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blindluke

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blindluke
·2 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Yep. I bought a yellow one with the intention of making it a dedicated PICO-8 machine, and it is wonderful. It's not as perfect as 351p is for GBA, as 5x integer scaling leaves you with some unused screen space, but still, an absolute joy to play.
blindluke
·2 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I wholeheartedly agree with you that TIC-80 is not as great as PICO-8 is, and I would never recommend it over PICO-8 to someone who wants to start their adventure with game development.

But it is not a clone of PICO-8. It offers a resolution that's very similar to that of the Game Boy Advance, so it serves as a nice transition stage towards GBA development. You can then enjoy your games on a console like Anbernic RG351P that's optimized for GBA games (2x integer scaling, same screen ratio). It's a specific use case, but one where TIC-80 shines.
blindluke
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
That's just a single data point, but here's my experience. I have severe myopia, and I experience discomfort when reading from a screen over a prolonged period of time. I read a lot, and I can't read for more than two hours even on a quality LCD screen. With e-paper, three hours of continuous reading are not an issue. If my reading habits were as simple as reading for an hour before bedtime, I don't think I would need anything more than a tablet.
blindluke
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I'd love to hear more details about your setup, if you're willing to share. Especially the part about using the Kindle as a secondary screen.
blindluke
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
You pay for the console, and the games are open by design. You can load any pico game into the console, go into edit mode, and see / edit assets, music, levels. The console only supports lua, which gives you the advantage that every game you open to see the source code will be written in the same language. A wonderful little thing. I used it to introduce kids to game development with good results.
blindluke
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> my point is there are dozens of other convenient questions you can ask to filter out projects

Absolutely. And I agree with you that "Is it widely used in production?" is a better filter. But that does not diminish the value of the filtering done by "Is it properly documented?". After all, it's not like we're limited in the number of criteria we can use to filter out bad projects.
blindluke
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
You're assuming someone places value on proper documentation because they need proper documentation to make it "accessible to you". That doesn't have to be the case.

For me, lack of proper documentation constitutes a red flag, and says something very negative about the project. The question "Is it properly documented?" serves as a simple and convenient way to filter out projects that have a low chance of being mature enough to fit my needs.
blindluke
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> My problem is, I know that we are missing information, what I don't know is how to tease out that information from myself and other coworkers.

I would start by reflecting on the way in which getting that knowledge out of the coworkers into the knowledge base is incentivized.

I keep my notes in markdown files. A lot of my coworkers use Obsidian, CherryNotes, OneNote, and I'm sure that there's a dozen other solutions out there. Keeping notes locally is actively encouraged by the fact you can't rely on the Confluence server to be up after business hours and the fact that the centralized knowledge base upgrades destroyed our documentation efforts twice over the past 10 years.

I also keep my notes short, omitting everything that's obvious to me. This makes them less valuable when it comes to knowledge sharing, but makes them better for me - short notes mean less visual noise to filter out. Writing a version of those notes that's more comprehensive is extra effort. That extra effort needs to be visible, treated as 'real work', encouraged and valued. Otherwise, I will prioritize other tasks that are visible, treated as 'real work', encouraged and valued.

The first thing I would worry about is making sure the central knowledge repository is as convenient as the local notes. Then, I would examine if creating / updating documentation in the central repository is encouraged, and in what way.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
He coded those games single-handedly AND in x86 assembly. Yep, that's a good example of a genius, right there.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I can provide answers to the last two questions, based on my limited experence.

> What are "local HR laws"?

I think this refers to the fact that regulatory compliance is different depending on where your business is located. Which brings me to my anecdotal experience with:

> What do you mean by "scaring employers re: regulatory compliance"? "Scaring" reads like you're implying some kind of manipulation, but "regulatory compliance" is something a company should already be in; what is there to fear?

A company I worked for was located in a country where it was the legal duty of the employer to keep track of the people on the office premises. Most companies used a time tracking system for this, the punch-in, punch-out kind. The thing is, the purpose of the regulation was to make sure that when evacuated, there is always a list of people that were in the building - so it could be referred to after the evacuation to see if everyone is accounted for. This law did not require keeping track of the time someone entered the premises, or the time someone left - the requirement could be satisfied with a simple paper list with checkboxes - one for when you enter, one for when you leave. And that's exactly what was done in this office. Every month or two, the company got an offer from a business trying to sell a time tracking appliance or service, and many, if not all of those offers were using manipulatory tactics - "If you're not using a time tracking system, you might be violating the law" was a common phrase. The manipulation here was that it was true that a system like that would satisfy the legal requirement, but the offers strongly implied that a having a system like that was necessary to satisfy the legal requirement. Which was not the case.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> That's not typical Java code. You could do that in quick & dirty code, but I haven't seen such code in production code.

It sounds to me like you're an extremely lucky person. I've seen too much of that sort of thing in production code, including a catch-all for Throwable at the top that didn't even dump a stacktrace.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> and so one can guess what correct fingering would be when there is no teacher around

At least in some cases, yes. For me, that's the real point of having a teacher - learning the thought process, not the pieces.

One thing worth mentioning is that sometimes the correct fingering for a piece is contextualized. There are pieces that you might treat as a goal in their own right, but they might also be just a stepping stone to other pieces. For example, you might see a sequence of three notes in the left hand, and there will be a "correct" fingering that's most comfortable for just those three notes. But the teacher that suggested this piece knows that those three notes can be seen as a simplified version of a six note pattern that occurs throughout a more difficult piece you will tackle later. So the "correct" fingering they suggest to you is the fingering that's most comfortable for the more difficult version you haven't played yet. You're not looking at the piece as-is, you're thinking of it in the context of what you'll eventually play and optimizing the fingering for performance of the target piece.

You will often hear that "correct" fingering is the one most comfortable. This is only partially true when you're in the early stages. Often, you go for something that's suboptimal in a particular piece because it will be more comfortable in another piece down the road.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Here's where having a teacher helps a lot. I started out as an adult beginner, and I remember that in one of the first study books (Duvernoy or Burgmuller), there was a passage in the left hand with a sequence of six eights, it went like C-F-Bb-F-A-F. Because of the slow tempo, I could have easily done it 5-1-5-1-5-1, where my thumb would just repeat the F, and my pinky would go down the C-Bb-A sequence. This is where my teacher stepped in - he told me that this is a great learning opportunity, and I should play it 5-1-4-1-5-1, fifth finger on the C, fourth over it to the Bb, fifth to the A. The main reason was that this would be more comfortable at higher speeds, but also that it would allow to do a finger legato on the sequence of three notes.

A lot of the fingering remarks at this stage were about legato. In the easy Beethoven Sonatina in G, you have sort of a reversal of my earlier story - the downward movement is in the top notes here. There's a sequence of two chords, D-A and D-G in bar three. You could easily do both of those 51-51, but then the possibility of joining the two upper notes would be lost. The "correct" fingering would be 51-52, lifting the pinky and doing a nice legato on the top notes, one that follows into bar 4 with 53. It makes a world of difference when you hear how it sounds with a proper chord legato applied.

If you don't have a teacher, the next best thing would be to make sure you have a good edition with the proper fingerings added. Something like Alfred Masterwork, or the newer Schirmer Performance - both are relatively inexpensive and nicely edited. But then you will get just the fingering without the reasoning behind it.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I like it too, very much so, to the point where I recommend it to people that find K. N. King's "C Programming: A Lengthy Approach" too intimidating. And I had nothing to do with writing it, as you obviously know.

My sincere thanks for the book.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
This small Austrian village already changed the name to Fugging. Someone did notice.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> it was exactly 8.5 hours of focused, deliberate practice

As already pointed out, that's a very low amount of practice to change the technique. For piano, when learning forearm rotation, the point when it became much, much more comfortable to me than my previous way of playing was after roughly two months of practice, 10-12 hours a week. That's just my experience, but when I asked my teacher about not feeling improvements around the one month mark (40 hours in), he said that everything is progressing at an expected rate.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Used the online version a lot before, and I'm tempted to grab the desktop app just to show support. Still unsure if I would use it over the web equivalent.

There are some things still unclear after reading the FAQ page.

Does the app require an install and admin permissions, or does it come as a zipped executable?

Buying the app is described as "pay once", but is it pay once for this version? Will the buyer get updates for no additional cost? (EDIT: I missed the fine print in the EULA - the updates are free for 12 months).

Also - keyboard shortcuts on the FAQ page are all using Ctrl, except for "F11 or Cmd Shift F". Likely an omission.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Sure, I added the following assumptions:

- stuff I play myself

- something I can explain to the 70yo parents in a few minutes before the game

- easily available (either recent, or a classic)

Here's five recommendations:

- Cacao (https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/171499/cacao)

- Carcassone (https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/822/carcassonne)

- Alhambra (https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/6249/alhambra)

- Ticket to Ride (https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/9209/ticket-ride)

- Samurai (https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/3/samurai)
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Thank you. Falba is pretty much exactly what I was hoping to find, especially since I'm in Europe too. Appreciate the help.
blindluke
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I wonder, is there a place one can buy a prebuilt 40% keyboard, with keycaps, the full shebang? Split or not, I'd love to have a portable mechanical keyboard to carry around, but I don't have the time nor patience to mess with a kit. Aby suggestions?