This feels rather similar to the All True Star Wars Fans™ are white men over forty contingent.
Okay, #gamedev people: if you were teaching somebody game dev from a non-programming background, who wanted to make a small one person game to learn what game dev is like would you have any reasons to suggest #unity over #godot? (I'm making #godot the default here mostly based on system requirements and getting started speed, so I feel like I'd need an active reason to suggest the overhead of Unity and I'm not thinking of any).
Context: they actively want to use a game engine, they aren't interested in learning the details of how the sausage is made at the rendering/physics simulation level (yet)
I suspect quite a few men see examples of #mansplaining and assume "I would never do that, I'm not an arse", but this afternoon I nearly explained user agent strings to [checks notes] a widely respected expert on distributed system design before I checked who I was about to reply to. I had assumed a completely wrong context.
Some recent comments from @[email protected] about the XY problem reminded me that mansplaining is what happens when you don't check what the context is before you speak. You may not mansplain because you're an arse, but you'll do it anyway if you believe you never would and so fail to build in the helpful habitual self doubt that makes you pause and say "what do I actually know about this person again?". Especially because if you're a man reading my timeline you likely belong to a society where there's a wealth of research suggesting you (and I) have been socialised to assume less competence in women.
An app on my phone literally just stopped so it could play a video ad advertising itself. Isn't the future marvellous.
@[email protected] I'd reply with the Twitter endless screaming bot, but unfortunately it was unable to make the appointment due to a rich Nazi and three videos advertising reasons to endlessly scream as a service
Always check the critical hits per lux rating before purchasing your new laser pistol.
A YouTube channel of somebody making bespoke and beautiful chef's knives to order (for actual chefs, not just for show although they are very pretty). Basically advertising, admittedly, but advertising mostly based around stories of people getting each other thoughtful gifts so I'll take it.
Might be some good #ttrpg inspiration in there as well for some unusual looking blade finishes.
Crafting the Ultimate Chinese Cleaver Duo for Father and Daughter!
YouTube
I found this episode especially amusing because I used to own one of the Chinese clevers he's making a replacement for, and they are awesome in exactly the opposite ways the knives he makes are awesome.
They're made out of thick, cheap, soft, stainless steel that means they go blunt in seconds but sharpen just as quickly and it is almost impossible to permanently damage them as they bend rather than break.
Conversely, his knives are light, will keep an edge for years, and cut through neatly anything - but if you damage it you'll be in for a world of work, and sharpening is a decent amount of effort and requires skill.
A YouTube channel of somebody making bespoke and beautiful chef's knives to order (for actual chefs, not just for show although they are very pretty). Basically advertising, admittedly, but advertising mostly based around stories of people getting each other thoughtful gifts so I'll take it.
Might be some good #ttrpg inspiration in there as well for some unusual looking blade finishes.
Crafting the Ultimate Chinese Cleaver Duo for Father and Daughter!
YouTube
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] It's kind of disturbing just how much more aggressive the llm crawlers are than the search crawlers, even from companies that must have had all of the infrastructure in place already.
@mavnn @grimalkina absolutely, it's extremely contextual which is why I see it as a practice or perhaps framework we can develop and iterate on
@[email protected] @[email protected] Of course, I have some other concerns around LLMs as 'automation' given the relative failure rates compared to other things I would call automation (plus ethics, legality, etc). But the 'can it be done' discussions and the 'should we use this tool' discussions seem to get more time than the 'is this even a good goal' discussions.
our gitlab was brought down by a DoS attack by Meta today, with 299991 requests from "meta-externalagent/1.1 (+https://developers.facebook.com/docs/sharing/webmasters/crawler)". i wonder if i could sue for damages?
@[email protected] @[email protected] It's the only thing that's managed to even make me notice the overhead of running forgejo on a raspberry pi: it started querying every file in every commit of my blog history with about 70+ concurrent connections at a time, and then at some point seemed to get stuck in a loop and just kept on doing it. At least I think it did; it was still going a day later when I was in a position to log into the server and start dropping requests and my blog's history isn't that huge.
@SJohnRoss I mean, that kinda sounds like an awesome read. 😂
@[email protected] @[email protected] It's one of the only FRED edition HERO books I didn't own, and I now regret it. I actually have a huge respect of both you and Steve Long for totally different reasons and I can't really imagine two less compatible styles of writing or philosophies on GMing (when I'm in a crunchy mood I appreciate Steve's literally lawerly clarity and precision in writing rules and even sometimes backgrounds, but I wouldn't say that I'd jump at a chance to play at his table reading between the lines of his GMing style)
@grimalkina Aye, class related blindspots aside, we need people to reflect on the detail and nature of the different types of work they do to make good decisions about what to automate (in their context). To flip this on its head slightly, one of the prompts I've been using is asking folk to consider where there is value in the process rather than just in the output.. Where there isn't, automate away. It's not a simple task and likely needs revisited as a practice.
@[email protected] @[email protected]
> there is value in the process rather than just in the output
This seems a crucial aspect that is frequently being ignored, and I suppose I see this highlighted as somebody who's doing some teaching at the moment. Brandon Sanderson (the author) has a saying he's given several variations of that boils down to "I didn't get any money for all the books I wrote before I got published, but I did get a better writer and a better person from them."
On the other hand, I started programming by literally automating my then data entry job out of existance. I didn't learn any more manually copying the data between a spreadsheet and a database the third time than the second.
But I think we're terrible at judging what is and what isn't a learning experience and worth doing, and even worse I think that can change with both experience and situation. My advice on whether to use an automatic website creator is going to different if you're an art student who needs an online portfolio right now, or if you want to be a website designer.
Random find of the day; can't say I'm much of a K-Pop person, but it seems that there's some pretty solid K-Rock out there. And I'm a sucker for songs that use traditional instruments in unusual contexts, and take advantage of the head room being metal gives you rather than just going full metal all the way through.
youtube.com/watch?v=kbx0sg4S...
#MusicFindOfTheDay #Gayageum (I think)
KARDI(카디) - Not But Disco (Music Video)
YouTube
@[email protected] Literally just discovered @[email protected] this morning, and their art style would look amazing on cards.
@DukeDuke I tried to explain to this person that they appeared to be confused and they doubled down
@[email protected] @[email protected] I have just posted my first post to the nuance hashtag to commemorate the shear level of wtf that thread induced.
Becoming increasingly convinced that my swiping keyboard on mobile is getting less and less accurate, and increasingly paranoid that I'm actually just getting more and more of a grumpy old man. #nuance
What artists on here would make a killer tarot deck?
@[email protected] It wouldn't be a traditional deck (but if you wanted that, why commission art? :D) but I've been enjoying the art from @[email protected] on their feed.
@[email protected] feel free to get in touch if I can help, I do this kind of thing when I'm not ill: blog.mavnn.eu/2024/01/29/sho...
@[email protected] Also, as a very random side note the EU (as an organisation, and various governments within the EU) are currently funding open source infrastructure work. It gets in the weeds quickly, but it may be something of interest: even if you don't need/want to engage with it yourself, individuals can apply for support to help projects as long as the maintainers agree the work benefits the project.
@mavnn I think this thread is me calling upon my followers! I am willing to fund the start of this with my consulting and newsletter right now
@[email protected] I saw just as I posted! I hadn't spotted how recent your posts were or I would have waited in case you were still writing (as you were...)
My dream would be to assemble a small group of tech advisors who want to see this work happen to chat with, even just 1 call & follow-up emails. I am really really willing to roll up my sleeve and learn lots but I want to be self-aware about the unknown unknowns. I might just be overthinking risks, but creating a form of infrastructure for SAFE and TRUSTABLE open source studies even just surveys would be my dream. And I've seen first-hand how dev data is vultured over so ownership matters to me
@[email protected] feel free to get in touch if I can help, I do this kind of thing when I'm not ill: blog.mavnn.eu/2024/01/29/sho...