barsoap

joined 1 year ago
 

Synopsis: Title. Asianometry.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 0 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Nope they're boys with pubes. Pubes don't make you a man, strength of character does.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Should you really be working when you’re claiming retirement checks from your union?

As a carpenter? Yes and no. It shouldn't compete with what union people are by and large doing for their steady bread and butter but completely outlawing earning any money is cruel to the type of busy-bees that many tradespeople are. Hand-craft chessboards or something, anything where skill and mastery is eclipsing the industrial aspect. Also teaching, training, and consulting. Retirement should be a role-change (if desired), not a kick to the curb. Also, accommodate for half-retirement: Half the cheque, half the jobs kind of situation.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 2 points 2 days ago

When you adjust the rules of the game to not define a set number of interactions with each player

Then being nasty wins out, no matter the length of the game as long as it's known (or at least an upper bound is known) But that's not the case in practice so it's irrelevant which is why I specified (yes I mentioned it) infinite or unknown amount of iterations.

That mark. That thing we consider good. The innate sense, what pretty much everyone agrees on. It is there because our ancestors were successful because all that game theory stuff happens to apply. If it didn't, then we would consider defecting good, not, to sum it up neatly, "never start a fight but always end it".

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

That simple thought experiment incentivizes bad actions from time to time.

The optimal strategy, in theory and practice, for the iterated prisoner's dilemma (unknown or infinite amounts of iterations) is some version of tit for tat, details depending on the exact rules (such as low information reliability needing increased forgiveness). The strategy involves punishing the other player for defecting but it will never defect first so two tit-for-tat players will play 100% cooperatively and the knives stay where they belong, behind their backs. Holistically speaking choosing to punish is not bad because it incentivise the other player to play cooperatively, leading to overall greater results for both.

Evolutionarily speaking: If cooperation did not give advantages, why the fuck did we become a social species? Going for anti-cooperative strategies only ever makes sense in zero-sum games and practically nothing in life is.

You have more to gain by acting selfishly.

That's capitalist propaganda with no basis in game theory.

Not every choice is a conscious decision in my eyes, but the vast majority are.

Oh my sweet summer child.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 4 points 2 days ago

Still makes sense in places with tight housing markets, though. Triply and quadruply so if it's infested by speculative investment. Then make sure that short-term rentals require a hotel license if it even smells of being a commercial short-term rental (couch surfing is completely fine, doesn't take up a housing unit) and last, but not least: Public housing. Look at Vienna as to how to do it but that can literally take the better part of a century to do because land. Specifically in the US, you also need to build tons of public transit don't worry even if you make your metro free at the point of use it's cheaper than road/sewer upkeep in suburbia. Suburbia is a financial graveyard for municipalities, they just don't generate enough tax revenue for the infrastructure they demand.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

Homes where noone wants to live don't count towards relief for a shortage unless you can figure out how to make those places at least baseline attractive to people. Jobs, schools, parks, a sportsball team, all that stuff.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Middle class is, mostly, simply the newfangled term for that portion of the proletariat which isn't lumpen which is now called the precariat. Low-rank petite bourgeois also counts as the same class as it's actually an economical one (petit bourgeois get shafted amply by capital), not political (what with their penchant for temporarily embarrassed millionaire narratives and support of "business-friendly" policies). That worker / petit bourgeois distinction has always been fuzzy and awkward I mean it's not like there's not workers who think like that.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (4 children)

But for myself, the world and humanity was created with free will and it’s up to us to choose good vs evil.

That's a terrible take: It implies that if you see something that you consider evil, you attribute it to choice, whereas the opposite is generally the case -- once individuals have waded through layers of shit conditioning they are able to make choices that are actually attributable to them and not to society, upbringing, etc, and they very much do not choose evil. They might choose things that are inconvenient to others, or short-sighted, or unwise, but evil? That's not just a different ballpark that's a different game:

There can be no good without evil.

As a mark is not set up for the sake of missing the aim, so neither does the nature of evil exist in the world.

In other words: Noone, willingly, chooses imperfection. Minds, life, that would do so, would use its degrees of freedoms like that, would long have went the way of the dodo.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

It's not a blob the client is definitely open source, not sure about the server software but you're not running that. It's an extension like any other, just that it comes bundled with the default install and doesn't use the usual extension enable/disable UI: Go to about:config, set extensions.pocket.enabled to false. It's going to stay that way, this isn't microsoft which likes to "fix" your settings.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 2 points 3 days ago (3 children)

There's a subscription if you want and they're also earning some money off referrals. In 2022 they made ~80m dollars off all those side hustles, should probably be 100m by now. Selling the default search engine spot is still the biggest number, about 500m. And they have a piggy bank of over a billion.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 3 points 4 days ago (5 children)

During the google money years the ROI on Firefox was so mind-bogglingly high it would've been insanity to drop it all into the browser: It couldn't possibly have soaked up the sheer amount of resources.

Meanwhile, yes they did sink a large amount of resources into it in a way a profit-driven company never would have: They designed a whole fucking new programming language to get proper concurrency into the thing. Rust is, in a very real way, a language to write browsers in. That's its purpose. And then they set the language free because, among other things, you can't make money with it.

Sure, lots of those investments tanked. But OTOH you have stuff like pocket which makes money and could probably keep the lights on by itself. If everything but pocket were to fail Mozilla absolutely would have to downsize, would definitely have to scale back its charity spending, rely more on the FLOSS community to actually write code, but it'd continue with the same kind of force as say Blender, which wouldn't be what it is without its paid staff (both coders and artists) and sidle-hustles (commercial support, training, and cloud services, mostly. Oh, t-shirts and mugs. Don't forget t-shirts and mugs).

I guess overall the gripe I have with the "Mozilla should invest more in Firefox" chorus is that it implies "Do you want Mozilla to be way smaller and less capable of shaping the web than it currently is". People have no sense of the scale of Mozilla, think that it's running on donations etc.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 10 points 5 days ago

Servo isn't dead it's just on slow burn. Also, under the umbrella of the Linux Foundation Europe. As far as Mozilla is concerned it has served its purpose: Prototype stuff that then got included in Firefox to get rid of a quite large amount of technical debt.

The long and short of it is: Firefox is supposed to make money for Mozilla's charitable causes. It's not an end in itself, but a means to an end.

1
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by barsoap@lemm.ee to c/technology@lemmy.world
 

Asianometry dives into the tech, history, and the last bits of innovation potential spinning magnetic platters have left as they hold on to their last niches under the onslaught of SSDs

 

Videogames are being destroyed! Most video games work indefinitely, but a growing number are designed to stop working as soon as publishers end support. This effectively robs customers, destroys games as an artform, and is unnecessary. Our movement seeks to pass new law in the EU to put an end to this practice. Our proposal would do the following:

  • Require video games sold to remain in a working state when support ends.
  • Require no connections to the publisher after support ends.
  • Not interfere with any business practices while a game is still being supported.

If you are an EU citizen, please sign the Citizens' Initiative!

1
Bevy 0.14 (bevyengine.org)
0
Equality (ro-che.info)
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by barsoap@lemm.ee to c/science_memes@mander.xyz
 

For all your boycotting needs. I'm sure there's some mods caught in lemmy.ml's top 10 that are perfectly upstanding and reasonable people, my condolences for the cross-fire.

  1. !memes@lemmy.world and !memes@sopuli.xyz. Or of course communities that rule.
  2. !asklemmy@lemmy.world
  3. !linux@programming.dev. Quite small, plenty of more specific ones available. Also linux is inescapable on lemmy anyway :)
  4. !programmer_humor@programming.dev
  5. !world@lemmy.world
  6. !privacy@lemmy.world and maybe !privacyguides@lemmy.one, lemmy.one itself seems to be up in the air. !fedigrow@lemm.ee says !privacy@lemmy.ca. They really seem to be hiding even from another, those tinfoil hats :)
  7. !technology@lemmy.world
  8. Seems like !comicstrips@lemmy.world and !comicbooks@lemmy.world, various smaller comic-specifc communities as well as !eurographicnovels@lemm.ee
  9. !opensource@programming.dev
  10. !fuckcars@lemmy.world

(Out of the loop? Here's a thread on lemmy.ml mods and their questionable behaviour)

 

In this video, I measure a wave of electricity traveling down a wire, and answer the question - how does electricity know where to go? How does "electricity" "decide" where electrons should be moving in wires, and how long does that process take? Spoiler alert - very fast!

I've been very excited about this project for a while - it was a lot of work to figure out a reliable way to make these measurements, but I've learned SO much by actually watching waves travel down wires, and I hope you do too!

 

This is from the 37th Chaos Communication Congress, still ongoing y'all might find other things of interests there, e.g. sticking with looking at stars the talk about the Extremely Large Telescope. Congress schedule, live streams, relive and released videos (i.e. final cuts not the automatic relive stuff which is often quite iffy)

Talk blurb:

The Solar System has had 8 planets ever since Pluto was excluded in 2006. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move. But did you know Neptune was discovered as the 12th planet? Or that, 80 years before Star Trek, astronomers seriously suspected a planet called Vulcan near the Sun? This talk will take you through centuries of struggling with the question: Do you even planet?!

In antiquity, scientists counted the 7 classical planets: the Moon, Mercury, Venus, the Sun, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn – but their model of the universe was wrong. Two thousand years later, a new model was introduced. It was less wrong, and it brought the number of planets down to 6: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn. Since then, it's been a roller coaster ride of planet discoveries and dismissals.

In this talk, we stagger through the smoke and mirrors of scientific history. We meet old friends like Uranus and Neptune, forgotten lovers like Ceres, Psyche and Eros, fallen celebrities like Pluto, regicidal interlopers like Eris and Makemake as well as mysterious strangers like Vulcan, Planet X and Planet Nine.

Find out how science has been tricked by its own vanity, been hampered by too little (or too much!) imagination, and how human drama can make a soap opera out of a question as simple as: How Many Planets in Our Solar System?

 

~~Astronomers~~Engineers^1^ presenting at the 37th Chaos Communication Congress for a general but technical audience. The congress is still going on in case you're interested, lots of interesting stuff there and don't be afraid of German talks there's real-time dubbing.

Talk blurb:

The Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) is currently under construction in the Atacama desert in northern Chile by the European Southern Observatory (ESO). With a primary mirror aperture of 39m, it will be the largest optical telescope on earth. We will briefly introduce the history and mission of ESO and explain how a modern optical telescope works.

The European Southern Observatory (ESO) is an intergovernmental organisation founded in 1962 and is based in Garching bei München. It develops, builds and operates ground-based telescopes to enable astronomical research in the southern hemisphere and to foster cooperation in the international astronomical community. In 2012 the ESO Council approved the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) programme and its construction is scheduled for completion in 2028. The 39m primary mirror will make the ELT the largest optical telescope at that time.

It will be located on the top of Cerro Armazones, a ~3000m high mountain in the Atacama desert in Chile. This site provides ideal optical conditions, but also comes with logistical and engineering challenges.

We will walk you through the telescope and along the optical path to the instruments and explain some of the technologies involved to push the boundaries of ground-based optical astronomy.


^1^ Oh boy the "what is it good for" question got them swimming. "I'm not an Astronomer -- Science, I guess? Looking at things?" :)

 

As the US tries to halt the slide in its relations with China, the most difficult sticking point is still Taiwan and Xi Jinping’s determination to “reunify” the island with the mainland.

Are Taiwan’s military preparations enough of a deterrent to China? What does the US “commitment” to Taiwan’s defense mean? Could it include protection under Washington’s nuclear umbrella?

Taiwan's foreign minister Joseph Wu says it is not only Taiwan that has “a stake in the peace and stability over the Taiwan Strait” and hopes the actions of “like-minded partners” will also have a deterrent effect.

If China does attack, Wu is clear who will do the fighting.

“If war breaks out, the one who bears the responsibility for Taiwan's defense will be Taiwan itself. And we are determined to defend ourselves,” he says.

DW’s Tim Sebastian speaks to Joseph Wu down the line from Taipei.

view more: next ›