Contramuffin

joined 2 years ago
[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago

The answer, even with other OS's, it's typically yes you should shut it down. I always use sleep, but if I know that I don't have anything important open, I try to shut down

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I've got some unexplained phenomena that happen from time to time at my lab (workplace). Valves closing for no reason, oddly specific equipment failures, that kind of thing. I don't believe it's ghosts, but also I genuinely can't think of any reason for why those kinds of things could happen. I just say that it's ghosts anyways because it's fun.

In any case, my belief is that out of all supernatural phenomena to possibly believe in, ghosts are the least horrible thing to believe in, so anyone who believes in ghosts gets a pass from me

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 58 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Nothing serious, but he's well known for being impossible to work with. He has gotten into multiple arguments because he refuses to follow kernel development rules. When called out on it, he makes a big stink about it. Obviously his code doesn't get merged. Then he does the exact same thing again 1 month later.

He has gotten into multiple arguments with Linus Torvalds over his refusal to simply follow the kernel development rules. During those arguments he has made cheap shots at completely unrelated people, which then drags those people into the argument.

It's gotten to the point where apparently a significant portion of the kernel developers feel like he was negatively impacting the kernel, and Linus eventually removed his code from the kernel.

He's what you might call a Linux lolcow. And now he's doing even more lolcow things by... Getting weirdly attached to his LLM-sona

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 9 points 1 week ago (3 children)

No strong opinions, but I would lean away from lemmy.world. After all, the point of defederation is to have resilience from losses like this. And if lemmy world goes down, it would be a heavy hit to the wider lemmy community

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 13 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

There's not much fanservice in Dungeon Meshi. I would say it's exactly like how you would expect it to turn out if you just played DnD and then hired someone to animate it. Complete with the player stupidity and boss cheesing.

The series does take time to build up - it starts off feeling like a generic gimmick anime, but the story and lore gets deeper the more you watch. And the gimmick (eating monsters) ends up becoming a lot deeper than you would expect. (I'll talk about it more below.) The storytelling is, in hindsight, extremely efficient, but the writers just never draw attention to the info that you're supposed to remember. So I think it's one of those series where you really have to rewatch afterward in order to pick up all the lore tidbits that the characters just toss around.

Speaking of lore, I would say that the worldbuilding is one of the most extremely detailed that I've seen in any media, where it touches on really mature topics like implicit (and explicit) racism, tribal tensions, political feuds, cultural differences. And every little thing must have an explanation. And there's actually different races of humans in this world, each with their own nation and culture. I think it all ties back in to the core theme of the series, which is that eating is so fundamental to life that it influences human culture. And, inversely, that because eating is the one universal constant across all cultures, it is the one thing that can unite people. Over the series, you stop seeing "eating monsters" as a gimmick and it starts becoming more like a thesis. Like, "yeah, of course it would be a show about eating. What else could be so fundamental to discussing the human experience?"

Touching on the typical icks with anime (oversexualization, often with minors, harem, OP main characters, etc.): the series actually avoids all of the typical anime pitfalls. There's no sexualization. Characters don't talk or hint about sex at all. No revealing clothing, and all characters dress appropriately for their job/environment. There is one single scene where one character tries teaching another character about sex (giving the "birds and the bees" talk), but it's not sexual in nature and IMO it is really meant to highlight a common implicit bias in this world (the character receiving the talk is actually a grown adult, but due to his race, gets infantilized frequently). Speaking of grown adults, every character in the show appears, acts, and is a fully grown adult. And as for power scaling, the main characters don't have any OP skills and never learn any OP skills. They're just a standard party of adventurers, and it's made clear that the only reason they're successful is because of the party's deep understanding of monster biology and dungeon ecology and their willingness to use creative solutions to difficult problems (aka: cheesing every boss).

As a complete side note, I think it has one of the best and most accurate representations of autism that I've seen. I'll leave it vague, but there are several characters that are strongly autism-coded, and the writers really went above and beyond to show how autism is interpreted differently by others when the person in question is a male or female.

Overall, I'd say I highly recommend the anime. It instantly became one of the best animes that I've watched, and it's an anime that can be enjoyed casually, or analyzed for lore to hell and back, or analyzed for its literary merit. (If it wasn't clear, I'm part of the 3rd group. I really enjoyed how coherent its thematic messaging is and how skilfully it tells its story)

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 3 points 4 weeks ago

Other than locking the janitor in the bathroom, feels like a funny and harmless senior prank

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago

OnlyOffice. Good compatibility with MS Office, and UI is basically equivalent

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

What I meant is colloquially, of course. I use a rotary cutter myself, but if I need someone to pass it to me, I just call it a pizza cutter. Less confusion and people just understand what you're referring to. So my question is, do people actually call it a rotary cutter in common usage

(I'm asking in a serious context, by the way. I feel like I can't be the only person who just calls it "the pizza cutter tool")

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Genuinely, does anyone actually use the term "rotary cutter"? I feel like it's such a common sense thing to do to just call it a pizza cutter

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

I mean... If we treated the sun to be just another star (ie, if the astronomers got their way), the planets would probably be called Sol b, Sol c, Sol d, Sol e, Sol f, Sol g, Sol h, and Sol i.

Sol a would be reserved for the sun, of course.

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

I really actually just need an explanation for this

[–] Contramuffin@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

That would only encourage billionaires to nope off into space fantasy land (and of course they would still maintain power over governments). As it is right now, billionaires being on the same planet as normal people is at least incentivizing them to keep the planet in somewhat hospitable conditions.

As it is now, the best course of action would be to depose billionaires more quickly than they can escape off-planet. And to do it in a public and spectacular way to put fear into the billionaires

 

To be pedantic, some MAPK's are activated by mitogens. We're conveniently ignoring that fact because what's more funny is that some MAPK's are not

view more: next ›