do it. People did it.”

Reddit has also experienced its fair share of pushback from those old institutions of media power. During the Boston marathon bombings back in April, a smattering of inspired Reddit users began posting a series of comprehensive timeline threads as new information from plenty of sources (including Twitter, Facebook, and Reddit’s comment threads.) However, it turns out the Reddit community incorrectly speculated on the identity of a bombing suspect, perpetuating the false info until it reached older media institutions that started reporting the info as fact.

From there, those same old media institutions started questioning whether or not Reddit was a service that did more harm than good. (See: the New York Times’ extremely extensive timeline of events regarding what happened in the aftermath of Reddit’s incorrect speculation.) It also allowed some columnists for older news publications to assert themselves as the foremost authority on fact-checking, verification of information, and good judgement. (Because they are clearly the only people in the world capable of those skills, right? No.)

While Ohanian noted Reddit’s involvement in Boston Marathon bomber misinformation, he also pointed out how users have gone the complete opposite direction, too. One incident he recalled involved a Redditor who posted a photo of a Sikh woman with facial hair to the /r/funny subreddit (aka Reddit category). The woman actually saw the post, and responded with a well-written explanation about her beliefs, which prompted coverage on many news blogs as well as Reddit’s highly trafficked front page. Despite the public attention, the original poster came back with a full apology and thanked the woman for teaching him something new. Usually, that’s not something you’d think of happening in comment sections, especially when the offensive commenter is using a screen name that allow for anonymity.

“What happened in the discussion around that [comment thread] was just amazing,” Ohanian said. “That to me feels like a smattering of progress.”

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12 Surprising Facts That Sound False But Are Actually True

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Everyone has a few favorite pieces of trivia they keep on file, and they're best when they're the kind that make people scoff, demand proof, and reach for their smartphones.

A recent Reddit thread asked users for their favorite fact that "sounds like b.s. but is actually true." 

They all sound completely ridiculous, but the facts bear them out.

Here are some of our favorites. Sources or additional reading provided when they weren't by the reddit users.  

Via Reddit user xRyNo: 

"Death rates in boxing exploded after the introduction of the boxing glove. Almost nobody ever died bare knuckle boxing because head punches often resulted in broken hands, so nobody used them."

Sourced from a 2007 article in The Independent, though another study disputes it.   

Miguel Cotto Manny Pacquiao Boxing

Via Reddit user CaptainNoBoat:

"One tiger killed 430 people.

That tiger killed more people than 300 years of worldwide shark fatalities.
- More people than snakes, bears, wolves, and spider fatalities combined in the U.S. in the last 100 years.

One tiger."

He's referring to the Champawat Tiger, active mostly in the 19th century, and eventually shot in 1907 by legendary hunter Jim Corbett.

Tiger in India

Via Reddit user ma_petite_choufleur

"Mammoths were lumbering around Russia* 3600 years ago.

The Egyptians were making pyramids 4000 years ago."

*The original post referred to Siberia, but the last surviving mammoths were the small mammoths of Wrangel Island, which is in the Arctic Sea to the north. They may have died out as late as 1650 BC. 

mammoth

Via Reddit user --wasp:

There is a planet that is covered in burning ice. Not dry ice. Ice, but it's incredibly hot. It is called Gliese 436 b. Its surface is at a constant 800ºF, but the ice remains as ice because the gravity of the planet is so incredibly powerful that it compresses all of the water vapour into a solid state. It is actually called ice-ten/ice X.

Gliese 436 b Via Reddit user Eagle1388:

"There is a measurement of radiation exposure called "The banana equivalent dose"...bananas are naturally radioactive because they are high in Potassium-40 isotopes."

A dental X-ray, for example, delivers about 50"banana-equivalent doses." 

yellow bananas

Via Reddit user somnicule:

"Anosognosia is when someone has a stroke or another kind of brain injury, which leaves them with some disability (e.g. the inability to move their arm), and also leaves them incapable of believing they have that disability.

"The bullshit part? Squirting cold water into the left ear temporarily enables them to acknowledge the disability - for about 10 minutes."

Read more about how the treatment works here

Hospital waiting room

Via Reddit user Noxate:

"The grandsons of tenth U.S. President John Tyler (born 1790) are still living."

John Tyler Via Reddit user VLHACS:

"14 years before the Titanic sank, a fictional story was written by a man named Morgan Robertson. In the story, the ship was described as the largest ever built at the time (same as the Titanic), it was also woefully short on lifeboats, and it also struck an iceberg and sank. The ship in the story was also a triple screw propeller liner, and it was named the Titan."

The book, titled "Futility" was apparently reissued after the Titanic sank with some changes. 

The TitanicVia Reddit user Noxate:

"Theodore Roosevelt watched his mother die from typhoid fever then went upstairs in his home to watch his wife die from child birth an hour later. This all happened on Valentine's Day and was Theo's 2 year anniversary of getting engaged to his wife."

It was February 14th, 1884, he was 25. In his diary that day, he wrote simply that "The light has gone out of my life."   

Teddy Roosevelt Via Reddit user Monkey0410

"A day on Venus is longer than a year on Venus."

venus sdo

Via Reddit user MuskMelon12:

"Tropical rain forests in the Amazon have their nutrients periodically replenished by the Sahara Desert.

"Wind blows dust particles all the way from the desert, across the ocean, to the tropics where the sand and its associated nutrients help the fertility of the rainforest!"

Amazon

Via Reddit user InsectOverlord

"The center star of Orion's sword isn't a star; it's the Orion Nebula and is the only nebula visible from Earth with the naked eye. It's so big that if the distance from the earth to the sun were one inch, the Orion Nebula would be 12 miles wide. (source: Jack Horkheimer)"

Orion nebula 

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Computer Scientists Figured Out How To Execute The Perfect Reddit Submission

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A team of Stanford computer scientists has cracked Reddit using math. 

Ph. D student Himabindu Lakkaraju, computer science post-doc Julian McAuley, and assistant professor Jure Leskovec released a paper earlier this summer outlining the algorithm they used to figure out exactly what makes Reddit titles perform well. 

Here's the concept. Reddit is comprised of a vast number of communities, or subreddits, where people submit content around a common theme.

The /r/Pics subreddit is a clearinghouse for pictures, /r/Funny is a community focused on comedy, and /r/Gaming is all about video games. Other subreddits get more specific, like /r/Gifs, technically a subsection of /r/Pics, is all about .GIF images. And /r/GifSound is all about pairing appropriate music to GIFs. The rabbit hole goes deep. 

When people submit an image to reddit, there are four central elements. There's the community they submit it to, when they submit it, the value of the content itself, and the title. 

The Stanford team set out to tackle a fascinating problem relevant to any kind of media: When you factor out the content's merits, what goes in to a successful title?

The team developed a number of algorithms to isolate the effect of a positive title, and the way they accomplished that is clever to say the least.

"If you browse Reddit long enough," said McAuley, "You see the same content posted multiple times, and often when it makes it to the front page it's not actually the first time that you've seen it."

People often submit the same piece of content to reddit multiple times in the form or re-posts. This will be submitted a certain amount of time after an original submission, and oftentimes this reposted content will have a new title, or be in a new community.

This data is available on KarmaDecay, a site that inventories successful content and re-posts. Without going into too much detail over the models themselves — read the full paper here for the clever strategy— Lakkaraju, McAuley, and Leskovec scraped this data and developed models to ascertain what, precisely, goes into a good title when you normalize for the content itself.

Essentially, they were able to find the impact of a title alone, and were able to factor out the community the content was submitted to, the time it was submitted, and especially the inherent "value" of the content image itself. 

The results were fascinating, to say the least. 

"First, of course the community that you're trying to target," said Lakkaraju. "For example, if we look at more niche communities like /r/atheism, you need to focus on the community topics, or the topics that the community considers as important."

"On the other hand, when you go to other communities such as /r/pics, you know you need to pick the titles that are more catchy. You don't need to tailor it to specific content"

While that may sound basic — niche communities like niche topics — their factual findings were quite amusing. 

Reddit Study Take a look at this chart sent to us by the Stanford team. 

The x-axis is a mathematical articulation of how similar the title of a submission is to other titles in each community, where 0 is completely irrelevant and 1 is exactly like the rest. 

The Y-axis shows the probability a submission is successful. 

Notice that for generic communities — funny, GIFs, and pics — there's something of a bell curve. If you title is way too unique, the post does poorly. If the title is like every other title, the post does badly.

"The idea is, be different, but not too different," said Leskovec. "If you are too different then you are off topic. If you're not different then you are the same and again, you don't get noticed."

Then, take a look at the niche communities, atheism and gaming. The more like all the other posts you make your title, the better it does, with no consequent drop. There's a word for this effect on Reddit.

So obviously you have to tailor it to the community. What else?

Reddit Study

"It's good if you use some of the positive sentiment words in the title," said Lakkaraju. Reddit posts with positive ideas or words perform much better than Reddit submissions with negative ideas or words. 

Speaking of word choice, every community likes to see different parts of speech in their post titles.

"Gaming actually prefers usage of nouns much higher than, for instance, the funny community,"said Lakkaraju.

"When we come to adjectives, communities like you having a good sentiment words. Positive adjectives are preferred by communities like funny and pics."

Finally, sentence composition also has a major impact. 

"Shorter sentences are better and sentences that are questions are better," said Leskovec. 

"Particularly for pics and funny, they put a lot more emphasis on shorter titles and also the ones which are phrased like a question," said Lakkaraju.

This makes a ton of sense, especially for funny, they said. When you tell jokes in real life, the format is often a question then a punchline. It's the same thing on Reddit, only instead of a verbal punchline you've got a picture. 

"It's easier to capture imagination," said Leskovec. "If I ask you a question, you want to know, "So what's here?", right?"

Of course, since they studied reposts, timing is also crucial. 

First off, resubmissions work when you take something from a small community — like GifSound — and then post it to a larger community, like Pics. This falls apart completely the other way around. 

But what if you want to resubmit content to the big communities?

"If people are interested in submitting already-submitted content, I think they should at least wait for the stipulated number of days," said Lakkaraju, which according to Leskovec was between 20 and 40. 

Still, according to McAuley, there's no replacement for original content. "If you do really want to make a good submission to reddit, the best thing to do is actually to make original content. Really the best thing to do, is to create something new."

If you don't believe that they were able to do all this with a mere algorithm, don't worry. They did a test run.

The team pooled 85 images from their database and assigned two titles to each one, one considered "bad" by their model and the other considered "good."

They then submitted the same image with two titles at around the same time to two similar subreddits — for instance, Pics and Funny — and then figured out how their model performed. 

Well, two of the "good" titled pictures made the front page, and the good titles got roughly three times higher scores — 10,959 points versus 3,438 points — over the course of a day. 

The point? Even though a picture might say a thousand words, you'll need a few extra to build the well-crafted title that really makes people click.

Read the full paper here >

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Science Says These Are The Words To Use To Get On Reddit's Frontpage

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Earlier this week we spoke to a team of Stanford computer scientists about their fascinating research into what makes a Reddit title successful. 

If you haven't seen the paper, it's absolutely worth a read for anyone who wants to know how a title can sink or float a piece of content, regardless of the medium.

One element of the title success was what words are used in the headline. Certain sentiments and parts of speech had positive effects in some subreddits and negative effects in others. 

One aspect of the Stanford team's research was which individual words perform the best in individual subreddits. 

They made these words -- the ones with the most positive effects and the words with the most negative effects -- into these word clouds which they were kind enough to send over to us. 

Check out the words to use on individual Subreddits:

Good words to use on Gaming:

stanford reddit wordcloud

Bad words to use on Gaming:

stanford reddit wordcloud

Good words to use on Funny:stanford reddit wordcloud

Worst words to use on /r/Funny:

stanford reddit wordcloud

Best words to use on /r/ Atheism

stanford reddit wordcloud

Worst words to use on /r/Atheism

stanford reddit wordcloud

Best words to use on /r/spacestanford reddit wordcloud

Worst words to use on /r/Space

stanford reddit wordcloud

best words to use on /r/Pics

stanford reddit wordcloud

Worst words to use on /r/Pics

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Best words to use on /r/Gifs:

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SEE ALSO: Computer Scientists Figured Out How To Execute The Perfect Reddit Submission

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If You Ever Get The Chance To Time Travel, These Are The 5 Things You Need To Google

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lottery ticketsA Reddit user posed the question:

If you went 10 years into the future and you could only make five Google searches before coming back, what would they be?

There are more than 500 comments on the thread but the top answer, submitted by Electric_Evil, has five questions that cover almost every base.

Assuming you want to become absurdly wealthy, Electric_Evil recommends Googling:

  • "Every Power ball winning number for ten years"
  • "The most profitable companies in 2023 that are ten years old or younger."

Assuming you want to help save the world (or just yourself), you should Google:

  • "All significant natural disasters for previous ten years."

Assuming you want to put your money to good use, try searching for:

  • "Technologies and medical advances that are suffering from lack of funding."

Assuming you want to actually make it home to utilize this information, you should also probably Google:

  • "Any and all side effects to time travel" to make sure it won't kill you."

We'd actually recommend swapping out that last question and one of the absurdly-wealthy questions for the following:

  • "How do I travel back in time ten years?" to make sure you know how to get back.
  • "[Your Name] dead" to make sure you haven't died of something preventable in the past ten years so you can live longer and enjoy your new-found riches.

Head over to Reddit for more time travel googling advice, here.

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Employees Of A Mall Shoe Store Apparently Walked Out And Left This Angry Note For Their Boss

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Employees of a Journeys shoe store in Rochester, N.Y. apparently walked out in the middle of a recent workday and left this angry note posted to the store gate after they locked up:

Gawker alerted us to the Reddit post that called attention to the photo. Gawker says "Jamie" is a district manager for Journeys.

It appears the dramatic walk-out was triggered by the district manager telling an employee that "cancer is not an excuse" along with other abusive treatment of staff.

Multiplecommenters on the Reddit thread wrote about the poor work environment and high manager turnover at Journeys.

UPDATE: Journeys has sent us this statement: "We take situations like this seriously and are currently investigating this issue.  Beyond this, we have no comment."

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Shoe Store Manager Says Employees Lied In Note That Went Viral After They Walked Out

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The shoe store district manager who was chided by now-former employees for allegedly saying "cancer is not an excuse" and being verbally abusive has been mischaracterized, a source tells Gawker.

Employees of the Rochester, N.Y. Journeys store reportedly walked out in the middle of a shift during busy Back-to-School season, leaving this public note that went viral on social media this week (via Reddit):

District Manager Jamie's side of the story is now coming out. Gawker's source, who claims to have direct knowledge of the events leading up to the walkout, says the employees who quit were bitter about being reprimanded for violating company policy and have also been accused of stealing merchandise.

The employees wanted to publicly humiliate Jamie, according to the source. The source also claims that Jamie didn't make the cancer comment and that none of the employees who work there have cancer and neither do their family members.

Gawker's source appears to have spoken to Jamie about the note incident after it happened. The source provided the conversations to Gawker. He also says Jamie has gotten threats and "has to be escorted from stores at night and is being constantly harassed about this by the media."

Journeys sent this statement to Business Insider yesterday: "We take situations like this seriously and are currently investigating this issue.  Beyond this, we have no comment."

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