barsoap

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 14 hours ago

What are the chances they figured out we're trying to decode their speech and they're trolling us?

[–] [email protected] 14 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago) (1 children)

Once upon a time, German authorities decided to raid the home, or rather estate, of the local Hell's Angel boss. Police (SEK) came up to the door in civilian clothes and balaclavas, announced themselves as police. Boss inside panics, thinks it's a rival gang trying to take him out, grabs a shotgun, shoots a police through the door. Ultimately gets apprehended.

Police file murder charges. State attorney downgrades that to manslaughter. Judge says "WTF that was self defence if police don't want to get shot through the door they shouldn't be running around ringing doorbells in civilian clothes and balaclavas anybody can shout 'police open up!'". Still got nailed for illegal possession of firearms on top of everything else he was wanted for, of course. Welcome to German law where you can legally stand your ground with a full auto but are not allowed to own one.

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

IIRC, that used to be a much more significant problem;

Yep systems that could automatically dose the fertiliser were not yet in widespread use. Farmers don't want to over-fertilise for the simple reason that fertiliser costs money but before those systems were available it was all too easy to say "fuck it I'll drown the field so that there's enough everywhere".

Not rotating crops seems to be a US thing, farmers over here never stopped doing that. There's also EU-wide laws about having to either let land fall fallow, or plant cover crops or nitrogen fixers. You can, in principle, plant your nitrogen fixers year after year on one field and your cash crops on another, but only if you're a complete idiot.

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

Under solutions, there, is written "compost" and "animal manure". That's fertiliser. Import-dependent agriculture is a whole another topic and I didn't want to get into it, but long story short, no matter how good and natural your soil management is you can't expect to export nutrients all the time and not develop a shortage. You can pull nitrogen out of the air, that's nice, but you can't do that with phosphate and minerals in general. Good news is that good water treatment plants will pull phosphate out of the waste water.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (5 children)

Modern tractors already self-drive on the field, fertiliser is applied in tightly controlled doses based on aerial analysis, that future is already there. You don't plant or fertilise at the same time as you plough so it makes sense for those things being attachments, not integrated machines. The reason combine harvesters are dedicated machines is because they do so much in one go it doesn't fit into a (sensibly sized) attachment.

You could also have drones distribute that fertiliser but you can't work the soil with them, and you already have a tractor to work the soil with so you can just as well use it to apply the fertiliser. There's also tons of odd lifting and transporting jobs on farms, that's why there's forklift attachments. You'll need something with torque, low ground pressure, PTO and attachment points and well that's a tractor.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (7 children)

I don't think that tractors will ever go the way of the dodo and when you have proper logistics, say a reasonably dense S-Bahn type rail network that can also handle shipping individual containers, a tractor and a trailer is all you need as you only have to haul to the next logistics hub and there's no truck load even 100 year old tractors can't tow: When you can pull a plough through soil torque isn't something you need to worry about, 20 horses at 5km/h go vroom. 20 horses! Do you know how much those eat.

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

They absolutely can do such things but then the money comes out of their pockets, possibly with the option to sue Rockstar for breach of contract and money back. I wouldn't even be surprised if Rockstar contacted Valve and said "don't worry we'll take the hit", having calculated what it costs to continue supporting the deck vs. taking that hit. Certainly not a company which has to worry about cashflow a lot.

Sony also refunded CP77, IIRC without getting CDPR involved, and Sony generally has a shoddy return policy. At that point, to the store, customer goodwill is more important and they'll figure out things on the backend.

OP didn't describe that kind of case, though, but "I bought a game without checking whether it's compatible with my hardware and didn't bother to launch it for six months". Steam isn't going to refund that out of their own pocket that's what the 14 days are for, so that they don't have to do it out of their own pocket.

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

Key thing about avoiding lawsuits is not lack of communication but not having illegal hiring practices. And it's not like everyone gets rejected for being a bad candidate, you might just have too many applicants and want to stay on good terms with them, maybe a position will open in the future.

And, regardless any of that, a simple but polite, standardised "We closed the position, you didn't make the cut, we wish you the best of luck" to tell people that they can stop waiting and consider the application failed, look somewhere else, is really never too much to ask. Even if they had to be escorted out by police. It's ghosting which really grinds my gears.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago

Possibly, technical inspections. I'm not sure whether it's a requirement for cars to be street legal or just a requirement for cars to be sold on the market. The regulation only mentions that it's about type approval but it's not like modifying a car automatically nullifies its type approval.

Certainly would be hard to argue for authorities that snipping the eCall would endanger others, similar situation as with seat belts I don't think legislation is unified there.

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

14 days, to the developer, means that you now know that you actually have the money and can plan with it. Months later, the money has either been spent, or earmarked for something in particular.

Your best hope at that point is that the developer has allocated some money for people like you but otherwise, nope. Accounting would break down your door if you granted the refund.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago

For a dev those 30% are very much worth it because Steam has tons of customers and very good recommendation algorithms, you gain more in additional sales than what you lose from the cut. Could they do with less probably but they're not extorting devs. There's a reason why Epic had to do stuff like guarantee sales and provide huge advances to get anyone onto their excuse for a platform.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago

20% for repeat offenders.

Historically EU fines are bad at stopping companies from trying shit, but they are good at stopping the behaviour. The money, btw, doesn't go towards the EU's budget it goes towards the member states' contributions, everyone gets a rebate.

 

Chris' release videos are always more of a highlight reel, here's the full release notes.

 

I know, I know, the duration. Not just pushing the community rules beyond the breaking point, but a 72 minutes video on focus, of all things? Bold move.

On the flipside, consider: You can already start listening while cooking, also, you should not rush eating. I rest my case.

Blurb:

Distraction is one of the hottest button issues today. Everywhere there seems to be assaults on our focus. Recently I came across two wonderful videos by the inimitable Jared Henderson (‪@_jared‬) on our declining focus rates, and it took me on a long research journey into the true terrifying effects of our limited focus.

 

Life is meaningless, but how do we cope? That is the question asked by Albert Camus in his landmark text The Myth of Sisyphus. Here I will draw upon this work amongst others Camus penned like The Stranger to give an overview of how Camus thinks we should live in a world where everything seems meaningless, and the universe will not hear our calls for a higher purpose. I will also focus on some of his more radical ideas as they are often glossed over or made more palatable by many popular interpretations of his words. Think of this as a slightly more provocative version of my genuine interpretation of the great thinker's ideas.

 

Long story short, found a paper. Abstract:

It is often thought that, for the Stoics, assent and the suspension of assent to kataleptic impressions is voluntary in the sense that one can deliberate about assenting or suspending assent. Against this view, I examine the relevant sources closely and argue that they point in a different direction: assent and suspension of assent to kataleptic impressions is not a matter of deliberation. Instead, kataleptic impressions force our assent in the absence of obstacles that make it difficult to discern kataleptic from non-kataleptic impressions. Surprisingly, neither is the act of withholding assent to kataleptic impressions a matter of deliberation; instead, the presence of obstacles that make it difficult to discern kataleptic from non-kataleptic impressions triggers the activation of a disposition to withhold assent. However, we can acquire this disposition through training in dialectic. This means that deliberation can be involved in the acquisition of this disposition. However, the act of assenting and the act of withholding assent to kataleptic impressions is not guided by deliberation.


I think you'll find your way to libgen yourself, it's chapter 13 in the book, haven't read anything else from it yet though some stuff looks interesting.


Overall this characterisation of katalepsis strengthens me in my assumption that what the Stoics are trying to get at is the exact same thing that Zen folks call "direct knowledge".

The best subjective (hey, this is phenomenology) experiment to demonstrate the clear distinction between this stuff and ordinary thoughts I know of, as in, "doesn't involve faith or decades of staring at the wall" comes from a technique the lucid dreaming community came up with to trigger lucid dreams: Ask yourself whether you're awake. If you're awake, the response to that question will be right-out unassailable, you just know, kinda feels silly to even ask. When you ask yourself that question regularly throughout the day, after maybe a week or two, the mind gets used to regularly posing that question and will also do it when you're sleeping, and if you get it right in that context, your dreams will become lucid (You'll be dreaming and simultaneously know that you're dreaming, allowing you to consciously steer them to at least some degree). If you get it wrong, which shouldn't be hard to do, the qualia, the spot that the wrong answer comes from will be quite different, which can be remembered when you're awake, again. "Qualia" and "spot" both kinda bad terms it's not a thing that can really be put into words, just suspend disbelief will you. The wrong answer comes from, as the paper puts it, an obstacle to assent, obscuring the view of the kataleptic impression: Your mind could tell your consciousness the truth but it has other plans for tonight, you knowing that you're asleep-yet-conscious would only get into the way of that.


Furthermore I think the first rule of this sub should be "Never assent to non-kataleptic impressions". Yes I'm going to Cato this.

 

Der halbe Roman der bei der ARD als Zusammenfassung durchgeht:

Nuhr sieht eine fast chronische Krisenwahrnehmung in Deutschland, die sich seit Jahrzehnten kaum verändert habe: „Seit ich denken kann, geht die Welt unter.“ Bereits als Kind sei er mit "Waldsterben, Ozonloch, Tschernobyl“ konfrontiert gewesen – heute sehe er viele Dinge optimistischer: „Inzwischen habe ich gelernt, darüber ernsthaft zu lachen.“

Das laut „Glücksreport“ vergleichsweise geringe Glücksniveau und die Unzufriedenheit in Deutschland führt der Kabarettist auf ein kulturelles Erbe zurück: „In Deutschland ist, glaube ich schon, auch einer der großen Gründe für unseren Erfolg gewesen, dass wir eigentlich nie zufrieden waren.“ Bei seinen Reisen, etwa nach Indien, Nepal oder Saudi-Arabien, habe er erlebt, dass Glück offenbar weniger von äußeren Umständen als von inneren Haltungen bestimmt sei: „Trotzdem trifft man auf eine ungeheure Gelassenheit“, insbesondere in buddhistisch und hinduistisch geprägten Kulturen mit „einem gewissen Fatalismus“.

Die politische Lage in Deutschland sieht Nuhr kritisch. Den aktuellen Koalitionsvertrag etwa kommentiert er skeptisch: „Ich habe bisher nur gehört: wollen, gucken mal, ob wir ...“. Nuhr bezweifelt grundsätzlich die Umsetzbarkeit politischer Versprechen, insbesondere beim Thema Migrationswende: „Ich glaube, dass keine Regierung das schaffen wird.“ Er weist auf Versäumnisse der Vergangenheit bei der europäischen Sicherheitspolitik hin: „Solange es uns selber nichts anging, haben wir auch nicht richtig hingeguckt.“ Das führe nun zu einem Rechtsruck in Europa: „Wir ernten überall rechte Regierungen.“

Gleichzeitig befürwortet Nuhr, dass Union und SPD das Thema Migration nun anpacken würden: „Wenn jetzt nichts passiert, haben wir wirklich in vier Jahren eine AfD bei weiß ich nicht wieviel Prozent.“ Die Auseinandersetzung mit der AfD bewertet er nüchtern: „Es gibt sehr viele Psychopathen bei denen. Ich würde erst mal sagen, dass man mit der AfD überhaupt keine Politik machen kann.“

Der Satiriker zeigt sich zudem besorgt über das Vertrauen in die Demokratie: „Wenn man dem Wähler nicht zutraut, die Probleme beurteilen zu können, dann kann man die Demokratie gleich zumachen.“ Nuhr macht auf eine verfehlte Debattenkultur aufmerksam: „Wenn jeder Nazi ist, dann gibt es für einen richtigen Nazi plötzlich gar keine Bezeichnung mehr.“

Mit Blick auf die aktuelle, auch von Trump angeheizte Wokeness-Debatte sagt Nuhr, die Bewegung habe mit „völlig überzogener“ Moral eine Gegenreaktion provoziert: „Man sieht, dass man da genau diese Form des Populismus hat, wo eben jemand an die Macht kommt, der einfach in seiner charakterlichen Bildung gar nicht geeignet dazu ist.“

Trotz der kritischen Analysen betont Nuhr, als Kabarettist mache er weiterhin Scherze über die aktuelle politische Lage: „Natürlich, ich habe mein Leben lang Scherze gemacht, es ist ja der Sinn des Humors, sozusagen das Leben erträglich zu machen.“ Den politischen Wandel sieht der Kabarettist dabei auch als neue Inspirationsquelle: „Ich hatte solche Sorgen, dass mir diese Regierung wegbricht. (...) Jetzt gibt es, glaube ich, schon genug Kandidaten.“

 

(Took the patreon read off the runtime)

Oh and in case the young'uns are lost here's the song with lyrics. Way before the toilet.

 

What do YouTubers, AI speech and non-native/L2 speakers of English have in common? In this video I explore two expressive features of English that are now widely discarded...

 

The characters and events depicted in this documentation are entirely fictitious, any similarity to names or incidents is entirely attributable to Mike Pondsmith's psychic foresight.

 

Wind turbines play an important role in Europe’s green transition. But as technology becomes bigger, better, and more efficient, older installations are being replaced and a second-hand market in wind power is emerging. Turbines are taken apart and reconstructed often thousands of miles away to begin a second life of producing renewable energy.

 

In this video we explore the details of Tolkien's lengthy career as a professor, while examining the first hand accounts of his students!

view more: next ›