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[deleted] t1_ivkimnf wrote

Why do things the boring way when you can do things the exciting way!

Please Note: Your significant other will not accept this as an excuse for anything going in wrong holes, strange places, etc., without permission or “by accident”.

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CurlSagan t1_ivkiwht wrote

I like how the cat first turned around to make sure that the owner was recording video.

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TiddyTwoShoes t1_ivkjcd8 wrote

I think there's a word for that, but nothing jumps out at me

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hispazn23 t1_ivl2f5j wrote

What product is this curtain and where can I buy one? I need this for my own self yeeters

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Frewt t1_ivl9zfd wrote

Yeah, I’m gonna need a sm64 edit right now

3

Runs_towards_fire t1_ivln7si wrote

Can’t go through the same hole the dirty dog went through.

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rabbithasacat t1_ivlut1p wrote

Loved how it aimed precisely for the seam, no ungainly bursting through the middle of the fabric, with the risk of self-humiliation by snagging one's claws in the mesh. It's clear finesse was essential to the performance.

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FlashMcSuave t1_ivmnnzb wrote

Bro knows that mat has been peed on.

Because he peed on it.

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Absoniter t1_ivmvg77 wrote

......................KA-JONGA!

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montyleak t1_ivmyjpz wrote

That cat doesn’t know how it works. It just knows a way it works.

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scotheman t1_ivn5nai wrote

My cat does this sometimes, it’s hilarious.

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ThaneVim t1_ivn83vt wrote

Honestly, this makes a lot of sense as well. I mean, cats are super sensitive, and that thing wants to stay closed. It's potentially a sensory overload for the kitty to go through it any slower. So, it figured out how to handle the thing: yeet! And therefore minimize contact time.

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nthexwn t1_ivnfkml wrote

What a cute kangaroo!

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qpwoeiruty00 t1_ivnrmrn wrote

r/madeofstyrofoam users when this person makes this very totally good and not triggering in the slightest title:

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guyver_dio t1_ivnvlhg wrote

Holy crap the thickness of the grout.

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Big_Mac22 t1_ivnxwn6 wrote

Cool to see them go paws first, ready to bounce straight off if it turned out to be glass after all.

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thetarm t1_ivo14di wrote

I don't know, a lot of people are aware that a cat's whiskers are very sensitive and sometimes they won't even eat out of narrow cat bowls because of something called whisker fatigue.

Clearly you didn't know this and instead of researching, decided to call out that guy's plausible explanation for no good reason.

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tandpastatester t1_ivobbal wrote

It’s basically a universal way to transport additional user info or data between different environments/platforms without storing it somewhere in cookies.

It’s most commonly used for marketing purposes. These parameters/tags can be recognized by analytics software to collect relevant data about their page visits. E.g. it will allow them to analyze how the visitors arrived on their website, which search engine or advertisement did they come from, by which keywords, etc.

Another common way they’re used is for usability aspects by the website itself. When a page loads it will read the tags for user preferences like search order, filter options, interface settings, etc.

It’s basically harmless, the data isn’t as personal as cookie info. There’s no harm removing it from the url to make it prettier, but leaving it there doesn’t hurt either.

1

soda-jerk t1_ivp0nto wrote

Not at all baseless.

Cats and dogs have other sensor hairs and whiskers, beside the ones on their muzzles. They use them to gauge the space around them, particularly their heads. That mesh screen dragging across all those hairs probably doesn't feel good. Though we obviously can't ask the cat, we can try to imagine what it's like, by thinking of what a similar fabric would feel like, rubbing against a highly sensitive part of our bodies.

The dog is a dog, and might be enjoying the sensation, or is a little slower putting the two things together.

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BaluePeach t1_ivp57m3 wrote

My cats won’t touch a door mat. They even leap like this out of the litter box to avoid the litter mat. I don’t know why. What makes it even weirder, is if I lay a mat in the middle of the room they bee line to go lay on it. Their brains have very odd wiring.

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KernelTaint t1_ivrj3hy wrote

Thanks, I know, I've been a software engineer for at least 30 years now.

> It’s most commonly used for marketing purposes.

That's a bold statement, it is used in plenty of places for things other than marketing and tracking.

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EmperorGeek t1_ivrybji wrote

Apparently the neighborhood went to the “dogs”.

1