this post was submitted on 29 Dec 2025
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Bikini Bottom Twitter

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Ahoy, me buckos! Welcome to Bikini Bottom Twitter! Your digital reef for the latest salty gossip and treasure tales! And while you're at it, be sure to drop by the Krusty Krab for a delicious Krabby Patty so I can get yer mon- err I mean, 'cause they're the best treat under the sea!

Rule 1 - This is Bikini Bottom Twitter, all posts should be Spongebob related in "(Old-School) Twitter-like" form

Rule 2 - Political posts, as long as it follows rule 1, will be permitted, so long as you behave yourselves.

Bikini Bottom Municipal Code §33-07: Anti-Tankie Ordinance Residents are prohibited from circulating tankie ideology or other authoritarian propaganda on Bikini Bottom Twitter. Offenders will be permanently banned from BPT by the BBPD faster than Plankton is ejected from The Krusty Krab.

Rule 3 - Please no reposts within the last couple days, at least

Rule 4 - All posts should be at least above a "Squirdward-krusty-krab-shift" level of effort

Rule 5 - Be chill, be a Patrick not a squidward.

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[–] EditsHisComments@lemmy.world 11 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

I don't think many Professors or Universities structure online programs well. In my experience, many tried to structure online courses the same way as traditional courses - but that defeats the whole point of an online.

I worked while I was student, so I did a lot of onlines before the pandemic. The best courses were were completely self-paced, communications were conducted via email, and any video-calling or meetings were held at an agreed time, even if it was at night. The professors usually were working in their respective fields in some way as well as teaching. Some either understood how it works and how to teach it, some didn't (and were absolutely terrible to have.)

But regardless, you have to want to know the material and to go the extra mile for your studies, online or not. It is seriously an expensive, and stressful, privilege. So go at your own pace so you'll do well and not experience burnout and other issues, but don't waste your time and money. Just do what's right for you.

[–] teft@piefed.social 3 points 3 hours ago

But regardless, you have to want to know the material and to go the extra mile for your studies, online or not.

This is key in anything you learn. If you don’t find it fun/interesting you’re going to struggle to learn it. Putting in the time comes really easy if you like the thing you’re studying.