darthelmet

joined 7 months ago
[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I know people like to joke about WoW being addictive/life consuming, but for me being in a raid guild was a genuinely positive social experience that I haven't really had elsewhere. I really miss it even if I think I probably couldn't go back to it now. I do have a handful of friends to hang out with and I cherish my time with them, but it's definitely a different feeling than the comradery of having a shared interest and goal with a group.

I didn't like the grind that came attached to playing though. I've been really hoping someone would make a game that was a similar experience to WoW-style raids as a standalone so I could just do the parts I liked without all that filler. Recently I saw a game "Fellowship" that was kind of doing that, but it's only small groups and while I haven't tried it, from what I've heard the actual encounter design isn't really the thing I'm looking for. (More avoiding the bad stuff than things that require strategy.) It is still in early access, so I'm keeping an eye on it to see if it crosses the finish line as something I might be interested in, but for now my specific niche seems to not exist.

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 11 points 6 days ago (3 children)

I did a pretty similar thing in school. I was playing a LOT of World of Warcraft and I was in raiding guilds with consistent and long raid times. So I'd go out of my way to get as much of my schoolwork done ahead of time as possible. I'd eat in class so I could work on my HW during lunch, I'd get like a week ahead on any work that I was able to such as reading textbook chapters. All so that I could make sure I never missed a raid night.

Unfortunately this kind of all fell apart in senior year of HS. WAAAAAAY too much work to ever keep up, so I had to stop playing.

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 5 points 1 month ago

Huh. I worked on her campaign back in 2020. Obviously we lost. I wonder what she's been doing since then.

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip -4 points 1 month ago

So what are we blaming all the other imperialist wars on? Was each president the dumbest ever elected or is there perhaps something else going on?

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

“As commander-in-chief, I will ensure America always has the strongest, most lethal fighting force in the world,”

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 2 points 5 months ago

Yeah basically this. My system volume is exactly where it needs to be for anything else I'm doing. Videos, music, voice calls, etc. I shouldn't have to basically mute my system to not go deaf when I launch a game for the first time.

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 35 points 5 months ago (7 children)

WHY THE HELL ARE GAMES SO LOUD ON STARTUP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!?????

There are others but this is one I just can't believe is a thing. It's so fucking simple to fix. Just start the volume on the lower end and if it's too quiet I can raise the volume or just give me a volume slider first thing on initial load before any sound is played and let me find the right levels with a test sound before playing any menu music or something.

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 1 points 5 months ago

I guess at the heart of my question is: Why people didn't create new letters to fit those sounds? Sure initially people would have to learn what the new letters are so they could pronounce them, but they already have to learn all these rules and exceptions so they can pronounce the reused letters correctly in the right circumstances. Why can't we have 38-56 letters?

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 4 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Oh I didn't know the current alphabet came from the Portuguese. I assumed it was from the French when they colonized Vietnam.

The point about the logographic characters being distinct is interesting. I guess if you don't have to phonetically spell it out you have some more freedom in picking what written characters will represent the meanings of the two words. It is still a shame we ended up with those homophones, but I guess that's just a path dependency thing since the spoken words came first. I guess they just had to work with what they had when they converted them into characters.

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 5 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (6 children)

Probably some other cases too, and im not sure which one applies to the specific sound you're struggling with but a couple of examples

A recent example I came across while doing Vietnamese vocab was several letters being used to make an "Z" or "L" sound in some cases. For compound sounds, there are things like "ng" sounding like an "M" in front of words sometimes in Vietnamese or in English we have things like "th" or "ch" where the resulting sound doesn't sound like it comes from either of the building blocks. "T" is pronounced like "tuh" and "H" is pronounced "huh", (there is a certain irony in trying to use letters to communicate the pronunciation of letters, but whatever.) so you'd think that "th" would be something like "tuh huh" instead of the actual pronunciation. While I was writing this I thought of an example where this is how it works: "tw" gets pronounced like "twuh" like in "twelve" or "twenty"... and then I remembered "two" exists and sounds like "too" (and "to") for some reason. So yeah. It's really hard to come up with a consistent rule for a lot of these.

EDIT: Oh I just remembered another funny exception for "ch": In "Chemistry" the "H" is neither pronounced nor does it modify the "C" to make the normal "ch" sound. It just sounds like there is a "C" there. Like "Cemistry." Except looking at that, that pattern is used in something like "Cemetery" and then the "C" sounds like an "S". I'm going to stop now because there are so many of these I could probably go on forever if I kept thinking about it.

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 5 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Huh. I hadn't even considered how technology might affect this. Interesting.

 

I've been trying to learn a new language (Vietnamese) and a thing that has been driving me crazy are all these instances of letters being randomly pronounced differently in different words sometimes. If you don't think about it too much, it's easy to go "this language is dumb, why do they do this?" But then I think about English and we have so many examples of this or other linguistic oddities that make no sense but which I've just accepted since I learned them so long ago.

So I wanted to generalize my question: For all the languages where this applies, why are there these cases where letters have inconsistent pronunciations? For cases where it sounds like another letter, why not just use that one? For cases where the letter or combination of letters creates a new sound not already covered by existing letters, why not make a new one? How did this happen? What is the history? Is there linguistic logic to it beyond these being quirks of how the languages historically developed?

[–] darthelmet@lemmy.zip 3 points 5 months ago

I recently had ECT for depression. It didn't work, but it did make me forget about a bunch of random stuff. It's been such a weird experience. One of the more benign things that keeps coming up is I forget if I watched/finished a show or game and even if I know I did, I can't remember much about it. I worry about what else I've forgotten but I don't know yet because it hasn't come up. Like I haven't been able to work because of my depression, but if at some point in the future I finally get it cured, or at least under control enough to go work, I worry that I'll just randomly not remember some important things I learned in school or something like that.

So it's definitely possible to do things that delete memories. I don't see a reason why with more research we could learn enough about the brain to do this selectively instead of it being a random side effect.

As for whether I'd be worried about such a technology: That has more to do with what our society would look like than the actual tech. If we finally reached a society where we are all truly free, then while I might not use it, I wouldn't fault others who decided some memory was too painful to keep. If we still lived in a society like we have today, I'd be terrified that the rich and powerful would have yet another tool to fuck with us.

 

So I have some food sensitivity issues and in particular I don't like raw tomato. They're gooey and seedy and they just make me feel kind of weird. Unfortunately there are a lot of things, especially sandwiches, which use tomato as a fairly critical part of the flavor of the dish. So just taking it out isn't ideally because it sometimes just makes the dish bland. I feel like processed tomato things like ketchup and tomato sauce don't really fulfill the same kind of role in these dishes.

Does anyone have any opinions/suggestions on what types of foods could plausibly be used as a substitute for raw tomato? It could be anywhere, but I'm thinking of things like sandwiches, salads, etc.

 

I've been reading a lot about things like AI, mass surveillance, changes to social media algorithms, etc. lately and it got me thinking:

Have developments in information technology reached a point where they are no longer improving society and are instead largely harming it?

  • I grew up alongside the internet. When I was a kid, my computer was so slow that I turned it on when I came home from school to give it time to boot up while I did other things. When Youtube became a thing bandwidth was slow enough that I had to do something similar with loading up videos I wanted to watch ahead of time. Over time, improvements to bandwidth and data transfer protocols have enabled us to go from just being able to send numbers and text to being able to send high resolution pictures, video, audio, and even data necessary to update the gameplay of an online game in real time. At some point in the last few years, this got good enough to do everything I wanted at the speed I wanted and I haven't really had much in the way of bottlenecks or slowdowns since then outside of some very specific tech issues.

  • I went from having something that just made phone calls to having a miniature computer in my pocket that can do all of the above about as well as my dedicated computer.

  • Media editing software has become so widely accessible that ANYONE can participate in generating culture and sharing it with the world.

  • Search and recommendation algorithms got good enough at some point that it made it possible for people to effectively comb through this new massive ocean of data.

And then.... what kinds of new technology has been developed or improved in the last few years? Algorithms have been made worse by being optimized around advertising, data collection, and other business interests. The availability of AI has led to a deluge of garbage gunking up the web and has made misinformation commonplace and hard to ignore. Mass surveillance has become more widespread and advanced. etc. It feels like all our recent and ongoing advancements have been net negatives for society outside of serving the interests of a handful of capitalists. So many of the brightest minds of our time are working on things that don't help anyone.

So what do you think? When was the last innovation (in internet technology, obviously we've had advances in medicines and things like that.) you'd consider to be good for us? Are there any promising lines of work being done today that you believe will lead us into a better future for the internet? Or are you pessimistic about it?

 

I'm new, apologies if this is the wrong place to ask this.

I've been becoming increasingly depressed with my life here in the states. I have been reading and watching a lot more ML stuff and I've been getting interested in some of these countries and I have been thinking about the possibility of moving to one. But there's a lot to think about and a lot to do to move to another country, especially one where I don't already have friends/family. So I was hoping people could give me some advice on this.

  • What kind of things should I consider to decide whether or not to move?
  • How do I decide where specifically to move? (I've been most interested in Vietnam, but I'm open to considering other options.)
  • What kind of things do I need to do to actually make the move happen? What are some resources I could use to make this easier?
  • What kind of things do I have to think about as an immigrant? How do the social services work for them?
  • Once I'm there, what are ways to get settled into the local community?
  • Any notes on job stuff? I'm not 100% sure what I'd do. I read English teaching is a potential job. I also went to college, but honestly my education is kind of all over the place and I don't have much job experience.
  • A bit of a stretch, but are there any lemmy comrades already living in any of these places who would be willing to get to know me once I'm there?

Also, semi-related: Any recommendations on language learning services? I was trying out one app for Vietnamese that another place recommended, but it turned out to not really be as effective as I had hoped.

 

I have some questions about advice on what I should do and how to go about doing it. But reading the rules of this community (and asklemmy), it isn't clear to me that such questions are in the spirit of the community, but I'm unsure. Is this an appropriate place to ask such questions? And if not, can you point me to more appropriate communities? (It's not mental, medical, or professional advice)

Not necessarily looking for an answer in this thread, but I suppose just to provide a sample question to better consider what I mean:

  • I am thinking about possibly moving to another country. What are things I should consider to decide if I should do so? What actions do I need to take to plan and make such a move? What are some resources that could make those move actions easier or even any companies that can do some of that work for me?
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