zlatiah

joined 6 months ago
 
 

As title suggested. For context & as an example... there was something I wanted to investigate today, but the only primary information was from a 2023 Twitter (yup, before it became X) thread. The annoying part is that the crucial tweets got labelled as "sensitive content" so it's not even available on Wayback Machine

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 5 points 3 days ago

It's also called Burma, the political situation there isn't exactly stable, and I've known one (but only one) Burmese guy in the US before. That's... probably it

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

Get ready for Autistic infodump

Osu (stylized as osu!) is a rhythm game... Developed by an Australian group, wiki says it first released in 2007. Probably by far the most popular rhythm game out there, and probably the only one that can rival DDR (Dance Dance Revolution) and DDR-clones/lookalikes. And unlike DDR which requires a ridiculously expensive setup (a reliable DDR pad would cost close to $1k and is extremely loud) or being a regular at your local Japanese arcade to play, osu can be played by anyone with a PC, a mouse/trackpad, and a lot of hopes & dreams

Osu was inspired by the Nintendo Ouendan series on the NDS; in that game you use the little pen provided by NDS to click circles/drag sliders/etc on the bottom screen; obviously works well with the NDS form factor. The osu team decided to translate this into PC gameplay where you need to control stuff with keyboard/mouse... and somehow it worked quite well!

Since osu is completely free (I believe it is still very much free-to-play, no idea how they monetize), relatively accessible (see counter-example of DDR above), and is a legitimate & very serious rhythm game, I think it quickly gained a sizable and very passionate player base. And unlike lots of other rhythm games where the charts are curated by a company, osu's charts are created by players & "peer-reviewed" by mods, so there are a LOT of charts, basically any anime/game-related song you could think of is in the game as an approved chart, which further helps grow the popularity. Needless to say it just kept growing from there... I think even back when it was the 2010s and I was playing the game actively, there were already a bunch of community groups, and ppl literally had names for different play styles. I think my style of primarily using mouse but mashing keyboard Z/X key for combos was called the Seiiryu (blue dragon) style or something... I forgot sorry

As for the gameplay itself... Osu's gameplay is actually quite unique in terms of rhythm games especially back then. Back then the gold standard of rhythm games I believe are DDR and IIDX, both of which are vertical fixed-screen drop-down notes where you have to time the fixed buttons to the notes. Osu on the other hand has dynamic notes where circles fly all over the screen. However, this also means that at higher level gameplay, osu relies less on your "sense of rhythm" and more on... precise mouse movements, almost like an FPS. I think nowadays games like maimai/WACCA/Chrono Circle might be similar to osu's playstyle. They did add more game modes though; they have a taiko clone, a "catch the fruit" game which is even more unique than their base game, and a djmax/iidx clone.

And... yeah. In short I think osu could be seen as the gateway drug into rhythm games due to it being free, having charts for just about any song you could think of, and having a passionate community. Now that you've sunk yourself in the rabbit hole, grab your wallet and pay for that $1000 DDR setup you have always wanted, $2000 maimai ADX controller setup, and mortgage on the suburban single-family home to play it in so you don't get complaints from neighbors. You know you want it. Do it. DO IT (/s obviously)


[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

In response, the guidelines regulate the labeling of AI-generated online content throughout its production and dissemination processes, requiring providers to add visible marks to their content in appropriate locations.

My understanding is that this is meant more as a set of legal guidelines... I'm not a legal scholar, but since China has a history of enforcing certain information-related laws I'd assume they can "legally" enforce it

On the technical side... there is a subfield of LLM research that focuses on "watermarking" or ensuring that LLM-generated outputs can be clearly identified, so I guess in theory it might be enforceable

In practice as to whether it will actually be ensured... who knows (facepalm

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 9 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Growing up playing osu! forever scarred my taste in music. Now I have a $300 SDVX controller at home and I need help

Also honorable mention for the 500+ hrs I have in Skyrim (with additional difficulty mods), Slay the Spire, Binding of Issac, ...

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 4 points 6 days ago

Ideologically, I thought the "least bad" for me would be academic research. One year at an institution with a really toxic research culture later, and I'm thinking of either a local small-business or employee co-op or running a small business based on my special interest so... yeah.

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 14 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

Two cats. Some of these are translated from my first language (I use it interchangeably with English with these two...)

The calico: Mew

  • Meow
  • Meeeeoooooooow (when she is sad & I have to call her)
  • Ms. Majestic (or something like that)
  • Big Mew
  • House tiger

The void: Tommy

  • Thomas (his official name, when he's majestic)
  • tom (when he's derpy)
  • ROTUND/Massive object
  • Le creature
  • Fat Tommy/Tommy Fat/My-Fat-Tom/My-Tom-Fat (yup it's just shuffling words)

Both:

  • Massive fluffs
  • Le chonkers (or something like that; one came in as a skinny stray & the other was a baby, but they are both very well-fed now)

Tommy is on a diet I promise

Two cats in a bathroom, both looking left.

 

Harvard University, one of the nation’s wealthiest schools, on Monday joined the list of universities across the country imposing hiring freezes, citing the uncertainty created by President Trump’s threats to slash funding for higher education.

... [T]he step by Harvard, which has an endowment of more than $50 billion, illustrates the gravity of the situation facing higher education...

The email emphasized that the hiring pause was temporary, but also asked the leadership of Harvard units to “scrutinize discretionary and nonsalary spending.”

Paywall, tried to summarize the article the best I can. Try this link if you prefer to read the full article & don't have access to NYT

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 16 points 2 weeks ago

I was actually pointed to this by two posts from Mekka on Mastodon:

Very bad precedent being set here.

 

A prominent Palestinian activist who helped lead Columbia University’s student encampment movement was arrested on Saturday night by federal immigration authorities who claimed they were acting on a state department order to revoke his green card, according to his attorney.

One of the agents told Greer by phone that they were executing a state department order to revoke Khalil’s student visa. Informed by the attorney that Khalil, who graduated last December, was in the United States as a permanent resident with a green card, the agent said they were revoking that too, according to the lawyer.

“Targeting a student activist is an affront to the rights of Mahmoud Khalil and his family. This blatantly unconstitutional act sends a deplorable message that freedom of speech is no longer protected in America. Furthermore, Khalil and all people living in the United States are afforded due process. A green card can only be revoked by an immigration judge, showing once again that the Trump administration is willing to ignore the law in order to instill fear and further its racist agenda,” ...

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 20 points 2 weeks ago

I was at one of the local rallies. I think the organizers also know that this event alone won't be effective & is only the beginning; there will be more to come. A lot more if (and most likely, when) the administration doesn't comply with the demands.

Fun fact... My local rally literally featured a startup founder who scaled their company & attracted investors using NIH funding as seed money, and a community college student from a nearby red state. I would imagine that even the most die-hard traditional conservatives would find such stories inspiring/good use of tax payer money... Science support has traditionally been bipartisan too.

Again, if they don't comply, more actions would come

 

Thousands of researchers and their supporters, including recently fired federal workers, gathered in front of the Lincoln Memorial here today to protest what they consider the antiscience actions of President Donald Trump in the nearly 7 weeks since he took office. The nation’s capital is just one of the many locations hosting the rally, called Stand Up for Science, with about 30 events nationwide and additional rallies outside the United States, bringing the expected total to more than 150 events.

At the Washington, D.C., event, protesters demanded an end to government censorship in scientific research, restoration of federal funding, reinstatement of federal employees, preservation of diversity and inclusion in science, and more. The crowd heard from more than a dozen speakers, including Senator Chris van Hollen (D–MD), former Representative Fred Upton (R–MI), and former National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Francis Collins.

Soft-paywall, although the article is still updating. Also see the organizers' website: https://standupforscience2025.org/

I was at the local rally this noon.

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 5 points 2 weeks ago

They don't. Let's just say that I chose the closest vet to where I live for convenience & I just needed someone to issue them travel certificates in a few months, but they are themselves a VC-owned nightmare... I'm moving out of the US in a few months and will likely change their diets anyways. I'm trying to find better alternatives as well

 

The key is 100% boycotting all services provided by a company. Wikipedia's list of Amazon product/services as reference (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Amazon_products_and_services).

Incidentally, I know entire neighborhoods that don't have other grocery stores besides Target/Whole Foods, not to mention that AWS is the cloud computing industry standard... As a personal example, my vet-prescribed cat foods are manufactured by Purina, a subsidary of Nestlé (needless to say, a separate but also extremely evil large corporation)

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 3 points 2 weeks ago

Oh screw me they are definitely paid way more than the postdocs. I'm fairly certain that for biomedical scientists with PhDs, postdocs are the lowest paid profession with this level of qualification...

Like seriously. I think the number that was thrown around for post-PhD scientists in pharma was like $100-150k/yr to begin with. Granted those jobs have their own shortcomings, but still...

[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

So I have a bit of a unique case... I'm a researcher, and academia is kind-of known for hiring people across the world & are very willing to sponsor visas as long as someone has a PhD. I genuinely wouldn't have been able to find a regular job in EU, and that is not even considering the language barriers... I'd love to know this topic better as well.

 

In an unprecedented move, the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) has begun mass terminations of research grants that fund active scientific projects because they no longer meet “agency priorities”.

At least 16 termination letters have already been sent out... And hundreds more will be coming, say two NIH officials, who requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the press.

The agency, based in Bethesda, Maryland, has now asked its employees to review new and ongoing projects for any DEI activities and to place them in one of four categories: projects that solely support DEI-related activities (category one), projects that partially support these activities (category two), projects that do not support these activities but include some DEI-related language (category three) and projects that do not support any DEI activities (category four).

Mind you: this is an administration where the president had trouble differentiating between "transgenic" and "transgender" mice.

Soft-paywall. Try this Wayback Machine link if you can't access it

 

Assume that this is not a wannabee, but someone who, for example, already has a solid job offer from an EU country, and some cash for the relocation.

 

After the kickoff gathering downtown, the growing crowd marched down Michigan Avenue to cheers from passersby and tourists and honks from cars before turning west on Madison Street and heading to Daley Plaza.

Was at the rally, can confirm that the organizers & Chicago Police Department closed off most of Magnificent Mile for people to march.

211
O_O (lemmy.world)
 
 

To clarify: I'm obviously going to stay at a job if it pays like 10 times what I normally make. Let's assume the job just pays average, and the position is just particularly awful even compared to similar ones.

Of course I guess "hating" a job can take many forms... Being in a dead-end job, having toxic managers/coworkers, bad location, etc...

 

The Trump administration issued an order on 27 January freezing payment on all federal grants and loans, but lawsuits challenging its legality were filed soon after, placing the order on hold. The fact that payments still aren’t going out because Trump’s team has halted grant-review meetings is exploiting a “loophole” in the process...

To further complicate grant-review efforts, the Trump administration laid off more than 1,100 employees at the NIH in the past week, representing about 6% of the agency’s workforce. Many of these workers were programme officers, grant-management specialists and scientific-review officers who help to screen grant applications, conduct grant reviews and perform oversight on the 60,000 funding awards the agency issues each year.

The scientific review officer said he could describe the impact of these layoffs on the agency’s ability to review grant applications and fund research in two words: “We’re fucked.”

This is the first time I've seen scientist swear on an official news interview btw.

Try this link if there is soft paywall: https://www.removepaywall.com/search?url=https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00540-2

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