this post was submitted on 14 Oct 2025
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My interests: Journalism, Politics, International Relations, Urbanism

1 - The New Yorker is the best magazine in the English-speaking world. They employ incredibly good writers.

2 - Without The Guardian, British democracy is utterly fucked. The Brits just don't know it. Most UK papers are owned by shady characters such as Jonathan Harmsworth. The Brits even have a paper (The Independent) owned by a politically-connected Russian mobster (Evgueni Lebedev).

The Guardian's non-profit structure gives it more freedom that most UK papers. They often investigate stories the rest of the UK press just won't touch: Paradise Papers, Panama Papers, Cameron's tax evasion, etc...

3 - The two best newspapers in France are Le Monde and Mediapart, hands down. Mediapart is a non-profit. Le Monde journalists have special rights and can't be removed by shareholders. These 2 newspapers are more independent than the rest of the french press.

4 - The Financial Times is the favorite newspaper of elites worldwide. CEOs. Billionaires. Millionaires. Presidents. Prime Ministers. Everyone reads it. And honestly, it's very solid. The information is always extremely reliable. The FT is also the most expensive newspaper on the planet. But they sometimes publish free stories.

5 - The editorial section of the Wall Street Journal is directly controlled by Billionaire Rupert Murdoch. The WSJ is the jewel of his global media empire. Fox News and the New York Post are for influencing the masses. WSJ editorials actually allow him to have influence over US high income readers.

6 - If you read WSJ editorials, Rupert Murdoch's ideas are very simple. Labor unions must be crushed. Corporate concentration is good. Netanyahu is a brave man. US military spending is good. Unions should be restricted by tough laws. Environmental rules are bad. Slash taxes on large corporations. Of course, he doesn't write it openly. But this what virtually most of the WSJ editorial content boils down to.

7 - Many talented reporters work for the Wall Street Journal and end up deeply ashamed of it. It feels like prostitution. Many would much rather work for The Financial Times, New York Times or ProPublica.

Rupert Murdoch employs great reporters at the Wall Street Journal simply because he needs them to acquire credibility in order to influence readers through his WSJ editorials. If the WSJ was 100% full of trash, american high income readers wouldn't purchase it.

8 - The best coverage of Silicon Valley is an online newspaper called The Information. If you truly want to know what Meta/Adobe/Microsoft executives are up to, read The Information. Most of their readers are very wealthy investors and rival tech executives.

9 - 90% of leftists who attack the New York Times are wrong.

"The New York Times doesn't go after powerful people"

They literally took down Harvey Weinstein.

They literally went after Rupert Murdoch

"The New York Times is very pro-israel"

They exposed Israeli war crimes.

The Israeli Prime Minister says he hates them.

"The New York Times didn't warn americans against Trump"

They did. They really did.

"The New York Times doesn't cover labor rights"

They exposed how the biggest US Corporations illegally use child labor

They exposed Starbucks vicious war against unions

I'm not saying it's a perfect news organization. A perfect news organization does not exist. But it's a very solid one. 90% of leftists who attack it are using bad faith arguments.

10 - When it comes to television and radio, public media (PBS, BBC, NPR, CBC) is often more professional, more serious, than corporate media. PBS or CBC make outstanding documentaries. Stuff US/Canadian private networks just wouldn't make.

11 - Generally speaking, journalism that you pay for is far better than journalism you don't pay for. This is a general rule, not a law of physics. There are exceptions. The Daily Mail has subscribers. It's largely non-sense. ProPublica is free. They do stunning investigations.

12 - AIPAC is a powerful lobbying organization. But there is limit to their power. There was an intense AIPAC campaign to stop the President Obama from signing a nuclear agreement with Iran. And he defeated them .

13 - Most Trump tweets aren't written by Donald Trump. They are written by a dude named Dan Scavino. Most americans have no clue who Dan Scavino is. They wouldn't know him if they met him in the supermarket.

14 - Having a lot of resources is a curse. Countries that have natural ressources (Iran, Algeria, Nigeria, Russia) tend to be highly corrupt and exploited by a small elite. It's simple. The elite can take control of the oil fields, the gas fields, the mines. Just sell ressources. Shoot protesters. No need to invest in anything else. It's much better to live a country with limited resources (Taiwan, Japan, Switzerland). Lack of resources force the elites to invest in science and education. The most unlucky country in Africa is Congo. It's full of diamonds, forests, oil, gas, lithium, cobalt, rare earth. So Congo has suffered horribly because of that. In fact, it's still being looted.

15 - If you want to transform an authoritarian regime into a democracy from within, the number 1 tool you need are powerful labor unions. Powerful unions can basically go on a general solidarity strike and shut down an entire economy.

16 - Everything Barack Obama predicted would happen if the US didn't sign the nuclear agreement with Iran actually happened. Trump left the agreement. Iran started enriching nuclear fuel. Then a major war happened.

17 - Many Middle Easterners are very tribal. Most Israelis see themselves as Jewish first, Israeli second. Syrian druzes think of themselves as Druze first, Syrian second. Many lebanese Shias see themselves as Shia first, Lebanese a distant second. And so on. Their loyalty often lies more to their tribe than to the State they actually live in.

18 - Imperialism was bad. But imperialism didn't actually cause instability in the Middle East. The most stable period was actually Ottoman Imperialism. For 5 centuries there was commerce and peace. Then, there was the British/French empire. Apart from some episodes of violence, it was stable. But when imperialism ended, it was basically a mess. Jews vs Arabs. Christians vs Sunnis. Arabs vs Persians. Jews vs Shias. Arabs vs Kurds. Alawis vs Sunnis. To this day, many of them have this tribal mindset.

19 - Saying "we don't speak with terrorists" is completely dumb. Many terrorist organizations later became peaceful. Many terrorist leaders later became statesmen. It's wrong to say "We can't make any peace with those who hands are stained with blood". Get out of here with that non-sense. If you truly want peace, seeking only decent leaders means you aren't going to find anyone at all. Criminals make peace. This isn't Scandinavia.

20 - The most ugly, polluted and noisy cities in the world have one thing in common. They have cars everywhere. The best cities in the world (Singapore, Geneva, Copenhaguen) all have one thing in common. They try to aggressively reduce car ownership. If you want to improve the cities, you need to increase parking costs. Pedestrianize streets. Build bike lanes. The hard part is the politics. Car owners see the short term pain. They never see the long term gains.

What are things you know because of your personal interests that most people have no idea about ?

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[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 45 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (8 children)

Having a lot of resources is a curse. Countries that have natural ressources (Iran, Algeria, Nigeria, Russia) tend to be highly corrupt and exploited by a small elite. It’s simple. The elite can take control of the oil fields, the gas fields, the mines. Just sell ressources. Shoot protesters. No need to invest in anything else. It’s much better to live a country with limited resources (Taiwan, Japan, Switzerland). Lack of resources force the elites to invest in science and education. The most unlucky country in Africa is Congo. It’s full of diamonds, forests, oil, gas, lithium, cobalt, rare earth. So Congo has suffered horribly because of that. In fact, it’s still being looted.

This isn't actually true. You can look at the Nordic countries which are very oil rich and owe a lot of their prosperity to that. The United States is pretty resource rich as well. What is a curse is imperialism, and having lots of resources attracts lots of imperialists. The "oil curse" or "resource curse" is a myth made up to whitewash imperialists and absolve them of guilt.

Strap in and let me tell you about my special interest, Iranian history. In the 1800s, before the discovery of oil, Iran was ruled by an extremely corrupt line of shahs who sold out every part of the impoverished country to fund their lavish lifestyles and massive harems - to the point that other countries had to step in and say that they weren't allowed to sell out that much of the country. But the Iranian people were upset by this state of affairs, and staged a massive boycott, which set the stage for a mass movement in 1905 that established a democratic parliament and a constitution, with the support of an overwhelming majority, including the clergy (a fatwa was actually issued declaring violating the boycott to be haram). Iran was well on it's way to becoming a peaceful, prosperous, democratic society - but then the Fire Nation attacked, in the form of the British and Russian Empires moving in, shelling the parliament building and dividing the nation between themselves, like a pack of wolves.

The Iranian people suffered tremendously in the following years, with major plagues, famines, and genocide conducted by the Ottoman Empire. Of course, the Russian Empire collapsed, the British took the opportunity to unify the country, propping up a shah of a new dynasty as their puppet. That shah proved uncooperative during WWII, and the Allies invaded to set up supply lines between the Eastern and Western fronts and to secure the Iranian oil (which had now been discovered), and the shah was forced to abdicate to his son, who the British found more amenable.

The British technically owned the rights to Iran's oil, but the deal they had made was with the previous dynasty (Qajar). The one that had been selling out their country to an absurd degree, the one that had been overthrown by the people precisely because they were selling out the country, and so naturally the deal they had struck with the British regarding oil (which had been made before oil had even been discovered in Iran) gave them extremely lucrative terms. But it actually didn't matter how lucrative the terms were because the British were just straight up stealing it. They falsified their records and forbid any kind of inspection of their facilities.

This led the Iranian people to once again mobilize in support of democracy and self-rule. As outrage over the exploitation grew, the shah, who had previously rubber-stamped anyone the British picked, began to fear his own people more than the British and appointed democratic reformer Mohammad Mossadegh as prime minister. After the Iranians had watched the British stonewall them for decades, Mossadegh nationalized the oil industry with overwhelming public support. Iran was once again on track to becoming a peaceful, democratic, independent country.

But the British set up a naval blockade that crippled their economy. Iranians, at this point, had a neutral to positive view of the US, and hoped that it would live up to its stated ideals and support them against the British. The British, meanwhile, expected the Americans to back up their "property rights." President Truman threw up his hands in frustration, seeing both sides as intransigent. But Churchill simply waited him out, and offered his successor Eisenhower British support in Korea and NATO in exchange for the CIA launching a coup, and so Iran was passed around like a bargaining chip. Mossadegh's commitment to democratic ideals allowed the CIA free reign, he didn't crack down on the press despite the CIA controlling virtually all the newspapers, he didn't crack down on protests while the CIA was hiring protesters on both sides, etc. Naturally, he was ousted (although the CIA denied it/covered it up for decades), and the shah was given much more power (which he used to hunt down and exterminate the Iranian left) and the oil kept flowing.

But after a few decades, once again, outrage over the exploitation came to a head, and the shah, seeking to appease his people, participated in a multinational oil boycott. But as a result, his foreign support was withdrawn, which set the stage for the Islamic Revolution. President Carter, against the advice of his state department, allowed the shah to take refuge in the US. Naturally, this outraged the Iranians, because the US had previously staged a coup to install the very same man as a dictator. In retaliation, some of the revolutionaries seized the US embassy and took hostages. This of course led to a breakdown in relations between the US and Iran.

And so, Iran is often held up as an example of this supposed "resource curse" that leads to political instability (not to mention the old line about "Islam is incompatible with democracy"), but the reality is that the country had multiple times in its history where it could've become stable, peaceful, democratic, and independent, but those chances were destroyed, not by Iranians, but by foreign imperialists, the vile colonial empires of the British and Americans. Had they simply been left alone, they would not have suffered from this supposed "resource curse." If you look into the history of any similar country, you will find a similar story. But the history of these countries are simply not taught and not known in the imperial core, and so other explanations are invented.

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[–] Paragone@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

You left-out the critical resource of https://www.semiaccurate.com/ btw..


What a generally .. outright-awesome post.

The Guardian changed-ownership recently, & cut their journalism-staff, savagely, ttbomk, AND they are now purged from DuckDuckGo??

searching for

kremlin papers trump site:theguardian.com

produces NOTHING at DuckDuckGo, now, & for the last few weeks, at-least?

& I've seen that FT definitely has anti-viability strategy in its pushing of distortion, in its stuff..

fscking-idiot webmastering at TheGuardian.. WHERE'S THE SEARCH-FUNCTION??

https://www.theguardian.com/index/subjects/a

THAT page has a search-function.

??

WHEN I search on the keywords

kremlin papers

only-in-title, only-in-English, then click the button, then I get

https://www.google.co.uk/search?as_q=kremlin+papers&as_epq=&as_oq=&as_eq=&as_nlo=&as_nhi=&lr=lang_en&cr=&as_qdr=all&as_sitesearch=www.theguardian.com&as_occt=title&as_filetype=&tbs=

So, TheGuardian IS BLOCKING DuckDuckGo for sake of kickbacks for Google-exclusivity??

Looks like it..

"Those who are ignorant of history, are damned to re-enact its disasters." is true for our entire world, & especially true in the domain of journalism!

IF you keep disappearing historical key-information ( as for-profit, & for-institutional-status/importance, "journalisms" both do ), THEN you're garrotting OUR WORLD's viability!!

Scum..


The highest quality science-news is https://www.science.org/news

whereas the highest quantity of science-news is probably https://phys.org/latest-news/

( you have to fight with phys.org, as it keeps trying to prove one is just a bot, if one keeps digging into archives )


Salut, Namaste, Kaizen, & Gratitude for making this post!

_ /\ _

[–] over_clox@lemmy.world 54 points 2 days ago (12 children)

You can clean dirty/corroded electronic edge contacts with a pencil eraser. Also helps equally as cleaning preparation before soldering.

Go ahead and try it yourself on an old penny, it'll clean up and look shiny as new. Same principle for electronics.

[–] RedEyeFlightControl@lemmy.world 43 points 2 days ago (3 children)

A good rubber eraser also takes sticker adhesive right off of most surfaces, safely.

[–] proudblond@lemmy.world 11 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Wait wait wait, for real? I’m 42, how did I not know this?

The real LPT is always in the comments.

[–] RedEyeFlightControl@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ha, yeah. Snap-On sells a 400$ tool that takes 30$ consumable rubber wheels. Or you could use a 99 cent pink pencil eraser.

[–] Paragone@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

Snap-On's Snap-On: they are a BRAND-Identity, not an engineering-actual-solutions-to-acutal-problems company.

There's a Project Farm, or something, yt-channel, where they guy just does comparative-tests of different products, to see what the truth is, & .. it's a resource all ought be knowing-about.

Ha I DID remember its name right! https://www.youtube.com/@ProjectFarm/videos

_ /\ _

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[–] zlatiah@lemmy.world 11 points 1 day ago

Anyone remotely interested in Japanese music, J-pop, or rhythm games might have seen some music being labelled with something like "BOFU2017" or "BOF:NT" in song names, and a lot of these music have surprisingly high production value. This actually has some rather interesting history

So Beatmania was a DJ simulator rhythm game released by Konami in 1998 that was an inspiration for a lot of music games in the future. The Be-Music Source file format was developed for a community simulator of Beatmania. Later, BMS evolved into essentially its own rhythm game (which anyone can play btw, beatoraja is even available on AUR), and the community forbade players from playing official Konami charts (referred to as "illegal charts")

In order to increase the amounts of content available for BMS, the community decided to host BMS creation competitions to encourage players to make more BMS... the flagship event is called "BMS of Fighters" (BOF), hosted annually starting from 2004. All music from the events are completely free and libre: as in, free as in both freedom and free beer. And the competition is fierce; a quick search on YouTube will show some top-ranking songs and their production values tend to be very high (... and there are some shitposts too, we don't talk about Mopemope or that stupid Kirby song)

Obviously because of the libre nature of these competitions, a lot of these songs end up getting picked up by various rhythm games that are not BMS at all. The most popular rhythm games (like DDR, maimai) tend to have a generous collection of the top ranking BOF charts. The low-budget games even more so: when I was in China for two months and saw a lot of local arcade games (basically Chinese clones of maimai, DDR/PIU and Dancerush), guess what songs they have the most! Muse Dash which also started as a Chinese indie game also has a ton of BOF songs; in fact, Blackest Luxury Car, a song which I strongly associate with Muse Dash's entire identity (they even have a stage modeled after the song), was in fact... a song from BOFU2017

It's hard to tell but I wouldn't be surprised if BMS have a wider societal impact on rhythm game music and even the entire Japanese music genre as a whole. A lot of the artists behind top-ranking charts probably got contracts with various rhythm games... or maybe even beyond those. One funny example I know is that one artist became the lead composer of a gacha game that grossed $18M last month; the game in question is almost universally praised for their good soundtracks

As for the BMS themselves... distribution is not centralized whatsoever, especially for less popular songs. Some are on Google Drive, some on OneDrive, some on certain hosting websites, some only in packaged archives that some people are thanklessly maintaining... but anyways it is rather fascinating

Also the 2025 BOF started on October 3rd and is ongoing now. The portal for all BOF events are here: https://bmsoffighters.net/

[–] Krudler@lemmy.world 35 points 2 days ago (8 children)

I know more than I ever planned on knowing about audio equipment.

The first thing you need to know is that you cannot defeat physics with marketing hype. I don't give a flying fuck how many wave guides Bose talks about or all the technology under the sun, you need a big speaker to make deep bass. There is nothing anyone can say or do to change this.

And when you look up audio equipment, ignore the "music power" because they will state what is the momentary maximum power the speaker can handle... but we don't play micro seconds of MAX power music, we play steady audio... what you need to know is the RMS power the device can handle or output.

Furthermore, audio cables are a complete sham. You can take any power cable from a discarded vacuum, boom, you've got speaker cable. But but gold connectors... Yeah no.

[–] mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com 20 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Yeah, there’s a lot of snake oil in the audio world.

You’re spending five thousand dollars on solid gold cables that were soldered by blind monks then braided by trained gerbils, in an attempt to get the highest fidelity possible. Meanwhile, the album was recorded using the cheapest 10¢ per ft star-quad cable the studio could find, and $4.50 Neutrik connectors that were soldered by the studio’s unpaid intern.

There have been multiple instances where I have seen someone asking for advice on trying to track down an intermittent buzz in their system. They had people saying they needed to totally rethink their entire system, they had to buy thousands of dollars of new gear, completely change how they had everything routed… When all they needed was a 5¢ ferrite bead.

[–] Krudler@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Chef's kiss on this comment. I have been selling high-end audio gear for 2 years since I accidentally got good at it

I have never met a single person through this entire adventure who even knows what these are, and I'm continually laughed at and questioned why I would save them lol

[–] jaycifer@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Well, add one to the tally, what are those?

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[–] justdaveisfine@piefed.social 21 points 2 days ago (3 children)

This feels well known but...

Adding split screen to games is actually a very funky process.

It changes how the UI works, input setup, how sounds are handled, how some effects are done, how optimizing is worked on, it significantly increases testing and QA time because split screen may have its own unique bugs, and other quirky problems due to either the game's or engine's design (most of the time split screen is not a high priority focus compared to other features)

All that for something a very small percentage of players will even look at.

I often see people lament the lack of split screen games, and I do wish there were more, but its a hard sell and I can see why many games abandon it completely.

(Save for a few that made it entirely their focus, like split fiction)

[–] Paragone@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'd say that for anyone wanting to understand the archetypes, the underlying-Patterns, the "skeleton" underlying games they NEED to hit Architect of Games yt-channel, too.

People not interested in understanding how such things work wouldn't care about what he's giving us, but .. he cuts right through appearances, to get-into the underlying level..

https://www.youtube.com/@ArchitectofGames/videos

AND understanding what kind of gamers there are, you then need to understand what Nick Yee discovered:

The 2nd video, then the 1st, here:

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Nick+Yee+gamer+motivations+gdc

AND understanding the 14 GENRES is required, too..

https://www.kobo.com/us/en/search?query=John+Truby&fclanguages=en

( anybody who disses that book needs their head examined: there may be 2 fundamental mistakes in it,

1 being the root of humor, which is surprising-violation-of-expectations, and NOT "the drop", which is a UK & US specific thing ( other put-down cultures, too )..

Hofstadter's "Godel Escher Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid" explained that humor is simply a strange loop, ie a moebius-strip, where one walks around in a "circle", but now one's upside-down for some reason?!?

So, Hofstadter got MUCH deeper than Truby, on that point..

& the other being that the archetype-of-village is the Tribal Mother Village, and not the US's Wild West village.

Other than those 2 cockups, though, his meanings are profound.

Each of the genres is human-unconscious-mind working at understanding, through imprinting, 1 kind of meaning.

Horror is unconscious-mind trying to get its handle on death.

Action is unconscious-mind trying to get its handle on "morality? morality's irrelevant: ACTION decides everything.", ie it's trying to find its place between inertia & action..

Detective is unconscious-mind trying to convince itself completely-enough that intellect can conquer everything.

etc..

It's stupendously important understanding, that book..


Anybody wanting to make either a story or story-game, they'd better understand BOTH Truby's books, & Coyne's "The Story Grid", too!

( The Story Grid is THE book on editing. )

Yagoda's book on Voice is important for people doing writing..

Weissman's book "Presenting to Win" is absolutely crucial for anybody wanting to understand the fundamental-archetypes of presenting-information, & in stories, it can make-or-break one's writing, too..

say one has a character who has to fail-to-communicate something, to make the story work right..

Well, if you don't know th archetypes-of-presenting-information, then you're likely to botch that, aren't you?

But if you do know, then just pick from the archetypes which one suits the work, & impliment it!

There's writing software in Linux called Manuskript or something like that, which is wonderful for helping one write structured stuff, simply because it sets the overall-structure 1st, then you are more filling it in..

not suited to all things, but sometimes it greases-the-wheels sooo good..

a good mind-mapper for always-on-one idea-capture is important, for anybody who is committed to publishing their work, later..

: p

Oh, & this insight was from when I was watching an AoG video, a few years ago?

There's a game ( I'm not a gamer, at all: don't feel any point in it ) called, iirc, Rainworld, where there are many creatures in this world one has got living in..

you go 'round exploring in this world..

the creatures have their own lives, so behaviors evolve, while you are playing, & local-ecologies can change while you are away

THAT is object-oriented programming.

Functional doesn't work that way.

Emergent-complexity is something that OOP produces ( which is why it can be the enemy of managing-complexity ), & pure-functional-programming eradicates.

( I'm differentiating between Class-Hierarchy-Oriented-Programming, like Java, vs everything-is-an-object type programming, like Ruby/Crystal: the book on Object Oriented Programming in Ruby helped me understand the category-difference, though I never finished reading it.

CHOP is brittle, whereas true-OOP isn't, the same way. )

So, each of those creatures had their own state, their interactions had their-own histories, etc..

That's OOP.

Choose the tool that's right for that job, see?

Character-engines need to be OOP!

: )


_ /\ _

[–] Paragone@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

( a litle context for people who see that I've jumped-in, in-depth, in multiple domains, in this post:

I'm autistic, retired-for-many-years, & fighting-off 3 waves ( in different decades ) of MASSIVE brain-injury, through thinking & forcing-healing .. where the medical-profession ordered me to just drug myself into an acceptable psychiatric-zombie, on major-tranquilizers ( like Thorazine/Chlorpromazine ), & wait until I died.

I dig-into EVERYthing I care to understand, & am not satisfied until it makes sense to me, at the grass-roots level I want.

So, yeah: lots of stuff about competent-programming, philosophy sociology, speaker-building, science, space, religions, fluid-dynamics, engineering, functional-design, safety, management-processes, leadership, ALL kinds of stuff!

You get FAR when you spend a 1/2-century studying, while others are socializing, you know?

White medicine told me that me healing was just, itself, my psychiatric-delusion: "healing isn't possible", for the literal-brain-decimation I'd experienced as the 2nd wave of brain-injury..

I spent multiple-years much-of-the-time catatonic ( intermittently ), so I've been a human-rutabaga ( eyes-open, drooling, nobody-home, fighting-with-all-my-strength-to-EXIST-in-my-brain-for-hours ).

The reason I got better is because I finally decided that they were contradicting evidence-based-medicine, which they were, & set-about engineering healing into me.

I've had multiple-comments deleted from this site for "medical misinformation" when I describe the DOABLE EXPERIMENT that people with autism can do, to prove the mitigation that Walsh published, years ago, actually works, .. so I'll not bother trying again:

"evidence-based" medicine means authority-based medicine, as I linked-to with this: https://www.edge.org/response-detail/25433 .. & Lemmy.World stands absolutely behind authority-based-medicine-that-calls-itself-evidence-based-medicine, I've learned.

That article became a chapter in one of John Brockman's books, btw, so it isn't "just" a web-page: it's properly published, in a book, which you can see here: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/this-idea-must-die

Anyways, digging into a subject to "sufficient" depth has very different meaning for students-seeking-passing-grade, than it does for an autistic who wants to understand & command a domain's meanings/knowledge-functions.

Anyways, as I've stated on another of my comments, in this post: feel free to block me, site-wide, so you never see any "pollution" of mine, ever again, when logged-in, here.

: )

_ /\ _

[–] alternategait@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I love split fiction (even if we are currently stuck), and really enjoyed it takes two. Do you know of other co-op games that can support a serious gamer and someone who is terrible at gaming (I'm the one who is terrible at gaming)?

[–] justdaveisfine@piefed.social 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Depends how bad terrible is, but here are a few that are less intensive and should be pretty easy to pick up and ones I've generally liked (All on PC):

  • Baldur's Gate 3/Divinity Original Sin 1+2 (These are 'serious' games but they are turn based strategy so they're more thinking than reflex)
  • BattleBlock Theater
  • Castle Crashers
  • Cassette Beasts
  • Crypt of the NecroDancer (If you don't got rhythm then this ones hard)
  • Guacamelee
  • Human Fall Flat
  • ibb & obb
  • KeyWe
  • Kingdom Two Crowns
  • Pretty much any Lego game (They are forgiving if you make mistakes but also have more difficult collection hunting if you play it more seriously. They are all very similar though so I'd really only get one or two as you'll get burned out on them quick)
  • Lovers in a Dangerous Spacetime
  • Magicka (Is sometimes difficult but also hilarious)
  • Octodad: Dadliest Catch
  • Overcooked 1/2
  • Resident Evil 5/6 (These can have difficult patches but they're generally not very hard)
  • Spiritfarer
  • Trine series (I've generally liked them all)

There are probably more but I'm not looking at my whole collection right now.

[–] alternategait@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (2 children)

If it gives you an idea of how I am, I can play it takes two and trine and I cannot play overcooked.

[–] justdaveisfine@piefed.social 2 points 1 day ago

Overcooked is sort of a funky one because the levels are designed to have you tripping over other players. Depending on the other players, this can be a hilarious or infuriating experience.

It takes two has a huge variety of stuff like platforming and 3rd person shooting, so if you can handle that you can probably handle most of these.

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 day ago

tbf, nobody should ever have to play overcooked. Those games are way too much like having a job.

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[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Super Mario Odyssey 2 player. 2p controls the cap I think.

Also Galaxy 1 and 2 I guess. Just recently re-released (and overpriced of course).

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[–] ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling@lemmy.dbzer0.com 29 points 2 days ago (2 children)

You know how sometimes when you stand up you get lightheaded? If you squeeze your buttcheeks as hard as you can, that immediately stops.

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[–] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 31 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (3 children)

This might not be uncommon around here, but...

Between D&D and video games, I can identify most medieval weapons and armor.

Mythological beasts as well.

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[–] bitofarambler@crazypeople.online 27 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (4 children)

It currently costs $500 USD to live in most countries (rent, food, wifi, groceries) and $1000 to live in the rest.

Speaking fluent English is currently an incredibly valuable and valued skill that adult English speakers have been practicing their entire life, at least a couple decades; a skill in the same way engineering expertise, ballet proficiency or any other well-executed ability is a skill, with the added bonus that speaking fluent English guarantees employment.

US Americans can travel visa-free or visa-on-arrival to 180 countries.

I've been traveling 15 yearsish and owned a couple English schools in China.

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[–] Asafum@feddit.nl 22 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Amethyst, citrine and tigers eye are all Quartz they just have various impurities and structural differences that create the differences in color/appearance. Some can even be irritated or heated to change their color.

The Orion nebula can be seen with binoculars depending on the lighting and the famous horse head nebula is actually located very close to it in the sky (visually from our perspective, not physically)

Similarly, sapphires and rubies are the same mineral, just with different impurities that change the color of the gem.

[–] Assassassin@lemmy.dbzer0.com 17 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Almost every song you've heard has included at least one sample from the Roland TR808 drum machine.

You really do just need to turn it off and back on again 99% of the time.

Almost all of the internet utilizes akamai, Amazon, or cloudflare for some piece of vital infrastructure.

If properly made, furniture made of solid hardwoods will last multiple lifetimes.

[–] BenLeMan@lemmy.world 9 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Depending on the era and genre, the most ubiquitous drum machine would be a Linn Drum (late 70s & early 80s pop, e.g. ABBA), Roland TR-808 (80s soft pop, e.g. Phil Collins), or Roland TR-909 (90s House/Dance/Trance, e.g. Scooter).

There are many others, of course, and even if the actual machine wasn't used, these sounds have been sampled and reused countless times, e.g. using a Fairlight CMI.

Interestingly, the 808 is the only one of the three that does NOT use samples itself but synthesizes all of its percussion sounds, which gives it a rather distinct character. Perhaps that is what led you to believe that it is the most ubiquitous drum machine - it's easier to recognize than the others, even in a crowded mix.

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[–] DarrinBrunner@lemmy.world 18 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I sat here for a couple of minutes, trying to think of something I was willing to reveal.

[–] Agent641@lemmy.world 12 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Alright then, keep your secrets!

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[–] FishFace@lemmy.world 17 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I look up everything interesting that occurs to me on Wikipedia so I know a lot of shit about random topics.

Not sure the Guardian has enough readers to be so influential in British politics tbh, though it does try

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