GlennMagusHarvey

@GlennMagusHarvey@mander.xyz
4 Post – 77 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

A person interested in nature, science, sustainability, music, and videogames. I'm also on Mastodon: @glennmagusharvey@scicomm.xyz and @glennmagusharvey@sakurajima.moe

My avatar is a snapping turtle swimming in the water.

Yeah, they got organized very early and very fast.

Some people...tried. Fortunately, their attempts got overwritten.

they call them iowa bananas because if you offer someone this when they want a banana you still owe them a banana

I've heard that the official app was initially thrown together at some point around the time Mastodon first blew up due to Twitter...uh, blowing up, in a different sense. Basically, "it would really help onboarding if people had an obvious choice of official app to use". At least, that's what I've heard. Never verified this myself.

Tusky is definitely decent though.

Wait...is this Felix the Cat??

Hey, welcome to the threadiverse! I'm also a newbie, whose only prior experience with this sort of site has been Reddit (as well as internet forums but they're not quite the same type of thing), so here's what I've figured out so far. (The "threadiverse" is the informal name for the realm of Reddit-like websites linked by federation.)

Apologies for another long post for you to read, but I'll try to make this an easy read. (Feel free to tell me I suck in if you think I wrote this badly or if it was stuff you already knew.)

On Reddit, you have one site, which has a ton of subreddits, each of which is like a little forum and is independently moderated (within the limits of the larger site's policies, of course). Lemmy and /kbin are, basically, like many little "reddits", with a twist: they can talk to each other and so you can be a member of one "reddit" and post/comment on another. Also, subreddits are called "communities" on Lemmy and "magazines" on /kbin but they basically work the same way. You can subscribe to them and see posts from them and post to them, even if they're on other "reddits".

So, yes, you can have your account on lemmy.world, but also subscribe to (for example) /c/patientgamers at sh.itjust.works (which is sometimes written as !patientgamers@sh.itjust.works). Meanwhile, what if you're also interested in the content at /c/patientgamers on lemmy.ml? Well, you can subscribe to that too! (Think of it like being subscribed to two slightly-differently-named subreddits.)

While there's only one actual Reddit which has all the many many subreddits, in the threadiverse there are many "reddits", each of which has some "subreddits". There may be some duplication of more general topics, like memes, but you'll also often find that more specialized "subreddits" are only on certain "reddits" -- for example, my instance, mander.xyz, has a lot of nature and science related communities, not found on other instances. And each of those "reddits" has its own rules, and each of those "subreddits" has its own rules within the instance that hosts it. You'll want to check each out to get a feel for the vibes in each place.

And now for the nitty gritty.

The way this all works is that you basically have two ways to see everything on the threadiverse: (1) on the site where the thing is, and (2) on your home instance. For example, you posted your message on lemmy.world. I can go to lemmy.world to read your post, but I can't reply there, unless I have a lemmy.world account. So how am I commenting? I'm typing this reply to you on mander.xyz. That's because I'm viewing your post on my home instance. I saw your post on the feed of another instance (acutally a /kbin instance, located at fedia.io), and I wanted to reply, so on that page, I got the link to your post ( https://lemmy.world/post/928037 ), copied it and pasted it into my own instance's search bar, and pulled it up on my instance (Mander), and here I am, typing my reply.

Now, I did this only because my instance doesn't already know about your post. I'm not subscribed to !reddit@lemmy.world, which is where you posted this. If I were subscribed, then your post would have appeared in my subscribed feed, on my instance, already. And I'd just view your post and type my reply just like it were a post on my own instance. I'm subscribed to !patientgamers@sh.itjust.works, so new posts there will show up on my subscribed feed.

The first thing I did when I wanted to join Lemmy was that I needed to pick an instance to join. But the second thing I did, almost concurrently, was that I started noticing all the different places that had content I wanted to see. I made a quick list of all those different communities/magazines. So once I joined, I just went and subscribed to all of them.

You can see what communities are on a given instance by clicking "communities" at the top of the page. (Or "Magazines" if you're on a /kbin site.) So I basically just went through the communities lists of a bunch of instances, and checked out what people were posting about, and asked myself, "hey, do I wanna hang out here?".

How do I subscribe? I go to the webpage for the community, like going to the subreddit, and I hit subscribe. What if it's on another instance? I just take its URL, copy it, and paste it in my instance's search bar. Wait a few seconds, then there's a link to the community via my instance. Click subscribe. (Sometimes it's a little buggy and have to go into a post to subscribe. Or it says "subscribe pending" after I click. But, really, I actually am subscribed, and I can tell because those posts start showing up on my subscribed feed.)

Where are my subscribed posts? I just go to my instance's home page (mander.xyz for me, lemmy.world for you) and I can click "Subscribed". Or "Local", which shows posts on my instance. Or "All", which is a feed of all the posts my instance knows about (local and remote). And I can sort them in different ways too.

The search box is surprisingly useful on fediverse platforms, I've found. On Lemmy and /kbin, I can copy the address of any community/magazine or post or comment and stick it in my instance's search box. Wait a few seconds, and it'll find it, and I click on it and do my thing. Sometimes I find posts that my instance didn't know about at all before I pulled them up, so they're "missing" comments that I can see on the post's actual address, but I don't need to see them all on my instance, I just need to pull up the one I want to reply to and post my reply. By the way, these links are that colorful little fediverse star you see beneath your posts. (On /kbin it's in "more" -> "copy URL to fediverse".) Everything has an address and every address is searchable, it seems.

So here's basically how I'm using Lemmy now:

  • load up mander.xyz (my homepage)

  • check my notifications (which i'll get when people reply to me)

  • check my Subscribed feed, and optionally, the Local feed, or even the All feed (if I'm extra bored). anything my instance already knows about is something I can post on like it were local.

  • if I want to check out extra stuff on other instances, I can easily just go to those instances and read stuff. If I want to comment/etc., I find a link from there, go back to my instance, paste it in the search box, and do my thing.

Hope this helps!

Honestly I don't think an algorithm needs to work very hard to "be mean" like that. Sure, you can purposely put people with clashing views in each other sight on a place where people go to hang out and have fun. But you don't even need to go do that on purpose. To some extent, people naturally produce more "engagement" with stuff that's controversial/argumentative.

Imagine if I were to walk past you and say some completely innocent comment. Now imagine I were to walk past you and insult your favorite movie/show/song/game/whatever. You'd be far more likely to respond in the latter case.

So, as people respond, more activity is generated, and that makes the post "hotter". Simply boost what's hot, and you have a veritable litany of controversy.

🎊

Embarrassingly, I'm on here.

I gotta say the ones like these with the extra shading detail are especially impressive.

Then stop making big vehicles for the U.S. auto market and stop only selling big vehicles in the U.S. auto market!

https://youtu.be/jN7mSXMruEo [NotJustBikes video about stupidly big vehicles]

A keyboard. Any standard computer keyboard.

This post was originally written as a reply to a comment by @redsol2@lemmy.world. But it got kinda long and it's basically my answer to the thread topic. So yeah, lemme tell y'all a story.

I started out playing 2D platformers for DOS, where the default -- or more like, only -- control scheme was arrow keys to move and Ctrl and Alt to do things (commonly Ctrl to jump and Alt to shoot). I also grew up on NES, GB, and SNES games, and a handful of PC games. Notably, though, I never picked up FPS games as a child, and also never really got anything from the 32-bit era and beyond until much later in life.

With emulators being more integrated into Windows (meaning Ctrl and Alt do important things), I shifted the action buttons to the lower left corner of the keyboard. Emulating an SNES gamepad, for example, I generally map the action buttons in a mirror-image fashion to ZXCS (respectively, ABYX). (A friend of mine maps them in a similar fashion, using ZXAS instead.) This then lets me map the L and R buttons to A and D respectively. And I move this whole ensemble of six buttons up a row if I have ghosting issues. (The Sega Genesis gamepad can be mapped similarly easily.)

This works brilliantly well (at least for me) for 2D platformers, top-down action games, JRPGs, and more. Notably, though, this excludes pretty much anything that requires analog controls of some sort, e.g. FPS games, N64 games, etc.. But between a lack of hardware capable of playing 3D stuff (whether natively or by emulation), a lack of a familiar control scheme, and a lack of personal interest (due to just not having ever gotten into them), I pretty much just stuck with emulating up through the 16-bit era, with a little PS1 emulation thrown in. It's not like I ever had a shortage of excellent games.

And curiously, it turns out my control scheme (arrow keys + ZXC(V)ASD(F)) is the favored scheme for a number of Japanese indie developers who made things like action games and RPGs using 2D sidescrolling and top-down views. So I ended up having even more to play! In contrast, it seems western devs often prefer WASD, even for stuff like 2D platformer Flash games (to my chagrin). And I see (English-speaking) PC gamers these days regarding my sort of control scheme as a "left-handed" setup (which is amusing since I'm not left-handed).

I only learned to WASD as an adult. At first I even tried to use the mouse with my left hand, and tried putting my left hand on the arrow keys, but eventually I gave in and learned to WASD. I still only use this when I need to use mouse aim though, e.g. Terraria (which I played a lot).

For games that actually require console-style analog controls, though, I nowadays have a wired XB360 gamepad that connects via USB. I've tried mapping things like the N64 gamepad to a keyboard before but with no success. But now that I have this, funny thing is this means I'm only recently getting into a number of classics from that era.

I've considered getting an 8BitDo SN30 or SN30 Pro(?)...whichever basically looks like an SNES pad with added analog sticks. I specifically want a gamepad without "legs" -- the two stubs that seem to be meant as palm grips on each side of the gamepad. That's because I held my SNES pad from the side so that I could press A, B, and Y at the same time with my right thumb. (This was highly useful when playing Mega Man X.) Controllers with "legs" basically make it way harder for me to do this, as I found out when I tried to play MMX4 on my PS1. It felt so awkward, I just went straight back to emulating it, despite having the disc and hardware.

But, for now, I only pull out my XB360 gamepad for stuff that needs analog stick functionality. Everything else is keyboard. (And mouse, if needed.)

Ah, a meme other people's memes could smell like.

oh yeah I'm curious to see an average-pixels-per-user for each instance

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For whatever reason, I'm scratching my brain and can only come up with three urban fantasy games plus a franchise I'm not too personally familiar with. The three games are Underrail (an indie game from some years back, which I bought back when it wasn't even fully released yet, but still have yet to play), Operation Abyss (a dungeon crawler with modern-ish graphics but gameplay that definitely takes after old Wizardry games; the theming leans somewhat more on the science-fantasy side), and Tokyo Xanadu eX+ (an action JRPG that's something of a cross between Trails of Cold Steel and modern Ys games). The franchise is the Persona series, none of which I've played, and which Tokyo Xanadu gets compared to despite not being all that similar under the hood.

I don't think any of these are what you're looking for, but I hope they may help you on your search.

Do you mean SCP?

applauds

I hereby award the above comment one (1) internet(s).

Thanks in turn for posting that version.

I'm still a little surprised that the detection of this particularly very reactive species is so meaningful, but I really don't know much about the chemistry implications beyond being able to picture the structure and bonding in my head. (Wikipedia isn't particularly helpful unfortunately.) Though I guess it makes sense that if UV bombardment can somehow cause this thing ion to form them its reactiveness on its own means that it can precipitate the formation of other molecules.

Did someone say Kuala Lumpur?

https://youtu.be/LFyuykFNXig

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I wasn't part of the original but I subscribed anyway. Thanks for creating the community!

You win one internet.

Actually, no, you win two internets, but they are identical.

Ooh, nice, someone added the rest of the body.

I wonder if we can connect Gail and Hollow Knight with some sort of background platform.

She's supposed to be sitting on a bench, for what it's worth, but I didn't really think this through when I started drawing lol

You might already know this, but I just wanted to mention (for anyone curious) that one neat thing about what NYC did is that it's actually one of the more famous textbook examples of ecosystem services.

Basically, at some point they actually calculated how much it'd cost to build a water filtration plant vs. how much it'd cost to maintain the Catskills watershed, and found that the latter was significantly cheaper, proving the notion that well-functioning natural systems can do things that are worth huge amounts of money, seemingly for "free", so they're well worth the effort to understand and safeguard such resources.

Here's an article about it: https://blogs.edf.org/markets/2017/11/07/how-and-why-farmers-in-the-catskills-protect-new-york-citys-drinking-water/

And here's an article about how policy approaches have changed over time. https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2015/11/30/the-catskill-watershed-a-story-of-sacrifice-and-cooperation/

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Oh, I actually meant "real" saves, done from in-game. It's like Lemuroid had some chance of not updating the save file. I never figured out why this might happen. (Maybe it has something to do with not properly generating a new state on exit and having old states wipe newer saves?)

I think there's something to be said that there's a certain level of intellectual maturity that's needed to truly enjoy these games.

I grew up with NES Metroid, and despite having read the manual many times over, as a kid I never made sense of the game. I could play it, I could insert the Justin Bailey code, I could move around and do stuff, but I never truly understood what I was meant to do. I stumbled into Tourian one day and promptly got pwned by metroids, and then I never found my way back until I was an adult.

The second metroidvania game I played was Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance. Maybe it's an easier game -- it's certainly less confusingly open-ended than Metroid 1 -- but I absolutely loved the experience. I deeply appreciated the narrative journey of being trapped in this castle, full of weirdness and twisty passages that were slightly off from each other, having the mid-game bombshell dropped on me, and piecing together a mystery until I was able to find out what was going on. I played it all night, and in a story I like to tell people, the morning after I beat it (and finally got the best ending), as the sun came out, I put on the Aloha de Chocobo music from Final Fantasy IX and it was the most glorious feeling. But this depended on me understanding that I was immersed in a maze, and understanding what I needed to do to find my way out of the maze.

And I've been enjoying this genre since.

The first time played Super Metroid, it was after I played Fusion and Zero Mission, and I was actually rather unimpressed by it, despite it being basically a platinum standard for 2D metroidvanias.

It was only later, after playing various romhacks including randomizers and getting much more accustomed to the game engine and the sheer number of possibilities afforded by various speed tricks and sequence-breaking techniques, that I gradually realized why it's held in such high regard. The game is...neat, if you simply play through it once. But the more you learn about it the more you can do with it and the more fascinating it becomes. There is a seemingly infinite depth to it, which is not at all obvious on a first playthrough. In fact, some of it appears to be accidental, possibly game design bugs on the programmers' part, yet somehow such imperfects have made it even more of a masterpiece.

How do you convert dog dollars to people dollars?

What if I liek ded memez moar? Liek, say, this much? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3DkqMjfqqPc

Instant upvote from me.

Instant upvote, just display opossum

Yo dawg, I heard u liek memes, so we put a reply meme inside ur meme so u can react while you react

It's arguably so easy to "farm karma" that I accidentally did it for a while. Just kept posting silly puns to reply to stuff people post on the Florida Man subreddit.

Reddit karma ain't worth much at all.

On one hand downvotes are an expression of negativity, but on the other hand downvotes are an outlet for negativity.

Meanwhile, I'm scratching my head trying to figure out why a bunch of the top comments here got like one downvote each, lol.

I've generally found that avoiding the biggest crowds seems to also avoid some (though not all) of the worst behavior. More specialized subreddits, communities, and magazines tend to be more chill, and also more focused on their topics.

I was, but I finished her sprite and I'm just adding a light blue border right now. I don't quite have plans for what to do next.

I was using this https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/960003565940772994/1131966632013606952/sitting_v2.jpg

But I adjusted it to be symmetric and also I'm cutting out the chair.

Yeah, N64/PS1 era was when the industry started pushing 3D games hard, and it really feels like the beginning of the modern era to me too.

Where are these?

Thought: # of remaining virgin pixels is a little clouded by a couple things: people making mistakes then whiting them out, and people using default white space as part of designs

(not sure what you mean by # surviving pixels, but this was my first thought)

I'd like to see an overall heat map, yeah. I know that area in the top left quadrant with the four-color paint roller used to be something else that a user and their multiple alts tried hard to get on the Canvas.

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Ah, that's a neat thing to find out too.

I actually like that about this Canvas. The competition for space is much less intense so there was more of a collaboration than a competition vibe to the whole place.

May I request mander.xyz?

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