vegan chilli day
@[email protected] I'm currently running a reasonable level of sleep dep and read that as fooneing at first glance. I'll leave @[email protected] to decide the meaning of their own verb and go get some sleep...
vegan chilli day
@[email protected] I'm currently running a reasonable level of sleep dep and read that as fooneing at first glance. I'll leave @[email protected] to decide the meaning of their own verb and go get some sleep...
why is Gulliver of Travels fame depicted as Smokin' Hot Seattle Jesus?!
(I suspect it's AI-generated. Did someone who didn't know what Gulliver's Travels is about just paste his name into a prompt and go with it?)
@[email protected] I'm still trying to work out what the thing in his hand is. For one brief moment I thought it might be an egg cup, which would actually have been appropriate but... I honestly don't know. Maracas? And is he wearing a casio wristwatch? So many questions.
omg you guys what if the cp command is sentient
what if i copy too much data and then it decides to copy me what do we do then
@[email protected] Well, first you need to let thousands starve to avoid accidentally offending it in the future when it will time travel you into torment for having... checks notes... been nice to people who lived at the same time as you.
Great news everyone thanks to my significant advances in modern algorithmic analysis I am personally able to outperform a warehouse full of specialized GPUs by five orders of magnitude with a single ARM core for one one-millionth the cost in 0.1% of the time by training the "cp" command on only the GCC source and then compiling the output of that program with GCC.
The resulting compiler - which I'm calling "mhoyecc", or as I've taken to calling it, mhoye plus cc, passes 100% of GCC's tests.
> This was a clean-room implementation (Claude did not have internet access at any point during its development)
Talking of words meaning something, calling it 'clean-room' when the training data included an implementation of what was being built is... not how I would use those words, at the very least. I also suspect it is not how a lot of lawyers and judges would use those words, either...
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] At least one of my university friends became a sysadmin partly because he felt that it would otherwise be too tempting to try and poke around other people's systems.
I'm blue badady badada 🎶
@[email protected] Snazzy
My instincts are against leaky abstractions. You can't forget JS when using Elm, and you have to worry about the bridge. Why not just take the excellent MVU architecture and implement it in TS? Also I have a personal taste for curly brackets. Irrational I know.
@[email protected] No, that's fair and I'm on record as liking Elm for teams but not reaching for it for personal projects (partly because of JS interop) so I get where you're coming from.
@mavnn @pluralistic yes, the forms, forms, forms is absolutely out of control
no debate there
@[email protected] @[email protected] As a counter example one of my cousins applied for Australian citizenship and was rejected but the process was shorter, cheaper, and the reasons given were clear cut (if borderline enough that they had tried applying regardless). The UK process was long and ridiculous in places, but it was always clear what you had to do next, and where you had to go to get it. The Italians rejected my request on the basis of a rule that they changed retroactively (yay, different right wing government of a few years back) but at least submitting the request took me a fairly small amount of time and money (hundreds of euros, maybe a day of work)
not to waste your time in things I can look up, but what could people do efficiently in other countries that they couldn't do in the US?
Full disclosure: My wife is Japanese and had a green card in the US before we moved to Japan
We didn't follow through to her becoming a citizen, but what we did to deal with her green card involved a total of 1 meeting and a couple of forms
I have seen how others around us who weren't coming from a first world country to marry an American were being treated - I'm not trying to defend that
I'm challenging the statement that it is worse than applying in other countries
Honestly, I skimmed the main article and found it full of emotions and low on facts and nothing at all like what my wife went through
But I WILL admit that US govt processes are a mare's nest. Often times, ironically, in an effort to be fair.
Also, ironically - this complaint against American bureaucracy is one of MAGA's biggest compliants
@[email protected] @[email protected] So firstly: some other countries suck as well, just to be clear. Just maybe not as much 😁 . My wife getting her UK citizenship was far harder than it had any reason to be (answer questions on British TV shows I had never watched, do an English test that required a much lower level than she'd had to demonstrate for existing profressional qualifications from a UK university, etc).
But the main difference just seemed to be in the sheer volume of information you needed to find and submit, and obviously the more you submit the more there is that can be challenged, that you might have made a mistake on, that you might forget.
Having worked on a large website with an Elm front-end, I probably wouldn't use myself if faced with a similar task, but I'm a big fan of the model, view, update architecture.
@[email protected] Spicy take! Now I'm curious: why would you choose both MVU and not to use Elm?
@BigJackBrass They do this for books, too. 😬
@[email protected] @[email protected] "I've now finished this book and no longer need it, so I've sent it back."
@codebyjeff Yes. I also was naturalized as a Briton, and my father was naturalized as a Canadian. The American system is incredibly bad, by international standards.
@[email protected] @[email protected] I have family members who have applied for (and in some cases received) naturalization to seven different nationalities. The US applications were the most time consuming and expensive by an enormous margin. Not because the actual requirements were more restrictive (all four US applications were eventually successful, while some of the others were not), but because of the process.
One more session to go on the current round of #interactivefiction writing courses, and the older teens have asked for the final session to be a deep dive into expanding a conversation because they felt it didn't have enough narrative depth.
So that's pretty awesome. And now I get to have a play with dialogue rather than the very different process which is #writing examples of functionality which are interesting but small enough to not obscure the thing being taught.
Managed to scrape together enough energy to move my blog from github pages to a repurposed Pi sitting in my home office. Because, well, reasons (gestures at world).
Took the opportunity to move it from .co.uk to .eu at the same time given I haven't lived in the UK for years. blog.mavnn.eu/
Obviously, if you try it and it's horribly broken in some way do let me know 😅
Managed to scrape together enough energy to move my blog from github pages to a repurposed Pi sitting in my home office. Because, well, reasons (gestures at world).
Took the opportunity to move it from .co.uk to .eu at the same time given I haven't lived in the UK for years. blog.mavnn.eu/
@scottmichaud @grumpasaurus single source copper WiFi cables
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] Organic, vegan, golden cables. No pesticides used or animal parts included in this cable!
@mayintoronto TimerCaps. They save my ass. (There's other similar ones, timercap is just the ones I have)
@[email protected] @[email protected] lots of phone reminders and a pill box marked with days of the week. Auto repeating reminders help me actually take the meds, the pill box helps me not take them twice. Or three times.
I cannot recommend these two books enough. The closest thing I can think of is Le Guin 'Earthsea' series.
Magical does not even begin to cover it! Can't wait for the 3rd book.
@[email protected] I think you've got an unfortunate typo in this post (assuming you like them? 😅)
@[email protected] @[email protected] just the level of trust and attention to detail you like to see in people offering checks notes assurance services!
Hello people who enjoy #writing! I've had some interest in a 5 week online course for adult non-coders to try their hand at #interactivefiction - i.e. stories that include branching narrative based on the readers' choices. The course would cover some of the mechanics, but also advice on structuring interactive plots with managable complexity, looking at emotional hooks that work better or worse when readers have active agency, using interactive fiction tools to capture options to show editors and beta-readers in non-interactive works, and some examples of expanding existing writing into an interactive experience.
If you like this idea, I'm putting together a mailing list of potential course members who are keen enough they'd like to have a voice in the scheduling of the course. Send me your email via DM or email me at [email protected] and I'll let you know when there are updates on the course and nothing else; this is not a general purpose "get spammed by Michael" email list. Costs will likely run at around 55 GBP per person.
If you're interested in the course but don't want to give your email away, just follow this account and I'll post when public tickets become available. Just be aware that by that stage time of day and dates will already be set.