isosphere

@isosphere@beehaw.org
4 Post – 36 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

It's "rice" because it's asian; it's a derogatory term used towards people and their cars. When I was younger, this term was used against asian drivers and their asian cars - and it was not a compliment.

Looking at Urban Dictionary I see no mention of this anti-asian side of it, but it was there when I was growing up. Maybe others can chime in with their experience, I imagine it wasn't the same everywhere.

Not implying the people using it here are being racist, I don't think they are aware of what I'm recalling here.

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Celeste

A borderline racial slur about making things look good without substance behind the appearance: e.g.: "riced-up Honda civic"

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Office is weird about it because of their OneDrive product

Important question; author kind of answers here:

https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/comment/204729

If I were to rely on this for my instance, I would require that it be completely transparent and open source. It doesn't look like this is; you have to trust that it is making good selections, and give it power over your federation status. It's a dangerous tool, IMO, but I can understand why it would have appeal right now.

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I've been taking a lot of notes for ~16 years. When you write too many, they become write-only. It's too difficult to sift through them to find nuggets you can synthesize into something else. I've tried structuring my notes after writing them, but this becomes remarkably time consuming and difficult to do unless you are extremely diligent about how frequently you do it.

You've got to structure your notes as you write them, and LogSeq makes this easy.

I still take a lot of notes via "Note to self" in a messaging app; I don't use the LogSeq mobile app because of some opinions I have around syncing (if you pay, you can sync, but I want full ownership of my notes and to trust that they are private). However it's just a copy-and-paste for me, because I've got my hashtag structure figured out mostly.

I have a few tips for new users:

Use hashtags - but not indiscriminately.

It might take you some time to find the "themes" of your notes, before you've really wrapped your head around it you might just pepper hashtags everywhere. Eventually it becomes pretty clear. Use them diligently and later when you get fancy with search and queries you'll be glad you did.

Don't write massive blocks.

Separate larger thoughts in the outliner - sub-thoughts, parallel thoughts. Make child blocks. Remember that child blocks inherent the tags of their parent blocks, so don't repeat tags in child blocks or the search results will get messy. When you come to a conclusion, hide your evidence and reasoning under your conclusion for future reference.

Finally,

Journal!

I am very glad I've been journalling for so long. I wish I had done it more. Every now and then I go back to old journal entries and revisit the me of the past, and the problems I had. I can reflect on them, add amendments, and essentially have a conversation with myself through time. It is remarkably valuable.

My opinion on obsidian

I've used obsidian a bit. It is much more polished and so are the plugins. However, the long-form structure it promotes loses out on the second piece of advice I wrote above: don't write massive blocks. In my opinion, it is much easier to synthesize something later with your notes when you have structured them in an outlier format that is backed by a true graph structure with searchable parent/child relationships. It's more like how your brain works, and if you're using this as a second brain that's important.

I spent a lot of time learning from traders, and learning statistics. Most folks in trading use misleading profit and loss metrics to see if something is worth trading. I used the same kind of backtests, but I layered Bayesian inferencing on top of it.

I studied machine learning with Andrew Ng's courses, studied deep learning with Ian Goodfellow's book. Most importantly I took a course run by university professor and researcher in anthropology, Richard McElreath. I did my best to faithfully apply what I learned, though I am sure I strayed from academic standards.

At that point I had been doing this for years, for countless hours. It was my only hobby, and I dive hard into hobbies.

I tried my damnedest to be predictive every which way. I kept meticulous records to avoid fooling myself. Sometimes my models fooled me, and sometimes they combined with luck for my records to fool me. Long term, it's pretty clear. No evidence of any edge, ever, for any approach taken.

At the end of all of this toil and labour, I have the skills I learned along the way: statistical skepticism, a hands-on understanding of fat tails, an appreciation for the experience of randomness and the highs and lows of gambling. I think that's worth a lot - but I also think you can learn that a lot easier some other way.

I have done very well with buy and hold, it's fantastic. There's some bullshit in how you assign your portfolio - what proportions of what exposures - but its very profitable and exceptionally low stress compared to trading. It definitely has a better Sharpe/sortino/ulcer metric.

This is not answering your question (I can't argue for my current SWR, it's the trinity study minus a random fudge factor), but I've implemented an idea that I think others would benefit from.

I've been tracking my current withdrawal rate through time, based on my periodic calculation of baseline expenses. I suppose I could use actual expenses, but that's remarkably volatile, so instead I take the 6 month average of recurring costs.

The benefit is a nice time series graph I can watch. I can plot a horizontal line for my current expected return on capital, and another for my safe withdrawal rate.

The net result is a lot of information condensed nicely. You can see at a glance if you're trending towards safety, or away from it.

"The Lemmy Overseer" as I understand it is a backend service that gives us an API to use.

There is an open-source script for interacting with it. However, it does not tell you how that backend service works, exactly. It's a black box with well defined interfaces, best case, as I understand it.

I stick with vim for years out of that sort of badge of honor. Now I use vscode and nobody is taking it from me.

You can do almost anything in vim or emacs, but I can do it faster in vscode. It's a really fantastic tool and it's completely free.

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I still know permabulls that at least say they are buying with every paycheque. I doubt there are enough dollars doing that to keep the price afloat, if I were a whale I'd probably be selling, personally.

Open source and AGPL licensed, we can separate the code from them at any time and we do not need permission.

Agree re: $ towards instance admins; I have a tiny Mastodon instance and it isn't cheap.

Seconding Amid Evil, it's a lot of fun. Sometimes I fire it up for a quick game. Cool weapons.

Yeah, there's really no reason to spread this except to piss people off.

red alert... 2?

yeah, looks like a total conversion mod

the DLC for stellaris has been recieved poorly on Steam, going by reviews. I'm a little worried this is high margin low effort attempt to squeeze even more out of it

i hope it's good though!

Hard agree; I think academics and programmers are especially susceptible to this. It's an addiction that hooks in intellectual hubris, a condition I have some experience with.

it crashed the first time I tried to reply to this post

i getcha, but it was people who did that. it's kind of hard to shut us up, we'll answer more questions wherever we are

most knowledge has a shelf life anyway

I agree, but it should still be retired regardless of intended usage - history matters; we don't have to mistakenly other people to show off cool screenshots

I just got this game and I'm having a blast, this is the style of game I've been hungry for for a long time.

I love it in principal, but I found it reliable for long term operation. I was trying to use it as part of a home automation setup. Kept it updated, just had to be restarted all the time.

Your experience suggests maybe this isn't true anymore; are you aware of a time when stability was bad and now it's fixed?

I'm currently working on a disaster recovery plan using fsarchiver. I have very limited experience with it so far, but it had the features and social proof I was looking for.

I have so far used it to create offline filesystem backups of two volumes, one was LUKS encrypted (has to be manually "opened" with cryptsetup).

It can backup live filesystems which was important to me.

It's early days for my experience with this, but I'm sure others have used it and might chime in.

I'd probably do this for a hobby project

but financial software? no way in heck!

I'm too early in the game to know this well, but I feel the lack of mod support. This feels like a game that would really thrive with community support, but they have no plans on supporting mods or open sourcing it. They are currently working on a new project that they haven't elaborated on yet.

Still, I got this game for $14 and if I can find some people to play with I'm absolutely going to get my money's worth - this kind of game just doesn't exist with this level of depth. I love the technical detail of how the ship works on and how the systems interact with each other.

they look really great!

@StudioCaroline@mastodon.social recommended I try "underpatching", where you use some fabric to give the stitch something to hold on to beyond the already compromised material. Some people even do this in overt ways for the look of it. Here's one they shared, OP @ https://mastodon.social/@StudioCaroline/110521864616379151

Torn denim jeans patched from the inside with  yellow fabric and decorative stotchingy

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To yes-and this: procedural content in general. No Man's Sky is a snore-fest for me, big, empty, meaningless. Missions in Elite Dangerous and X4 are similarly pretty boring, though the former is more fun the first time around. There has to feel like there's some world-affecting point to what you're doing. IMO

yes!

It is pitch black.

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I'm wearing mine with pride! I know it looks kind of ratty, but it's so comfortable and I'm proud of being able to prolong its life. Senseless waste is pretty hateful to me, keeping things going is a great feeling, especially when it's a favourite!

I've heard that it's difficult for co-ops to borrow money, something about there being too many owners.

It seems to be a pretty rare structure. In Canada we had Mountain Equipment Co-op which was a great national company for a bit until the leadership was captured and they sold the entire thing off to a corporate interest. It's lost all ethos and is just a very expensive lifestyle brand now.

There's a gal on TikTok, I think her name is Madeline, that runs a business that she owns as sole proprietor (to please banks) but everyone in the company including her makes exactly the same day-rate pay. Decisions are made democratically. She's writing a book about her experience doing this.

All structures are vulnerable to capitalists though. As soon as people get complacent someone smells profit and exploits it.

Fewer overall matches then on Tinder, but the probability of a good date is higher. Overall worth using near a city. Outside of a city, I think you have to use whatever most people use. Or second most, if the first is Plenty of Fish.

I enjoyed the philosophy link, thank you.

sashiko style stitching

I was skimming this page on it and was left with some questions - it tells you what to do, but not why.

How much of Sashiko is style, and how much is utility? For ex. with the stitches chart at the bottom we are advised to "leave the center open", "avoid crossing over", "leave a slack loop on corners", but the purposes aren't explained.

I'm cool with it being for aesthetic reasons but I really like to understand what I'm doing, not much of a blind rule follower, and kind of a minimalist tbh.

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dabu dabu

whawhawhawhat do you want