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beefok

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beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
AND we get increased monthly bills to pay for the cost of their fuckups.
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
Why the fuck do we have to give out our personal information to any of these big companies if I can't trust that it will ever be safe-guarded? This is just so fucking insane to me to think these companies are just so big that they don't even give a fuck anymore. $16M is equivalent to $1.00 to them.

Our personal information/data should be given HIPAA-level protection enforced by the government. We as consumers should not have to deal with companies who do not compete on securing their customer's data. They should lose a "data protection" license when mishandling it, like a bar losing its liquor license.
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
That just blew me away! I didn't think I was going to hear anything, but yeah, immediately it gave an almost pulse-width modulated high pitch tone. I'm not surprised, but it is also awesome. I'm so many years old yet I can still hear the hum from CRT's, but I'd say that tone is much higher frequency.
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
I loved this book and have read it a few times now. I was probably 13 too! The movie was okay. It just left a lot of important scenes out. (Like all book->movie things)
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
I love all of your projects, Fabien!

This SNES video analysis one is incredible. I've always had all of this stuff running around in my head for how to explain how weirdly cool video generation for NTSC is, and you have done an incredible job finding a way to do so.

There is yet another reason for the weird frame and horizontal scan rate. When NTSC was originally introduced as a broadcast standard over a single RF modulated signal, the sound carrier and signals were also embedded in the signal as well. [1] Actually, I just found that Wikipedia does a good job of describing this on the NTSC page [2]:

    When a transmitter broadcasts an NTSC signal, it amplitude-modulates a radio-frequency carrier with the NTSC signal just described, while it frequency-modulates a carrier 4.5 MHz higher with the audio signal. If non-linear distortion happens to the broadcast signal, the 3.579545 MHz color carrier may beat with the sound carrier to produce a dot pattern on the screen. To make the resulting pattern less noticeable, designers adjusted the original 15,750 Hz scanline rate down by a factor of 1.001 (0.1%) to match the audio carrier frequency divided by the factor 286, resulting in a field rate of approximately 59.94 Hz.

So yes, yet another difficulty with NTSC -- sound actually splattered visual noise on the screen as well!

[1] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fd/Ntsc_cha... The combined spectrum of video, sync, and audio all on a single RF broadcast signal.

[2] Search for 'sound carrier' in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTSC#Color_encoding
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
I guess considering their group is called the Physics-based Simulation Group [1], I'm thinking maybe that's just the terminology they've always used? Or maybe it's a German->English translation thing?

[1] https://ge.in.tum.de/
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
> There’s virtually nothing that unites Federalist Society members (many of whom are Biden voters) apart from an engineers’ commitment to technical accuracy over practical effects.

In what fantasy universe do Federalist Society members vote for Biden? They have been backing conservative and libertarians for generations. Their members are part of the Supreme Court and clearly do not want a democracy anymore. They are the antithesis of liberal political positions. I call utter bullshit.

How do their views even remotely line up with Biden voters?
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
I was going to post the same thing. "What does this have to do with concurrent processes?!" :)

It's a good problem to think about, and I hope most people consider it in their work.
beefok
·há 2 anos·discuss
Hey, that's okay! At least our taxes pay money towards investigating and building these toothless fines! I don't have a problem with the taxes, just that it doesn't do anything.
beefok
·há 3 anos·discuss
Sort of off topic, but I got stung by the "AKSHUALLY" bug. I just wanted to say that the term, "fanatic skepticism", isn't a possible outcome. Definitionally, skepticism clearly means you wouldn't be fanatic of anything. In reality this is cognitive dissonance, not skepticism.

Anyway, personally, I think this is a topic that needs serious skeptical focus. I don't just want immediate knee-jerk reactionary opinions on what people saw -- I want honesty as new information is gained. New thoughts on what you saw? Give those updates.

I hope that we're not alone in the universe and, honestly, I think it would probably impact me more if we were alone in such a vast *thing*.
beefok
·há 3 anos·discuss
Wow, is that the only thing you got from my comment? I'm highlighting examples of why it's a serious problem and people need to think for themselves.

We know what group-think does way beyond the experiment. We have a very well-documented history on it. Read Soviet and Nazi history, you'll see what it can do. It's almost universal in big groups of humans.

If a police officer told you to shoot another person, would you do it? If 3 police officers tell you to do it, would you do it? How many police officers will it take to make you shoot the person?
beefok
·há 3 anos·discuss
That sounds dangerous as hell. No one should live that way.

If you aren't allowed to question leadership and are instead expected to do "what you are told", then all the experiments and horrors studies on group think are a reality at a dangerous level [1][2][3] What if you think an order is dangerous and have good reasons why?

Good leadership needs to know what the ground-level knows, they need good input and questioning. Stalin killed anyone who opposed or questioned him, so all of the input and feedback was only positive feedback/intel to avoid being killed. Even when they were setting up one of the worst famines in recorded history [4].

Healthy societies aren't cults, and that is definitely a description of a cult.

I hate a Godwin-Law argument, but the damn Nazi's "did what they were told" [5], and those 'hard-working'-don't-question-leadership lemmings had a blind-eye to/assisted and/or murdered millions of people because they didn't have to deal with the burden of questioning and thinking for themselves. Fuck that.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford_prison_experiment

[2] https://www.prisonexp.org/

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonestown#Deaths_in_Jonestown

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_famine_of_1930%E2%80%93...

[5] https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/how-the-nazis-defense-o...
beefok
·há 3 anos·discuss
I loved the original and the sequel -- this new one is amazing. I'm really enjoying it! It's also nice being forced to play without a walkthrough since it's NEW NEW...
beefok
·há 3 anos·discuss
https://earthquake.alaska.edu/event/0234u0lcjp

https://earthquake.alaska.edu/event/0234u01ap5

Would it have been around this time? I'd be interested to know if their seismographs can be used to detect non-earthquake recordings.

When I was little I lived less than an hour from Cape Canaveral and damn, when those shuttle missions launched, you'd feel it in your bones. I'm not sure how it would feel if it were just in the air crossing my path though.