nyan

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

She was going so fast that I couldn't identify all the works that she mentioned past the weaksauce trademark protection . . . 😅 Not surprising, I guess, given that some of them were pretty obscure. (Aura Battler Dunbine? Seriously?)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 22 hours ago

The odd thing about the world's dumbest firebomber is, why did he do it? There's no obvious profit to him in shoring up the curse, since he doesn't seem to want to charge admission to the cave or anything.

I wouldn't be surprised if we discovered he was a mook working for someone else. Even then, the ultimate motivation of the person responsible is just as mysterious as why the only modern "spontaneous combustion" case mentioned by the good doctor was the one in which the coroner seems to have been tripping balls. (Well, okay, that isn't so mysterious—most other cases have been investigated and found to boil down to "cigarette or other obvious ignition source + drugged, drunk, disabled or predeceased victim who couldn't escape the fire".)

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

The thing is, would they make the connection? Some people aren't very good at linking up cause and effect where the link isn't practically screaming in their face.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (3 children)

As someone who finds that most "dark mode" offerings aren't dark enough, I don't understand how they can tolerate it either. I suspect it's rather like spicy food: given enough exposure, you don't notice it's spicy (or bright) until reaching a level far above what people who aren't exposed to it on a constant basis would think was acceptable.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 day ago (5 children)

They're just not letting their eyes get dark-adapted in the first place. They can't see anything but the phone screen, but they also don't care.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I’ve seen a lot of bad reviews, though, so maybe it is supposed to be taken seriously and I’m the only one laughing at seeing a man pray to the virgin Mary for the souls of the people who he just killed with a sheet of gold leaf.

I can't remember whether or not this is the one that got seriously into the opium trade towards the end or whether I'm confusing it with some other semi-historical series set in around that time period, but yeah, I think it was intended to be more serious despite some of the loopier aspects.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 days ago

You think that an unelected body in the government is better than being able to vote for different representatives?

It doesn't have to be better, it just has to be not significantly worse (because switching systems incurs a cost, and the expected improvement has to be sufficient to justify that cost). As far as I can tell, the Senate here in Canada hasn't been significantly worse for the population than comparable elected bodies that exist elsewhere in the world. That doesn't mean it couldn't run off the rails in the future, but it could just as easily do that if it were an elected body (which is where the example of the States is relevant).

In general, it's better to leave things that work alone, unless you have a better reason for changing them than, "This doesn't match up with my ideology."

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

The opening theme music is just a new cover of the first OP from the first Aquarion series of twenty years ago, though. In general, I find the soundtrack is weaker than Yoko Kanno's work on the first two series in the franchise. They do seem to be trying valiantly, but they have a lot to live up to in that department.

(90% certain I'm dropping this in favour of Promise of Wizard.)

[–] [email protected] 20 points 4 days ago

My bet would be, convenient and intrusive. The two are not mutually exclusive—in fact, they very frequently go together.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 days ago

Some people feel that getting their entertainment material from the high seas is immoral or just more work than they want to do. That leaves them stuck with whichever monopolist has the rights to whatever it is they want to watch. Doesn't matter whether the company is any good or not.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

Well, yeah, but obeying robots.txt is only a courtesy in the first place, so you can't guarantee it'll catch only LLM-related crawlers and no others, although it may lower the false positive rate.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 6 days ago (2 children)

And this specifically target AI training web crawlers.

There's no way to distinguish between an AI training crawler and any other crawler. Per https://zadzmo.org/code/nepenthes/ :

"This is a tarpit intended to catch web crawlers. Specifically, it's targetting crawlers that scrape data for LLM's - but really, like the plants it is named after, it'll eat just about anything that finds it's way inside."

Emphasis mine. Even the person who coded this thing knows that it can't tell what a given crawler's purpose is. They're just willing to throw the baby out with the bathwater in this case, and mess with legitimate crawlers in order to bog down the ones gathering data for LLM training.

(In general, there is no way to tell for certain what is requesting a webpage. The User-Agent header that (usually) arrives with an HTTP(S) request isn't regulated and can contain any arbitrary string. Crawlers habitually claim to be old versions of Firefox, and there isn't much the server can do to identify what they actually are.)

 

It's the "silently" part that's the issue. I acknowledge that lemmy.cafe is entitled to defederate from whatever servers the administration pleases, but lemmy.ml still houses some of the largest communities in the Lemmyverse on some topics, and a heads-up that it was being blocked would have been appreciated.

 

There are definite reasons why people who step up behind me and take a look at my computer screen either flinch or look at me funny (sometimes both), and I expect people here will have some . . . interesting takes on this as well 😅. The colour choices may make more sense if you know that I'm usually in a low-light environment, so even some "dark" themes seem fairly bright to me, and anything with a white background is like a slap in the face.

Trinity Desktop Environment 14.1.0 on Gentoo, homemade theme. For those not familiar with TDE, it is a fork of KDE 3, from the days before indexing daemons and other such CPU-eaters, so this looks old-fashioned because it is. The wallpaper is Digital Blasphemy's "Tropical Moon of Thetis", and yes, the font is the dreaded Times New Roman, presented here in all its jagged glory because I prefer to keep hinting and antialiasing switched off. The system monitor text on the left is from conky. On the right, TDE versions of konsole and konqueror (as file manager).

(And just to clear up one piece of misinformation about TDE that comes up regrettably often: the development team forked QT3 along with the desktop and is maintaining it. So: unsupported widgetset no, QT3 more-or-less yes, if you find a bug please file it, if you don't know of any bugs please don't spread FUD.)

 

I have an ancient and rather ugly office chair which I love to pieces. Unfortunately, on Thursday morning, the chair attempted to make that literal, as I sat down and heard a nasty splintering sound. Now, I got this thing secondhand, and it's always had a vertical split up one wooden leg. My brother had run four large carriage bolts through it in an attempt to hold it together, which in hidsight turned out to be a bad idea, as one half of the leg had split in the opposite direction along the line of the first two bolts. ☹️

Removing the bolts, applying a rather considerable amount of wood glue and some dowels, then clamping it, letting it dry, and cleaning up got me to the point shown in the picture (larger version here )

What I need to know is, is there anything I can do to structurally reinforce this thing any further, short of replacing either that leg (beyond my skill level at the moment) or the entire base (a new one would have to be shipped up from the US)? In particular, would "splinting" it with a piece of new wood along the damaged side (or pieces along both sides) help keep it from tearing itself apart? Or should I just redrill the hole for the castor further away from the end, put a couple of C-clamps on, and hope it holds long enough for a new base to arrive?

I want my chair back. 😭

 

. . . busy re-emerging @world or untangling a QT5 slot-dependency rat's nest or something and has no time to talk? ;)

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