Erika3sis

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 hours ago

I've used it a little. It often loads slowly for me, it seems like it's inaccurate in some places or lacks detail in some places, but as a whole I like it. I think it's a good project with a good future.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago (1 children)

rogue puppet shows

I can fuck with that

[–] [email protected] 39 points 1 week ago (5 children)

Streaming or torrenting? Nah, the power it takes to keep those servers running and cooled is enormous.

Buying DVDs? Nah, the manufacture and distribution of those also has an enormous carbon footprint.

Getting the plaintext script from the Internet and making a local theater production out of it? Now THAT'S peak carbon neutrality!

[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 week ago (1 children)

And when everyone's female... Muahahahahaha, no one will be.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Once again we see what I call the Seppo-Usonian-American tripartite division: the "Israeli" "Americans" or other "Americans" in "Israel", these are really Seppos through-and-through, they have sold their chance at dignity for a "guarantee" of protection by The Empire, making their own interests align with those of The Empire; the Palestinian Americans, and the solidary Americans in the West Bank generally, these are the true Americans, because for as much as their lives may or may not have been shaped by Americana or by living in the USA, their interests do not align with those of the USA, so these Americans in fact feel very acutely how little their lives actually matter to a USA that despite all evidence insists the contrary.

I genuinely feel like the word "American", as most people use it, is a sort of Janus word or contronym, it's a word with multiple contradictory meanings. I have already reflected on this in my own country in Northern Europe, that just because I happen to share a first language and a blue passport with the NATO ghouls, that this alone does not make me and them belong to the same nation, our nations are in fact not only distinct but in an antagonistic relationship with one another! And the "Israeli" "Americans" I would say have far more in common with those Seppo soldiers in Norway, and the Palestinian Americans far more in common with myself, than the opposite or either group with the other.

So this is not a dynamic that's unique to the (")Americans(") in "Israel"/Palestine, this is a dynamic that is omnipresent throughout the entirety of what people presently understand as the "American diaspora" — it just happens to be that in Palestine, the contradictions are much more plainly visible and felt and much more openly discussed... Except even in the case of Palestine, it's phrased as "Israeli Americans" and "Palestinian Americans", as if these groups somehow share a common "American-ness" that the US government is simply hypocritical about, as if it's "brother against brother". But call a Seppo a Seppo, and all the apparent hypocrisy of the US government towards its overseas citizens disappears in an instant.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago

I should clarify that I am not a parent nor a child psychologist nor anything else to that effect, I am only speaking from my own experience of being parented—

I remember being around that age and I had a similar problem of just watching absolute political slop on YouTube. My access to content was never restricted nor closely monitored, but when my mom caught me watching some reactionary bozo on occasion, she would just call it what it was — and then all of a sudden I found myself a lot less interested in that type of content. When she or others would point out the problems with what I was watching or the messages I got from the content, that showed me the "smoke and mirrors" of it. And insofar as I engaged in that content out of a desire to appear precocious... Well, realizing that I was manifesting the exact phenomenon that C.S. Lewis described in that famous quote of his about the "fear of childishness", and that my attempt to convince myself that I was more grown-up than I really was was collapsing in front of me, I just felt ashamed — but very specifically not humiliated.

So I think the best thing you can do is to understand what role these streamers really play for the child. Because it's probably not all wanting to be popular, it's probably not all wanting to appear precocious, and it's probably not all wanting to build an identity; just as it's probably not all noticing the ways in which they're genuinely getting screwed over, and acting on genuine frustrations, genuinely trying to understand why this is and what to do about it even with the limitations of their own lived experience; nor is it probably all learning about the world's issues and wanting to do their best to be a good person even about things that don't very obviously affect them personally.

Rather the child's enjoyment is in all likelihood probably some sort of blend of these or perhaps other things. If you can determine the composition of the blend, you will know where to strike to most effectively reveal the "smoke and mirrors", and make the child feel that sort of productive shame that causes actual self-reflection. You should aim to be like the elderly Hungarian-born immigrant saying "And that makes a difference, doesn't it?", if you're familiar with that old propaganda film: shame is a negative emotion that makes one want to avoid the cause of the feeling, and it should be your aim to make the child identify the cause of the shame to be the shameful thing rather than the one shaming.

I trust that you're on good terms with your child and only have good intentions, so I think that you will succeed. And of course I should reiterate that my own perspective is limited, and what worked for myself might not work for everyone.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

It seems a rare opportunity, so yes, I would like to know from the horse's mouth as it were.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

What makes Luxembourg specifically the lower limit of area for a viable country? If it is that a country smaller than Luxembourg cannot feed its current population using only the resources of its land and territorial waters, then my point is that there are also countries way bigger than Luxembourg for which this is also the case -- but you could not call these countries microstates or neocolonies with a straight face.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Does this mean that Norway is by your definition a neocolony?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I didn't make any comments guessing it was Gibraltar, but honestly I had a suspicion it was Gibraltar. I would recommend that you look into urban agriculture, generally keep reading theory and reading local history and news and interacting with your local environment, and learning about regions similar to Gibraltar. Gibraltar may have virtually no industry now, but I wouldn't be so sure that this will always be the case. A fun game you might want to try is to take something you know to be true, imagining that it's somehow become the opposite, setting a time frame for this change, and then trying to imagine how this change came to be.

By the way, were you worried that mentioning you were from Gibraltar would trigger a discussion about the conflict surrounding Gibraltar's status? I definitely have semi-informed things to say about that topic, but I don't know if now's the right time.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

I once saw a documentary about food independence in the Bahamas, but it seems like this documentary is gone from YouTube now, and I don't know where else I can find it. It brought up all sorts of techniques that Bahamians are using to grow their own food despite the negligible amount of arable land in the country. Other countries have dealt with a lack of arable land by simply building more land, but whether land reclamation is at all feasible in your country is not for me to say.

In any case, there should be two aims for the food and goods issue:

  1. To become more self-reliant — even if a country grows only 20% of its own food, that's still more independent than a country that grows only 10%, and 10% more than 5%, 5% more than 1%, 1% more than 0%. Even if full food independence is impossible, even a small increase is better than nothing.
  2. To become less reliant on any one country or bloc — importing 80% of your food from, say, the USA, gives the USA a lot more influence over the country than importing only 20% of your food from the USA. Diversifying sources of imports protects the country from shocks to supply chains.

I think we can compare a country to the case of an individual person: you sell your labor power to the capitalist class to get a wage that you largely spend paying for food, utilities, housing, other goods and services, and this ends up only giving that money back to the capitalist class. So it's a dependent relationship, you can't provide yourself with all of life's necessities. However, you can still find ways to become more independent, and you can find ways to get more of your necessities from other people in a way that doesn't feed into (or feeds less into) this dependent relationship. Doing these things, you might still need to sell your labor power to the capitalist class in order to survive, and you might still give much of your earnings back to the capitalists, but you'll at least have something to fall back on if you try to assert yourself and things don't quite go your way.

So I might say that a focus for the left in your country should be organization across national lines. Wins for the socialists in the countries yours imports from is a win for your own country's independence. In other words, don't get too distracted by lines on a map, that you don't look at the systems of dependence themselves, because these systems also impact many regions recognized as parts of larger countries.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 week ago

RESULTS FOR TODAY'S BATTLE...

BOTH SIDES LOSE DUE TO A REALLY, REALLY OBVIOUS OVERSIGHT

 
  1. "Hand Talk" is already a commonly-used name for Plains Indian Sign Language, and so search results for the Hand Talk app end up burying or displacing search results for this endangered indigenous sign language.
  2. Hand Talk's translations are according to multiple reviews absolutely fucking dogshit, so dogshit that it would in fact seem like no proficient signers were actually involved in its development.

When the app boasts about being powered by "artificial intelligence", and its website has a whole page titled "for your company", I can't exactly say that I'm surprised. It really seems like this is just some tech startup trying to make big promises about accessibility and AI in order to win investors, reminding me of much of the technology shown in this video — while Hand Talk's main purpose in practice is probably just to allow corpos to cut costs on accessibility by "letting the AI do it".

It becomes quite striking, then, that on the "for you" page of their official website, that all five reviews that they choose to highlight from regular everyday people come from hearing people with no prior knowledge of Deaf culture or SL, rather than actual Deaf people talking about how the app has helped them; that none of the awards they highlight on the "about us" page come from Deaf organizations, and only one of the awards is actually related to accessibility; and that none of the three founders of the startup have any apparent background in Deaf culture whatsoever... Yes, I am sure that "advertising graduate and strategic communication specialist elected by Forbes as one of the most promising young people in Brazil" decided to found a sign language translation app Out Of The Goodness Of His Heart.

But hey, it's not like I'm proficient in any sign languages myself, and it's not like I've actually given the app a try, so maybe I'm just being presumptive from just a few bad reviews and a general "gross tech startup" vibe that this app is shittier than it really is. If any Deaf people have any positive experiences with this app, or with any apps like it, then I'd quite like to know your thoughts.

What stood out to me about the Hand Talk app was how it uses animated characters, because this reminded me of my own idea for SLiki, a sign language wiki made up of collaborative character animations. The difference is that Hand Talk presents itself as a translation tool, whereas SLiki would assume its users to already be proficient in the sign language in question; and while Hand Talk has a closed set of signs that it knows, and fingerspells everything else, SLiki would allow users to freely modify and crowdsource signs. And also SLiki would probably use Reimu and Marisa or some shit as its default models instead of these generic corporate art style characters that Hand Talk uses, and SLiki would be FOSS that would actually, y'know, try to incorporate its target demographic into the development process.

Once again, If Only I Knew How To Code.

 

cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/3081907 and https://hexbear.net/post/3076602

For instance, did it go OK to wear sunglasses indoors; or did the eye contact avoidance disappear when using the sign language, only to reappear when using a spoken language; things like that.

Didn't get any responses the previous two times I asked, so I might as well ask one last time.

 

cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/3076602

For instance, did it go OK to wear sunglasses indoors; or did the eye contact avoidance disappear when using the sign language, only to reappear when using a spoken language; things like that.

Crossposting because I didn't get any responses the first time.

 

For instance, did it go OK to wear sunglasses indoors; or did the eye contact avoidance disappear when using the sign language, only to reappear when using a spoken language; things like that.

 

Louisiana and Quebec are both settler-colonial territories at the mouths of major navigable rivers, and both have a history of Francophony. But why was French broadly displaced by English in Louisiana, while this has not happened in Quebec? What are the different historical factors that led to these different outcomes? In particular, what were the roles of the rivers, if any? What is the present language situation in these regions, and what would you predict the future language situations of these regions to look like?

 

In a move that has surprised countless fans of the classic Kyoto Animation animated series, and the comic strip by Kakifly on which it was based, the national flag carrier of Iceland announced on X (formerly Twitter) that a third season of the K-On! anime would be released exclusively on Icelandair in-flight entertainment (IFE) systems from June to November 2025, beginning just in time for the Nordic island's tourism high season, and ending just in time for the Iceland Airwaves music festival. The announcement of the exclusive anime came shortly after Icelandair's earlier announcement that the airline would begin making direct flights from Keflavík to Kansai — the airline's first destination in East Asia.

K-On! season 3, also known by its Icelandic title Rokkstúlkurnar, is to be an "ambitious multinational project" which will "bolster the tourism and creative industries of two famous island nations", the anime's official website states. Characters Mugi, Ritsu, Yui, and Mio, now in their early 20s, find themselves studying abroad in Iceland and working part-time jobs together at a petrol station on Laugavegur under the supervision of Georg Bjarnfreðarson of Næturvaktin fame. At the same time, the girls see famous sights of Iceland, and practice music with famous Icelandic musicians such as Björk (co-performing the ending theme) and Bubbi Morthens (co-performing the opening theme), in preparation for their band Ho-kago Tea Time's big performance at the annual Iceland Airwaves music festival. The real-life Ho-kago Tea Time, consisting of the characters' voice actresses, will perform at the festival in real life as well.

Episodes of K-On! season 3 will be released three at a time on the first of every month, each episode having a 30 minute runtime. The season's total runtime will then be 9 hours across 18 episodes.

Industry commentators have questioned the purpose and efficacy of this "publicity stunt", considering whether an eighteen-episode IFE-exclusive anime will be effective enough at promoting tourism and the Iceland Airwaves music festival to be worth the cost for the parties involved, and whether making the anime IFE-exclusive might alienate fans of the series. Other commentators theorize that the anime serves to distract from criticisms of Icelandair's carbon footprint and contributions to overtourism.

Nevertheless, many fans of K-On! expressed joy and cautious optimism following the announcement.

 

My girlfriend (23) and I (M22) have been together for three years now. My girlfriend started her transition last year. And at first I was fine with her maid costumes and cat ears, and the way she voice trained by saying "ara ara", but lately my girlfriend has been taking all this anime stuff way too far. Yesterday's incident was the worst one yet. That afternoon I tried to call my girlfriend to invite her over, but she wouldn't answer… Then about ten minutes later I saw out of my front window, an M1 Abrams tank driving down the street, while being chased by police cars and helicopters.…Yeah, it turns out that my girlfriend had taken the whole "tanks are feminine" spiel from Girls und Panzer a bit too literally. And honestly, I should've guessed that "I'm going to joyride a tank" was what my girlfriend meant when she tweeted "Miho Nishizumi is so gender, #MTF #goals", but I just didn't think my girlfriend had it in her to deal $230,000 in property damage and injure 12 people. So yesterday's incident has put a serious strain on our relationship, and I could really just use some advice. Thanks!

 
 

Denne serien snakker om mye interessant, det hele føles egentlig som en herlig liten smak av et veldig rikt språk som nordmenn flest tenker ikke så mye på og som jeg selv kan ikke forstå eller bruke.

Apropos, jeg lastet ned en app på mobilen som heter Mearka, utgitt av Statped, som er en trespråklig norsk-nordsamisk-NTS oversettelsesordbok. Denne app-en til og med inkluderer de særsamiske tegnene på NTS. Æ'kke det det RÅESTE du har noen gang hørt‽


This series talks about a lot of interesting stuff, it all feels like a sweet little taste of a very rich language that most Norwegians don't really think much about and which I myself cannot use or understand.

By the way, I downloaded a mobile app called Mearka, published by whatchamacallit, the Norwegian State Special Pedagogical Service or something, which is a trilingual translation dictionary for Norwegian, Northern Sámi, and NSL/NTS. This app even includes the uniquely Sámi signs in NSL/NTS. Isn't that the COOLEST thing you have ever heard‽

 

It uses SignWriting, which is currently the most popular proposal for a sign language writing system. SignWriting does have Unicode support, but nevertheless this Wikipedia Incubator is kinda buggy for me.

Although I've long been familiar with SignWriting, the way I personally would've imagined a SL wiki working would've been a sort of programmable animation that anyone can edit, maybe even a bit like a Scratch project. Because although SignWriting is the most popular SL writing system, it's far from universally accepted, and not all signers are going to be literate in it. Though I suppose endorsement from the Wikimedia Foundation might very well be what it takes for SignWriting to reach that critical mass for widespread adoption, if the ASL Wikipedia Incubator ever becomes graduated to an actual full-fledged ASL Wikipedia.

 

The surplus value went to Builderman 'cause he owned Noob's Place's bricks

And thousands of Robloxians like Noob did every day

Checked Robux conversion rates — alas, Tix went away!

For Builderman is bourgeoisie, and Noobs are merely proles:

That is the class contrast they have, e'en Guests know these two roles!

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