agamemnonymous

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 hours ago

Not any more than palm reading is a science

Well... stick with me here, this is just a devil's advocate hypothetical.

Your hands are your primary method of interacting with the world. The creases, callouses, and other incidental features are reflections of the ways you most frequently use them.

Obviously you can't divine the future, but you can gather information about a person. I dare say you could devise experiments to detect correlations between certain features of the hands, and features of the person: their profession, hobbies, grooming habits, clumsiness, etc.

I think a sincere scientific study could identify several hand features with moderately predictive correlations.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 hours ago

Near-photographic for most things actually.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Fuck, I might be terminally online.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

I've got a nice thin one under my office chairs, and I could see that. A little thick for my taste, though.

Although I can see drawing the grid directly onto one, and then playing on the other side. Then you could even put illustrated maps underneath projecting the grid onto anything.

That's definitely a whole project though. Onto the pile it goes.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I assume you replied to a notification, that doesn't reply to the comment, it puts it on the main post. I've made that mistake a few times.

I've been looking for a good one, but I'm having a hard time finding any coating or film that presents itself as the obvious best choice. Most of the options I've found have mixed reviews.

[–] [email protected] 33 points 1 day ago (5 children)

Is this the "Don't be such a silly little boy" green text?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

What do you mean by "appealing"?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

By where some bugs had made it red

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

She had that Camarillo Brillo

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

I made a hex map with Sharpie on a 3'x3' piece of white hardboard. Took forever since you have to draw every edge individually, can't just do entire rows like a square grid. I enjoyed it though, and I was able to add some details to help my players adjust to hex distances.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

I'd say average about -5. Verbal, physical, and emotional abuse was the norm. My mom was fine, but due to the age gap she was functionally more like a big sister. My dad must've been going for the high score on the Dark Triad.

School was a fun one; I was regularly held out of school to the point I was nearly kept back multiple times for truancy alone, at one point my grandmother had to threaten to call CPS because I wasn't even enrolled in school at all. Every day I'd have so many chores that homework was impossible, and that lack of structure kicked my ass in college. Bit of a mindfuck to constantly be told that school is for stupid conformists, and still get punished for bad grades. It's a good thing I've got a great memory and phenomenal test-taking skills, or I never would have passed a single class.

Socialization was fun too. Between frequent moves and the pile of chores on my list, I didn't have the opportunity to make many friends. Tried to get into Boy Scouts and sports to get some kind of social life, but those were for stupid conformists too. Combine that isolation with my dad's attempts to turn me into his shadow, I grew up real weird and isolated. People think I'm sociable now, but that required years of focused work. And I'm still pretty weird.

Character and values, ho boy. I wasn't exaggerating with "Dark Triad high score". He literally tried to become a Latin American island dictator, it was a lifelong project for him. I was taught the values of doing anything you can get away with, exploiting rules, lying all the time to get what you want, emotional manipulation, and countless other Machiavellian, narcissistic, psychopathic behaviors. Fortunately, my grandparents were much more moral and ethical, so it was a bit easier to deprogram myself on that front.

I won't even get into all the other little things, but I think anyone from an abusive household can tell you that all the little things can often have a more serious long term effect than the big ones. Daily whoopings suck, but they go away when you move out. Not so much a lifetime of being trained to treat every conversation like a competition.

On the bright side, I'm very resilient now. I joke to people that i never get stressed because my brain doesn't produce the stress chemical, but really I just coped with so much stress growing up that none of the minor daily stresses register at all.

So yeah, others have definitely had it worse, -5 feels about right.

 

Catalog all these "Pokemon", understand their "types" and how they interact, which "moves" are "super effective" against certain "types". They're just priming kids to develop, and adults to consider fondly, the same kind of competencies central to cataloging molecules and determining which other molecules they interact with, and how strongly.

Even battles are kinda like multi-stage chemical reactions.

 

Wife insisted on watching an episode of the new season, and I'm just left... whelmed?

First, as a Netflix original series the "Oh, we added ads to your tier, but you can upgrade to ad-free" felt super hypocritical. Ads started playing on our previously ad-free subscription at the beginning of the episode, so thanks for reminding me I guess.

Secondly, I feel like the heart of Black Mirror is that [insert technological development here] is supposed to be the central conflict which causes problems. This episode was about people bad with money suffering because they're bad at money.

They could've downgraded to a smaller place, their house was huge. Welding has pretty significant upward mobility if you train a few particular skills. And they were trying for a baby? Their budget was way too tight for that.

Most importantly, how do you not game Lux? You can dial up Tennis, or Parkour, or Nonchalance, or Serenity. Surely you can dial up something that can earn you at least an extra $1000 a month to justify it. If you can't figure it out, just get a booster to dial up Intelligence or Strategy so you can figure out a plan, then dial up Programming or Art or whatever your megabrain thinks of to generate more income. It seemed like Lux was straight monthly, not load based. It shouldn't be that hard to leverage your subscription to not only cover the cost, but turn a profit.

In fact, I think the premise would have been way more interesting if it went in like a Limitless direction: she uses Lux to be wildly successful, both causing conflict with her normal husband and generating a class gap between ubermensch Lux users and the Common users who subsidize their success.

It just felt like the tech didn't really cause problems itself. I mean, a person that would've been dead or comatose can be alive for $800/mo, or superhuman for $1800/mo. The subscription model is scummy, but it can easily be gamed. The tech just felt like a bolted-on afterthought in a story about people budgeting poorly. That's not poignant commentary on the relationship between tech and modern life, it's just a depressing vignette about dum dummies being dumb.

 
 

I've got an appx 12' x 24' space between my single story house and tall metal barn garage. The roof of the house slopes toward the space.

I want to convert it into a greenhouse so I can grow veggies without having to chase off critters. Ideally I should be able to install gutters that drain to a rain barrel.

I'm hoping some of you fine folks have resources and recommendations for this kind of project.

 

Looks innocuous enough at first glance right? Let's zoom in on the problem:

These don't go together. If the semicircle on the left is correct, then this is showing moon phases, and the symbol on the right should be of a gibbous moon:

If the cookie-with-a-bite-taken-out in the right is correct, then this is showing an eclipse, and the symbol on the left should be of a 50% partial eclipse:

It drives me crazy every time I look at it.

 

I'm considering pulling the trigger on an X1C but the waste is a huge turn-off. I know there are options for purging to infill or a sacrificial object, but last I heard there's still a considerable amount of purge/prime. Can someone who's played with the settings tell me honestly how much progress has been made in reducing waste?

 

Still pretty new to local LLMs, and there's been a lot of development since I dipped my toe in. Suffice to say I'm fairly swamped and looking for guidance to the right model for my use

I want to feed the model sourcebooks, so I can ask it game mechanic questions and it will respond with reasonable accuracy (including page references). I tried this with privateGPT a month or two back, and it kinda worked but it was slow and wonky. It seems like things are a bit cleaner now

 

Let's kick off some activity here with a question:

How much crunch do you, personally, like in your games?

Ultra Lite? Lite? Basic Set? Every book you can get your hands on?

Light on combat, heavy on skills? Vice-versa? Light overall with some aspects way more fleshed-out? Heavy overall with some aspects way more simplified? Are there specific mechanics you like to take full advantage of? Mechanics you like to gloss over?

No wrong answers, let's just get some discussion going

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