Why is it called Palestine? What happened to the Second Temple?
EnglishMobster
Decimal time exists, thanks to the French Revolution.
There are 100 decimal seconds in a decimal minute, 100 minutes in a decimal hour, and 10 hours in a decimal day. Each second is slightly shorter than a SI second.
Revenue, not profit.
In other words - Twitter would lose even more money. And they'd lose it to people that can take it straight from their bank accounts. 6% of it, to start with.
So $0.48 of every blue checkmark would go straight to the EU.
I got banned from there too because I used to go on /r/4chan back in 2011. I was an edgy teenager back then.
They apparently fetched every comment that had ever been made to that subreddit and banned everyone. It happened in like 2015-2016, long after I stopped going on any subreddit like that.
I got one for saying we should destroy a bridge in Königsberg in the name of Euler.
This is a reference to a famous problem in graph theory. This problem has been ruined since they built an extra bridge. It was an obvious joke in context, to an audience that would understand the joke.
Unfortunately, Reddit's so-called "Anti-Evil Operations" team doesn't look at context and said I was inciting terrorism.
Article 3, Section 2:
In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.
Because judicial review is inferred (not stated) in the Constitution, and because Congress has explicit permission to regulate the judiciary (including the Supreme Court), Congress can effectively do what they want.
This means that Congress can put a clause stating "this law is not subject to judicial review" and there is literally nothing SCOTUS can do about it. It's a check on SCOTUS. Congress has full power over judicial review.
Congress has tried exercising this clause in the past (to force judicial review to require a 2/3 majority of justices), but it's always died in the Senate.
Tangentially - I never listened to Fall Out Boy when I was a teen. I was much more into metal at the time and sort of dismissed them until 2013 or so.
I listened to their newest album (at the time) in 2013 and found that I liked a lot of their songs. It wasn't until like 2019 that I was like "Hey, didn't they have a bunch of older songs I never paid attention to?" (Of course, I knew the hits... but nothing pre-2013 that wasn't a single, basically.)
They recently released a new album that was inspired by their older albums (they basically said in an interview "this is the album we would've made if we didn't go on hiatus"). I didn't like it as much as I did their newer stuff, but that prompted me to actually listen to their entire discography. And yeah, I don't like their older stuff as much as I do their newer stuff. They have a couple bops, but nothing that really grabbed my attention outside the singles I already knew about.
But I know my perspective is different from a lot of old-school fans, who love old-school Fall Out Boy.
Lemmy was always on the fringe. The founders are literal hardcore unironic "China did nothing wrong" communist tankies.
If you know C++ already, Unreal is a much more natural starting point than either Unity or Godot.
Unreal is what gets used in many AAA shops - it's not a monopoly by any means but it is the most common off-the-shelf engine in the industry. Unity's main edge is that it's easy to learn but if you are comfortable in C++ then there's no real benefit to Unity.
Godot uses GDScript, which is a custom scripting language that's meant to be easy to learn. It's FOSS so you don't need to worry about being screwed over - but it's a lot less mature than something like Unreal which can ship on everything you can think of.
But my advice is to make small things. Don't hyperfocus on a dream game. Just make things that will take a weekend (maybe a week at most). Then move on to something else.
When I was getting into game dev, I made a couple simple projects then jumped into my dream game. I spent so long making that one game that I never finished.
When I got hired in the industry, they cared more about what I released than what my education or job experience was. Because that one big game was never finished, I wound up with my smaller "just getting started" games on my resume; stuff I had made but wasn't proud of. But those games were at least finished and available to the public... and they were what got me hired, not my magnum opus overscoped unfinished indie game I never completed.
One thing I found especially dumb is this:
Jobs that require driving skills, like truck and taxi drivers, as well as jobs in the sanitation and beauty industries, are least likely to be exposed to AI, the Indeed research said.
Let's ignore the dumb shit Tesla is doing. We already see self-driving taxis on the streets. California allows self-driving trucks already, and truck drivers are worried enough to petition California to stop it.
Both of those involve AI - just not generative AI. What kind of so-called "research" has declared 2 jobs "safe" that definitely aren't?
I split my time like so:
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Kbin.social: 35%
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Lemmy: 55%
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Reddit: 10%
I prefer Kbin the most, but Ernest has been slow to update the main site and the mobile API is missing (meaning it's quite bad on mobile, even with the PWA).
Sync works great with Lemmy, so on mobile I use Sync (hello from my phone).
Historically, I've used Relay for Reddit for many years at this point. Relay is the one third-party app that didn't leave. So far, I haven't had to pay anything either, and nothing has broken.
While my Reddit usage is down, I still occasionally go on Reddit both in my browser and via Relay (while it still works). I usually go to Reddit for the WorldNews live threads and to check the Baldur's Gate 3 subreddit.
I do find myself missing out on news I would otherwise have known about. I don't see dev diaries for Paradox Interactive games here on Lemmy/Kbin, for example. This makes me surprised when a patch comes out (since I don't see the dev diaries in my feed). Likewise, there are other niche things that I only find out about way later than I used to, and that kind of makes me miss Reddit.
I also find myself engaging more with other social media. I watch a lot more YouTube and TikTok. My Google Pixel has a "for you" article feed as part of the launcher itself; I used to ignore that but find myself browsing it now. I play more games on my phone than I used to.
It's sort of plugged the hole, but not really. Even when I'm on Reddit nowadays it's simply not the same.
I mean, in the late 2000s I was kind of a shitty person. But in like 2014 I realized I was a piece of shit and started to work on myself.
I stopped basing my personality on how many girls I could land and started just focusing on myself and not on relationships. I spent 2 years guiding myself to a much better place, and then in 2016 I met my current fiance.