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From the gaming side of things, I'm disappointed that Intel and AMD are focusing on the midrange market going forwards. I'm on Linux with a 6900XT and wasn't going to upgrade until there's a compatible option with acceptable raytracing performance (and when HDR is finally sorted out). The 4090 and other high tier cards are absurdly expensive, would be good to have competition in that segment.

I liked the books and television shows of both but I personally thought The Terror was in another league entirely.

Which is to say people should still watch/read them both.

Although I could've done without the gratuitous and seemingly unnessecary sex in The Terror (novel), but that seems typical of Dan Simmons.


It could have also done without the gratuitous and seemingly unnecessary X-Files tier ghost story, at which point there is nothing left of it.


To add to that fun fact, it's why the Yamaha logo is three crossed tuning forks.


To further add facts, logos such as these draw upon the tradition of Japanese emblems or "mon" [1]. Mitsubishi being another famous one.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mon_(emblem)


I thought Bloodhounds (K-drama on Netflix) had some of the best fight scenes I'd seen in years. I'm not a big k-drama or even drama person but I came for the fights and ended up liking the characters. There's a weird character write-off towards the end because apparently the actress had a DUI accident and so they took her off the show, but otherwise it's a pretty solid show.


Not directly related, but brings to mind the training video for the fire control mechanical computers on US Navy ships: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1i-dnAH9Y4


Also not directly related:

David A. Mindell, "Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control, and Computing before Cybernetics" https://press.jhu.edu/books/title/1207/between-human-and-mac...

Absolutely epic book.


It feels a bit strange when you hear naval people from the 40s talking about 'computing a firing solution'. But these systems must have been reasonably sophisticated for 2 moving warships 10+ miles apart to stand any chance of hitting each other, allowing for wind, changes in atmospheric pressure, the earth's curvature, pitching and yawing and coriolis force.


Also these things existed prior to WWI so by 1940 they were several iterations in.


My remedy for the RSI in my right hand (stiffness and pain in the fingers and knuckles) is gripping as hard as possible. If I work out I remind myself to grip everything as hard as I possibly can, and I add light dumbbell exercises so I can specifically focus on gripping as hard as possible. If I'm at my desk or wherever I also occasionally make a fist as hard and tense as I can. The pain has gone away and my hand has its full range of motion again. Of course, for all I know I could be doing something wrong and my hand will blow out in a few years. Just adding my anecdotal experience.


If anyone is playing on Linux with an AMD GPU and has texture issues (missing FBI text on the characters' jackets is the give away), it can be fixed with applying a patch to mesa-git: https://github.com/HansKristian-Work/vkd3d-proton/issues/175.... It should hopefully be implemented soon. I think it's only limited to RDNA2.


Under the headline is a video with the tagline "Google Flights has a new feature to help you save money - An upgrade to Google Flights will tell you the best time to book your next getaway." Hilarious.


I thought it was related to the article. Probably automatically matched by "google" tag or something like that.


Google search is cratering from what I see, and that probably means context for their ads, too.

After all, this is all related.

Lately, I've been messing with wifi and hostapd. I get massive maps images, and pictures of hotels in the first 1/2 of my respones. I presume "hostapd" is a close mistype to "hotel", and people are searching for high speed wifi, so they may be searching for 80211ac or some such. Or likely google just sees "wifi thing -> wifi", and now I'm apparently searching for "hotel wifi".

Great. I can't get anything meaningful, unless I add -hotel.

They've gone so overboard with loose context matches, that I can't imagine their ad placement has much value.


I don't think it's an ad. It looks more like Livenowfox.com's content management platform using post tags to insert 'related videos'.


I'm fine with Google having a lackluster flights booking app.

I'm not fine with it showing up by default.

I'm seriously pissed off when stores (Google Play Store, App Store, Amazon, et al.) show ads when I search for a brand name. Ads show up first for popular item categories, and sometimes take all the space above the fold.

I was looking for HBO Max this weekend. Disney came up first. How is that permissable?

To sell your competitor's name is wholly uncompetitive. A shakedown of every business with an internet presence.

Just because Google was in the right place at the right time shouldn't give it license to continue this shitty behavior -- without innovating or delivering value -- for the rest of all time.


// To sell your competitor's name is wholly uncompetitive

I don’t know where this came from. If I am googling Cancun it’s the perfect time to show me an ad for less famous destination I never heard of but might end up going to.

If I had somehow never heard of Toyota, telling me it exists when I am looking up Honda is perfect.

I get that there are plenty of times where this is annoying but there are also plenty of times where this unlocks awareness that helps a consumer.


Search became the only way to access platforms and sales channels.

Google is the gatekeeper of search. (Just as an app store is the gatekeeper of software on a mobile platform.)

Google gets to tax every inquiry into your product, even those with direct sales intent.

If you put people on a bell curve distribution, some non-negligible percentage will always click on the first link. Google taxes all of this.


It depends on how it's done, doesn't it?

If it's presented as a relevant result, it doesn't seem so good. If it's presented as "you might also be interested in" then it seems better.


What bothers me is when I Google "Pepsi" and item #1 is a Pepsi ad, item #2 is Pepsi's website.

It's obvious what I wanted, neither I nor Pepsi are happy about that ad being there...


Freakonomics had a episode one time about this very thing (and some other stuff in online advertising), using eBay as a case study. They were buying ads on the term "eBay". Presumably Pepsi is doing the same thing.


To my utter disappointment, the Apple store is not better in that regard.

I went for an Apple device to move away from Google-the-nosy-company, but I was happy to leave Google-the-advertising-company too. Yesterday I was searching for "microsoft authenticator" in the app store, and the top result is... another "sponsored" authenticator. WTF, Apple?


I've noticed lately that your search results in Google play store is "below the fold" significantly. 2+ pages of scrolling to get to it.

This is especially insidious when you're searching for security or banking apps.

For example on my device I search for "chase" first result is Chime, followed by a box labeled "ads related to your search" with rocket money, Western Union, and a payday loan company.

Then below that is "limited time events" that list the barbie app, uno and some racing game.

Then below that is "You might also like" with Uber, Mahjong, and some habit tracker.

Then below that is "Similar Apps" with wells Fargo, Discover and PNY Bank apps.

Then below that is my search results with the first result being the chase app.

I don't know how this behavior is defensible


The App Store on iOS is a surreal Kafka-esque joke. You can type in the exact name of an app and it will either not appear at all, or won't appear until the n-th slot in the list.

The QR code search doesn't do this, so apparently someone decided that text searches should.


> WTF, Apple?

People are still believe there are ethical companies, whatever it means for them.


This is especially concerning with re: software MFA. People are downloading fakes because when they search for an MFA solution often the one they’re looking for by name is not the first or second one listed and they get confused.

This is a security risk.


Reminds of me of strapping a milk crate to the back of your motorbike or scooter. In Australia at least, it seems stranger to me to see a Honda CT110 without a milk crate bungee strapped to the back than with.


From the recordings section below, there's a pianist called "Hyperion Knight". That's the coolest name I've ever heard.


Pretty sure that’s also a class of enemy in Elden Ring


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