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Printer logic extention

pops up every second i try to use a fucking chromebook for work. force installed by the school admin and will not let ppl remove this peice of bloatware that is a big distraction to schoolwork. the only way to remove it is to give them ur account info and pray to god you dont get hacked.
me: alr, time to do a slideshow on a school assignment.
*window pops up*
me: FUCK SAKE! not this Printer logic extention for chrome.
Teacher: just login and it will go away :)
Me: it won't tho, i really hate this pile of bloatware >:(
Teacher: put the chromebook away then if ur going to act like that >:(
Me: whatever, might as well do this at home then...
by The Gen Z Dictionary February 23, 2026
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A broader version of the Extended Causality Hypothesis, proposing that the known laws of physics are not complete but are projections or subsets of a larger, extended physics that operates beyond our current observational capabilities. The hypothesis suggests that what we call "physics" is what we can detect from within spacetime—but there may be extended physics that operates outside, beyond, or between the domains we can access. This extended physics might include phenomena currently considered impossible (FTL travel, telepathy, precognition) that are perfectly lawful in a larger framework. It might include dimensions beyond our perceptual reach, forces beyond our measurement, entities beyond our detection. The hypothesis doesn't claim that magic is real—it claims that our current physics is real but incomplete, and that an extended physics awaits discovery when we find ways to access domains beyond our current observational limits. It provides a framework for taking anomalies seriously without abandoning scientific rigor: anomalies might be windows into extended physics, not violations of physics.
Example: "The Hypothesis of Extended Physics suggests that FTL travel isn't impossible—it's just impossible within our current observational domain. In the extended physics that includes higher dimensions, it might be as natural as walking. We can't see it yet, but that doesn't mean it's not there."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A broader version of the Extended Causality Hypothesis, applying specifically to thermodynamic laws—proposing that the laws of thermodynamics we know (conservation of energy, increase of entropy, unattainability of absolute zero) apply within our observational domain, but extended thermodynamic principles may operate beyond it. This hypothesis suggests that phenomena that appear to violate thermodynamics (perpetual motion, entropy decrease, energy from nowhere) might be lawful within an extended framework. A system that seems to produce energy might be drawing from thermodynamic dimensions we can't measure; an event that appears to decrease entropy might be exporting it to domains we can't see; what looks like violation might be interaction with extended thermodynamic space. The hypothesis provides a framework for understanding claims of free energy, anomalous cooling, or reverse entropy without dismissing them as impossible—they might be impossible within our thermodynamics but possible within extended thermodynamics.
Example: "The device seemed to produce more energy than it consumed—a clear violation of thermodynamics. But the Hypothesis of Extended Thermodynamics suggests it might be drawing energy from dimensions we can't measure, operating according to laws we haven't yet discovered. The violation is only in our limited frame."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A broader version of the Extended Causality Hypothesis, applying specifically to biological phenomena—proposing that the biology we know (evolution by natural selection, DNA-based inheritance, carbon-based life) applies within our observable domain, but extended biological principles may operate beyond it. This hypothesis suggests that phenomena currently considered impossible (spontaneous generation, radical longevity, non-DNA inheritance, life in impossible environments) might be lawful within an extended biological framework. It provides a framework for understanding claims of extraordinary biological phenomena without dismissing them as impossible—they might be impossible within our biology but possible within extended biology. The hypothesis also suggests that life might exist in forms we can't recognize, operating according to biological laws we haven't yet discovered, in dimensions we can't access.
Example: "The organism seemed to repair itself instantly, regenerate from nothing, live indefinitely—violating everything we know about biology. The Hypothesis of Extended Biology suggests it might be operating according to biological laws we haven't discovered yet, in domains we can't access. Not magic—just extended nature."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A broader version of the Extended Causality Hypothesis, applying specifically to knowledge itself—proposing that the epistemology we know (how we know what we know, what counts as evidence, how truth is established) applies within our cognitive domain, but extended epistemological principles may operate beyond it. This hypothesis suggests that there may be ways of knowing that we cannot access from within our current epistemic framework—forms of knowledge that don't fit our standards of evidence, truths that can't be established by our methods, understandings that come through channels we don't recognize. It provides a framework for taking seriously claims of non-standard knowledge (intuition, revelation, direct perception) without abandoning epistemic standards—they might be invalid by our epistemology but valid within an extended framework we haven't yet accessed. The hypothesis also explains epistemic disagreement: different epistemic frameworks might be accessing different aspects of reality, and what seems irrational from one perspective might be rational from another.
Example: "The shaman claimed to know things he couldn't possibly know by our standards—no evidence, no method, no verification. The Hypothesis of Extended Epistemology suggests he might be operating according to epistemic principles we haven't discovered yet, accessing knowledge through channels we can't detect. Not irrational—just extended rationality."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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Theory of Extended Reality

A broader version of the Extended Causality Hypothesis, proposing that the reality we experience (3D space, linear time, material objects, causal order) is not the whole of reality but a subset—a projection or interface of an extended reality that includes dimensions, domains, and phenomena we cannot directly access. This theory draws on analogies with virtual reality: what we experience as "reality" might be like the interface of a vast simulation, hiding the underlying code while presenting a usable surface. Extended reality would include the hidden dimensions, the higher-dimensional spaces, the domains beyond spacetime, the levels of organization we can't perceive. It would include phenomena we currently call paranormal, spiritual, or impossible—not because they don't exist, but because they exist in aspects of reality we haven't learned to access. The theory provides a framework for integrating scientific, spiritual, and anomalous experiences into a coherent understanding: all are real, but at different levels of extended reality.
*Example: "Near-death experiences, UFO sightings, mystical visions—the Theory of Extended Reality suggests these aren't hallucinations or lies. They're genuine experiences of aspects of reality we normally can't access, like a 2D being glimpsing the third dimension. The reality is extended; our perception is limited."*
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A broader version of the Extended Causality Hypothesis, proposing that the science we know (empirical method, peer review, falsification, reproducibility) is not the whole of science but a subset—the science that works within our observational domain—while an extended science may be possible for domains beyond our current access. This hypothesis suggests that there may be phenomena that cannot be studied by our current methods because they operate outside our observational capabilities, but that extended methods—yet to be developed—might access them. It provides a framework for taking anomalies seriously without abandoning scientific values: anomalies become phenomena that current science can't address but extended science might. The hypothesis also suggests that our current scientific methods might be domain-specific—perfect for studying within spacetime but inadequate for studying the extended domains that contain spacetime. Extended science would require extended methods, extended instruments, extended ways of knowing.
Example: "Paranormal phenomena resist scientific study—they're unrepeatable, unmeasurable, unpredictable. The Hypothesis of Extended Science suggests this isn't because they're unreal but because our science is designed for within-spacetime phenomena. Extended phenomena require extended science."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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