'morgen!
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) February 23, 2020
Extract from an email that we have seen. It is (probably) from a Predatory Journal. We are always looking for more if you have any to share. #PredatoryPublishing #PredatoryPublishingEmails https://t.co/194SnnDZK1 [ @v_i_o_l_a, appreciate your time in sending us this] pic.twitter.com/je4UqUZ0kQ
— Publishing with Integrity (@fake_journals) February 22, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231489601308647424
eine schöne sammlung von @drwebdigitalhub, z.t. sogar mit #versalß: "42 kostenlose Schriftarten mit deutschen Sonderzeichen" https://t.co/5WmOJ55cLi #fonts #umlaute
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) February 23, 2020
"Erwachsensein-Verdienstabzeichen-Aufnäher" https://t.co/pgI1rS26Ch – da fielen mir auch noch ein paar ein … 🙂
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) February 23, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231538019892629504
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231624891285352457
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231629302925602816
#Followerpower: Hat irgendjemand eine gute Quelle zu der Frage, wieviel Prozent aller Google-Suchanfragen mit einem Klick auf einem Wikipedia-Eintrag enden? Ich suche jetzt schon eine Weile, finde aber nichts Aussagekräftiges (ein RT würde mir auch schon weiterhelfen).
— @ChrisStoecker (@ChrisStoecker) February 23, 2020
Word of the day: HURDLE (18th century Scots) – to curl up like a cat pic.twitter.com/5V2GwKv5T7
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) February 23, 2020
Despite their pudgy appearance, wombats can actually run as fast as Usain Bolt.
(Image: JJ Harrison.) pic.twitter.com/EvZi6CjTTO
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) February 23, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231629987641425926
Für meinen Vortrag auf der @dhd2020 hat das Publikum die Wahl.
Ich kann nicht alle #CoDesign Maßnahmen aus meinem Katalog vorstellen, daher wird abgestimmt:https://t.co/fHXdvdsbyH#dhd2020 #digitalhumanities pic.twitter.com/PkgwKhq2vu
— Swagunke (@swagunke) February 23, 2020
Sunday reading @BLMedieval Add 29433 f. 113v pic.twitter.com/BR2379lrQo
— Melibeus (@melibeus1) February 23, 2020
Karneval: Der Norden rastet aus. pic.twitter.com/PMQiBuQl5m
— Universität Lübeck (@UniLuebeck) February 22, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231631423351787521
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231631722124541964
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231631956384743424
Third greatest fear for a librarian is using an incorrect acronym and looking like a fool in front of other librarians
— Fake Library Statistics (@FakeLibStats) February 22, 2020
Costume of the librarian of the National Library of Madrid. I'm all in for reintroduction. pic.twitter.com/YTBKtNuRmS
— Marike van Roon (@vanroon_m) February 21, 2020
The ultimate #Brexitshambles victory. The partly Turkish, American born, Brussels schooled prime minister waving a Dutch/French produced #bluepassport made in Poland, offering inferior travel rights to Britons whose currency has fallen in value. Bon voyage! #gladtohaveanirishone pic.twitter.com/M14YJKH82o
— Julian Shea (@juliansheasport) February 22, 2020
Looking for the next printer in residence @bodleianlibs , https://t.co/2h1CjDkMXz b/c 13 million books are not enough https://t.co/0HysyPh1M3 pic.twitter.com/IPZc4gdQPD
— Bodleian Centre for the Study of the Book (@bodleiancsb) February 22, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231636086436306944
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231636242791571457
Cue the market for burgundy passport covers. @IvanMeyer https://t.co/r703aaMOqm
— Denise Strohsahl (@SSC_Marketing) February 22, 2020
This is crazy!
An editor asked 41 teams to provide data because their manuscripts looked too clean.
HALF of the teams withdrew their papers. 1 out of 41 teams provided full data. https://t.co/HbH6KDPf3K
— Eiko Fried (@EikoFried) February 21, 2020
Being old enough to remember the days when there wasn’t a storm
— VeryBritishProblems (@SoVeryBritish) February 22, 2020
Tory is an autonomous robot of MetraLabs. Today he finds her/his way at the library of @MPI_Luxembourg to conduct an inventory of around 51,000 books. Let's see the findings. pic.twitter.com/M35kOxWIlG
— Juja Chakarova (@JujaChak) February 18, 2020
If something can’t be explained off the back of an envelope, it’s rubbish. RICHARD BRANSON.
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) February 22, 2020
"Also mein Taschenrechnerverlauf ist noch peinlicher als meine Googlesuche."
Jenny, 26, Digital Native
— Herr Glem (@GlemKultur) February 21, 2020
In academia, irony doesn't exist pic.twitter.com/I2MovoYMzP
— Joe Hanson (@DrJoeHanson) February 21, 2020
Immer noch überwältigt, dass meine #Bachelorarbeit über den Einsatz von #WorkingOutLoud in #Bibliotheken ausgezeichnet wird.
(https://t.co/ke0MlfHXNA)Da muss nochmal ein Dankeschön gesetzt werden an Wegbegleiter
1/2— CarinaD (@carina_bib) January 27, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231649031606210560
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1231650411368603648
Just linguist problems: Can't concentrate on the content of political debates because you focus too much on how people pronounce things. Paul Ziemiak pronounces "Tag" /taχ/, but "Landtag" is -/taːk/. Phoneticians and phonologists, please explain!
— Lena Ackermann (lenaackermann.bsky.social) (@_lenaackermann) February 23, 2020
Wir haben es immer noch nicht gelernt, an solchen Abenden einfach wegzuschauen, ein Buch zu lesen, was zu spielen oder gemeinsam zu kochen und den Morgen mit eindeutigen Ergebnissen abzuwarten.
STATTDESSEN WIRD JEDE HOCHRECHNUNG AUSEINANDERGENOMMEN.
— Hilli Knixibix (@HilliKnixibix) February 23, 2020