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Respawn is developing ‘the final chapter’ of the Star Wars Jedi story, EA says
  • Jedi Survivor is a shockingly good game, so excited for a third one, but sad to hear that the director has left, but then again the rest of Respawn has seemed pretty consistently talented, but he left partly because he felt it was better working with a smaller team during early Respawn which could indicate Respawn is growing too big and bureaucratic like has happened to so many talented studios before it, but the wall running in Titanfall predated him ... :S

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    Communal Luxury: The Public Bathhouse | Hot baths at home "are a textbook example of an unsustainable lifestyle based on fossil fuels." Can bathhouses do better?
  • The idea that most bathing throughout human history has been inherently communal is kind of absurd on its face.

    It's not like every single whole town or tribe would go to the same spot on the same river at the same time to bathe. Communal bathing may be common amongst some cultures and peoples but the mass communal bathing of the Roman, Victorian, and modernish ages was driven by necessity once you had too many people cramped into too little space, and there were also huge health implications from that lack of hygiene.

    I also really do not trust the author napkin math about how much energy Roman baths used, nor does he even establish that household showering is a significant water or energy use compared to wasteful industry.

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    What business plan seemed so dumb to you but actually worked out?
  • The difference is that Uber's model of using an app to show you the route, give driver feedback, be able to report problems and monitor and track the driver, etc. is actually a huge improvement to both rider safety and experience compared to calling a cab company and then waiting who knows how long for someone to show up and hopefully bring you where you want to go.

    Not saying that their model of gig workers, or dodging up front training is good, but they legitimately offered up a fundamentally better taxi experience than anything that came before, which I think encouraged regulators to really drag their feet on looking into them.

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    Neither Elon Musk Nor Anybody Else Will Ever Colonize Mars | Defector
  • You're talking about the people who lowered a car from a rocket crane onto the surface of another planet, you can be thoughtfully critical, but their technical record has earned them a lot more than surface level dismissal.

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    NYPD shot four people - including two bystanders one who is in critical condition - and another cop over a $2.90 fare.
  • If they had, three people would have avoided bullet wounds and one of them wouldn't be in the ER right now.

    And maybe a bunch of people would have been stabbed by the guy with a knife who just threatened to kill someone.

    If you've ever ridden the subway in NYC, particularly during rush hour, the idea of firing a taser into a train full of people is absolutely crazy.

    Again, they could be lying about the knife and the threat, but if he did have a knife and just threaten to kill someone it would be absolutely crazy to let him get on a subway train full of people.

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    NYPD shot four people - including two bystanders one who is in critical condition - and another cop over a $2.90 fare.
  • They claim he made a threat. The article failed to print his side of the story for some curious reason. It isn't printing any testimony from the bystanders, either.

    Fair enough, supposedly they were wearing body cams so hopefully some of what actually happened can be answered objectively, I'm just pointing out what the article said. If he didn't make a threat or have a knife, then tasering him is a wild escalation, it's just that if he did, then the police can't really just let him get on a train.

    Cops will often lie about the danger of a suspect in order to justify elevating their use-of-force. That said, they weren't that concerned by his unreasonableness when they deployed tasers into the crowd first. They didn't switch to guns until they realized the tasers weren't going to work.

    Again, assuming what the article says is true, which is a big assumption, it's not that crazy to taser a guy who just got onto a train with a knife and threatened to you. At that point you're looking at a potential mass stabbing incident if you do nothing.

    Again, who knows, maybe the cops are blowing his behaviour wildly out of proportion, I'm just saying that, based on the article, it sounds like he wasn't just gunned down for jumping a turnstile.

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    NYPD shot four people - including two bystanders one who is in critical condition - and another cop over a $2.90 fare.
  • I mean according to the article, technically they just tried to stop him over the $2.90 fare.

    Then because of that he threatened to kill them and they realized he had a knife so they tasered him.

    Then when that didn't work and he ran at them with the knife they opened fire.

    Multiple people are still dead because they brought guns into a disagreement over $2.90, but the headline implies a lot more unreasonableness on the individual cops' parts as opposed to the overall policy.

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    Google finally unveils its take on freeform windowing on Android – OSnews
  • Yes it does. Look at the giant black bar at the bottom of the screen.

    Notice how, like Windows, it takes up the full width no matter what is on it, yet like MacOS, doesn't even tell you which individual windows you have open.

    They took the worst of both taskbar UXs.

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    Google finally unveils its take on freeform windowing on Android – OSnews
  • They better change that taskbar before releasing to consumers.

    They somehow managed to combine the "take up the full width no matter what's needed" mentality of Windows with the "show the user no useful information whatsoever" mentality of MacOS.

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    RFC 7493: The I-JSON Message Format
  • I'm honestly unsure if they intend the 'must-ignore' policy to mean to eat duplicate keys without erroring, or just to eat keys that are unexpected based on some contract or schema....

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    RFC 7493: The I-JSON Message Format
  • A summary:

    An old proposal (2015, not sure why OP posted it now), that basically proposes to put some more standards and limitations around JSON formatting to make it more predictable. Most of it seems pretty reasonable:

    • Must be UTF-8 encoded and properly escape Unicode characters
    • Numbers must respect the JavaScript number Type and it's limitations (i.e. max magnitude of an int etc.)
    • Objects can't have duplicate keys
    • The order of keys in objects does not matter
    • A JSON file does not need to have a top level object or array, it can be any JSON value (i.e. just a string or a number is still valid JSON).
    • It proposes that when processing JSON, any unrecognized keys should be ignored rather than errored

    It recommends:

    • Specific formats for date-time data
    • That binary data be stored as a bas64url string

    Honestly, the only part of this I dislike is the order of keys not mattering. I get that in a bunch of languages they use dictionary objects that don't preserve order, but backend languages have a lot more headroom to adapt and create objects that can, vs making a JavaScript thread loop over an object an extra time to reorder it every time it receives data.

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    RFC 7493: The I-JSON Message Format
  • Dude, go drink a coffee, and then reflect on what a negative little bitch you're being.

    The quality on Lemmy is somewhat worse than Reddit 10 years ago, entirely because the user base is a fraction of the size and is more equivalent to when Reddit was first growing 15-20 years ago. Even then it was only a success because they bootstrapped it using fake posts and comments.

    Lemmy is doing great, what it needs to grow is a positive and welcoming community, and then for Reddit to do something stupid again to trigger an exodus.

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    What are some words you swear people use to try and sound smart?
  • "This isn't a meeting about the budget per se"

    "This isn't exactly a meeting about the budget"

    If you finish those sentences, it becomes clear why per se is used:

    "This isn't a meeting about the budget per se, it's a meeting about how much of the budget is spent on bits of string"

    "This isn't exactly a meeting about the budget, it's a meeting about how much of the budget is spent on bits of string"

    In this situation, using per se provides a more natural sentence flow because it links the first part of the sentence with the second. It's also shorter and fewer syllables.

    "Steve's quite erudite."

    "Steve's quite intellectual."

    I think intellectual might be a closer synonym, but intellectual often has more know-it-all connotations than erudite which seems to often refer to a more pure and cerebral quality.

    "Tom and Jerry is a fun cartoon because of the juxtaposition of the relationship between cat and mouse."

    "Tom and Jerry is a fun cartoon because of the side by side oppositeness of the relationship between cat and mouse that is displayed"

    For those to say precisely the same thing it would have to be more like the above which doesn't really roll off the tongue.

    "I don't understand, can you elucidate that?"

    "I don't understand, can you explain?"

    Elucidate just means to make something clear in general, explaining something usually inherently implies a linguistic, verbal, explanation, unless otherwise stated.

    Honestly, these all seem like very reasonable words to me for the most part. I can understand not using them in some contexts, but for the most part, words exist for a reason, to describe something slightly differently, and it takes forever to talk and communicate if we only limit ourselves to the most basic unnuanced terms.

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    What are some words you swear people use to try and sound smart?
  • When people use industry specific jargon and acronyms with someone not in their industry.

    It is a very simple rule of writing and communication. You never just use an acronym out of nowhere, you write it out in full the first time and explain the acronym, and then after that you can use it.

    Artificial diamonds can be made with a High Temperature, High Pressure (HTHP) process, or a ...

    Doctors, military folk, lawyers, and technical people of all variety are often awful at just throwing out an acronym or technical term that you literally have no way of knowing.

    Usually though, I don't think it's a conscious effort to sound smart. Sometimes, it's just people who are used to talking only with their coworkers / inner circle and just aren't thinking about the fact that you don't have the same context, sometimes it's people who are feeling nervous / insecure and are subconsciously using fancy terms to sound like they fit in, and sometimes it's people using specific terminology to hide the fact that they don't actually understand the concepts well enough to break them down further.

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    Grasshopper CEO Suda51 says people ‘care too much’ about Metacritic scores
  • Suda suggested that one reason is publishers and developers focusing too much on Metacritic scores, and deciding to play it safe and stick to what is conventionally known to ‘work’ instead of taking risks with new ideas.

    I think most people are missing that they're talking about them from a dev and publisher standpoint, not consumer / gamer.

    And from that perspective it is problematic whenever things that are supposed to be used to assess something become targets to shoot for. Oscar bait, teachers teaching the test and not the subject, etc.

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    Neither Elon Musk Nor Anybody Else Will Ever Colonize Mars | Defector
  • Setting that aside, exploring space is not the same thing as building a company town for the world's least mentally stable pregnancy fetishist oligarch in an unworldly cold desert where everyone is sure to die.

    I would argue that the majority of sci-fi has predicted otherwise.

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    Neither Elon Musk Nor Anybody Else Will Ever Colonize Mars | Defector
  • Yeah bud, there's also these little shelters called caves.

    The author of the article literally guffaws at the prospect of respinning a planet's core when that's not remotely how you would approach that problem.

    It would be like writing an article saying "Come on, you believe in vaccines? What, you think a scientist can cut open your individual cells and put antibodies in each one? You really think they have tweezers that small? Get real dum dum."

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  • The federal New Democrats backed Conservative demands Wednesday that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau take part in a televised "emergency meeting" on carbon pricing with Canada's premiers.

    The federal carbon price is not the "be-all, end-all" of climate policy, and New Democrats are open to alternative plans presented by premiers, NDP environment critic Laurel Collins said Wednesday.

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    www.blogto.com Toronto's new Love Park puts up sign begging you to be patient about gross pond

    The centrepiece of Toronto's new gem of a park has been looking more like a murky emerald than a crystal-clear diamond over the past week. Love Par...

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