Currently sitting in a field waiting to walk for graduation, AMA
I’m sitting here for the next 30-40 minutes with no one to talk to, AMA
I’m sitting here for the next 30-40 minutes with no one to talk to, AMA
I was recently thinking of a new way to describe to my spouse (and to myself) how my mind works when it comes to performing tasks. This is a regularly occuring conversation, as her needs and mine often run counter to each other and leave us both frustrated. I have trouble understanding even my own reactions to things, let alone hers, so I try to explain them in new terms occasionally to see if it makes things click.
Anyway, I came up with one that I found apt and kinda fun, if maybe a bit sad in places: a DnD 5e character sheet. For the purposes of this exercise, the sheet is for a sorcerer, not a wizard (learning new tasks happens slowly, almost at random) and the Frustration mechanic is effectively identical to Exhaustion in the PHB.
Here it is. I'm curious if any of you have thoughts on this or find it feeling familiar.
Spell list:
Cantrips:
Relax
Read
Eat
Get ready for bed ¹
1st level:
Choose to go to bed ²
Get ready to leave
Choose a meal
Prepare a meal
Work on dishes
Take out trash
Do laundry
Other chores
Do a favor (unasked)*
2nd level:
Do a favor (asked)*
Stifle frustration ³
3rd level:
Do a big favor (asked)*
Dismiss frustration ⁴
Feat - People Pleaser: When casting "Do a favor (unasked)", roll a d20. On a 15 or higher, cast as a cantrip instead. When casting "Do a favor (asked)", roll a d20. On a 5 or lower, add 1 level of frustration. When casting "Do a big favor (asked)", roll a d20. On a 10 or lower, add 1 level of frustration.
Feat - Desperate Times Call for Desperate Measures: Regenerate 1 spell slot of any level. Add 1 level of frustration.
Feat - Self Soothe: whenever casting a cantrip, roll a d20. On a 19 or 20, remove 1 level of frustration.
Curse - Temper: whenever casting a spell of 1st level or higher, roll a d20 with advantage. On a 2 or lower, add a level of frustration.
Curse - Social Anxiety: when interacting with another character, roll a d20. On a 5 or lower, burn 1 spell slot or add 1 level of frustration.
¹ Must be cast on the turn following casting "Choose to go to bed." Otherwise, this becomes a 1st level spell.
² After casting this spell, any spell other than a cantrip must be cast one level higher than usual (e.g., 1st level spells can only be cast using 2nd level spell slots).
³ Temporarily remove 1 level of frustration. It returns after d20X10 minutes.
⁴ Permanently remove 1 level of frustration.
Well, I have a lot of stuff going on.
In May, I graduated with my Bachelor's degree in Computer Science. That was good, and I was glad to do so. After that I took a short well deserved break. It feels so good not to have to go to class and listen to a lecture from a lecturer who doesn't want to be there.
Now that I have my degree, I need to find a job that uses that degree. (or any thing remotely related) That may sound simple enough, but it is tough.
I don't know what I want to do with my degree. That's hard for me to say, but it's true. Like I have always been looked at as someone who was "smart" and "had it together" or "had a straight path". Very much not. Anyway, I don't know what all that degree qualifies me for. I know it opens me up to the development field. I did a lot of programming through college and between, but it's not something I really enjoy. I am not particularly bad at it. It just not something I really want to be doing 100% of the time all the time. Then there is the IT field. I am not so sure where I really would like to go in IT though. Support is not really an ideal place for me. I am terrified of the idea of having to talk on a phone. I can do in person support better. Then there is infrastructure. I am kinda interested in infrastructure, but it is huge. I don't even know what to look for in that area. I am just a kid with a CS degree, I don't have this figured out.
I live in the middle of nowhere. or at least it feels like it (rural central Arkansas) You have to really look at the next city over for anything. Even then most things I see are out of the capital. There is nothing bad about any of this. I got my degree in the next city over, drove there every day. The capital is only 40 - 50 minutes away.
It feels like everyone wants to see experience. Either directly or indirectly. This is hard for me. I don't have any professional experience at all. I have some personal projects I have worked on. I do have those listed in my resume. I don't feel that helps that much. I spent my time getting that degree, not working.
Family is troublesome. In many many ways. They are always like "you need to get a job", "have you found anything yet", "are you filling out a job application". Like please leave me alone about this. I am doing what I am doing. You don't have to know every single thing about me. I am me, not you. Troublesome and frustrating. Another thing is they are stuck in the past. Two of them are going deaf. One of them is nuts, and does not know how to respect privacy at all. Its a lot. It leaves me with an annoying bootstrapping problem I have to solve. I still live with my parents, with my grandparents next house over. I have to get a place that is away from family. To do that I need to get a job. To really look hard, and even want to do so and not just do some and get frustrated, I need to get away from family. There are solutions. Just go elsewhere and look for stuff. Not easy when they always want to know where you are all the damn time. Always wanting you to keep them updated and know where you are. I have a few tricks, location services is very inaccurate when wifi is turned off. I also can just say "I am going somewhere", and when they ask more I just say "I am 23 blooming years old". Not the kind of trouble I want to go through all time. Family is frustrating. Even more so, when you are an introvert and just want to be alone for a while. When you get into actually doing something, they come to you to ask about something. "do you know where this [item] is?", "I need you to do this [task]". It's like they can sense when you are actually focus or are just vibing or actually happy. They go on and complain that you snap at them. When they were the ones that were interrupting a rare moment of focus, or appear out of nowhere. Annoying to say the least. Never the one to actually win. By default, "I am older and know more then you", "I gave birth to you". Saying I am in trouble when I do nothing wrong. Like when I got in trouble for going to my grandparents house early in the morning during the summer. Lost all trust that summer. Or when I shared some cinnamon rolls that I bought with my grandparents. Got into trouble for not bringing my parents any. It was just a kind gesture and I am made to feel like I don't care about anybody over it. Troublesome and difficult.
If you just read all that, thanks. I promise I am decently put together in real life. That is rawer then I would usually like to put out.
So far I still don't have a good title for this post so I guess I'll just add some more.
I have not found anything yet. I have not applied to many places yet. I did apply to a regional ISP and got an interview, but was rejected for lack of work history to show I can deal with phone support, and for potential lack of clarity. I applied to a local audio cable manufacturer, but was caught by ats or lack of checking. Actually applied to their website for that one. I have asked some of the local Facebook groups "who was hiring locally in CS / IT fields". I got a few responses from it. A pyramid scheme. Someone who would look at their employer. They didn't have anything open, but at least they have my information now. Someone who is likely looking more so for a general laborer then an IT person. I still kinda want to hear them out, but they still haven't said anything else to me. I have brushed up my LinkedIn. I have also signed up for more accounts then I would have liked. I have talked with a local employment agency, but I don't think they will find anything like what I am looking for.
Well, its a process, and I am just at the beginning. If you do have any advice for my job search I would be glad to read it.
TLDR: Dotz graduated and is looking for a job, then rants about family.
I've been thinking perhaps I'll need to get one of the desktop LLM UI. I've been out of touch with the state of the art of end user LLM as I've been exclusively using it via API, but tech-y people (who are not developers) mostly talk about the end-user products that I lack the knowledge of.
Ethical problems aside, the problem with non-API usage is, even if you pay, I can't find one that have better privacy policy than API. And the problem with API version is that it is not as good as the completed apps unless you want to reinvent the wheel. The apps also may include ads in the future, while API technically cannot as it would affect some downstream usecases.
| Provider | Data Retention (API) | Data Retention (Consumer) | UI-only features |
|---|---|---|---|
| ChatGPT Plus | 30 days, no training | Training opt-out, 30 days for temp. chat, unknown retention otherwise | Voice, Canvas, Image generation in chat, screensharing, Mobile app |
| Google AI Pro | 0 | 72 hours if you disable history, or up to 3 years and trained upon otherwise | Android assistant, Canvas, AI in Google Drive/Docs, RAG (NotebookLM), Podcast generation, Browser use (Mariner), Coding (Gemini CLI), Screensharing |
| Gemini in Google Workspace | See above | 0-18 months, but no human review/training | See above |
| Claude Pro | 30 days | Up to 2 years (no training without opt-in) | Coding, Artifact, Desktop app, RAG, MCP |
As a dual use technology, the table doesn't include the extra retention period if they detect an abuse. Additionally, if you click on thumbs up/down it may also be recorded for the provider's employee to review.
I don't think OpenWebUI, self hosted models, etc. would suffice if they are not built to the same quality as the first party products. I know I'm probably asking for something that doesn't exists here, but at least I hope it will bring to people's attention that even if you're paying for the product you might not get the same privacy protection as API users.
Id never heard the terms satisfier or maximizer til I was having a discussion with my then girlfriend about the difference in the way we select things. The difference became apparent when she wanted to buy a new lawnmower. We walked into a big box store, she looked at a row of 10 mowers and said "I want that one" pointing at the second one. Being a maximizer I thought she meant that was her first choice out of the 10 options here but obviously we had two more stores and many more options to check out.
Nope.
She meant she had looked them over in 2 minutes and THAT mower was her final choice.
I honestly was quite surprised. "You don't wanna shop around? Compare features? Compare prices?" No, that's not what satisfiers do. Satisfiers just find the first thing that satisfies their needs and go with it.
Which is why my wife can select anything and everything very quickly and I end up making a spreadsheet to do a thorough cost benefit analysis on anything important. I even had one when I was dating for every woman I went out for coffee. And fortunately, she didn't - she just started reverse alphabetically and since my username was near the end of the alphabet I won the luck of the draw.
And here we are happily celebrating our 15th anniversary next week. Who says you gotta be the same to be compatible lol?
Are you a satisfier or a maximizer?
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any films you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
When Musk bought Twitter and "unleashed free speech" on the platform, it made me curious about other social media platforms, specifically one where data and privacy are much more respected.
That inevitably lead me to mastodon. I opened an account and all that, but I must be doing it wrong, or maybe mastodon just isn't what I want it to be.
I don't really know who or what to follow on there that would create an experience that draws me in.
In fairness, it could just be that I am not following interesting accounts but I follow 7 accounts
and the rest are just news outlets like Ars Technica, Electronic Frontier Foundation and Propublica, which ain't bad but like, they post links to long-form articles, which isn't really what you are really looking for if you are just doing a light skim of your feed for a quick 5 minutes.
Are interesting folks not on mastodon? or I am just not following the right accounts? Im interested in tech stuff and social issues and some politics (but not much cause that can get doom scrolly fast)
This is the fourteenth of an ongoing series of book discussions here on Tildes. We are discussing A People's Future of the United States. Our next book will be A House with Good Bones by Kingfisher at the end of June
This was our first collection of short stories. Please feel free to discuss any story you read regardless of whether you finished the collection.
I don't have a particular format in mind for this discussion, but I will post some prompts and questions as comments to get things started. You're not obligated to respond to them or vote on them though. So feel free to make your own top-level comment for whatever you wish to discuss, questions you have of others, or even just to post a review of the book you have written yourself.
For latecomers, don't worry if you didn't read the book in time for this Discussion topic. You can always join in once you finish it. Tildes Activity sort, and "Collapse old comments" feature should keep the topic going for as long as people are still replying.
And for anyone uninterested in this topic please use the Ignore Topic feature on this so it doesn't keep popping up in your Activity sort, since it's likely to keep doing that while I set this discussion up, and once people start joining in.
I'm going to finish this weekend. We will discuss in the second half of next week.
Next week we will be discussing the City We Became. Our next book discussion after that will be at the end of January.
I've organized this schedule so that longer books are followed by shorter ones. I look forward to reading with you.
Last week in January : Kim Stanley Robinson Ministry for the Future,
Last week in February: Trevor Noah Born a Crime,
Last week in March: Dan Simmons Hyperion,
Last week in April: Adrian Tchaikovsky Elder Race,
Last week in May: Victor LaValle a People's Future of the United States,
Last week in June: T Kingfisher A House with Good Bones,
Last week in July: James McBride the Heaven and Earth grocery Store,
Last week in August: Cats Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut
Last week in September: Ted Chiang Stories of Your Life and Others
Back in January I was tasked by my brother in law to create a murder mystery parlor game during our family reunion in an Irish castle. Well we just got back last night, and it ended up being one of the most fun vacations of my life.
This is a family of social over-achievers. Super engaged professionals and executives and teachers. A dozen of them would stay up every night drinking and laughing til 2am, sleep 5 hours, then do it all over again. I have trouble keeping up, so I'm glad the game I designed happened on one of the first nights. At first, the mastermind behind this whole trip only gave me 90 minutes for the middle of the day but he lost control of the schedule and I got my three hours in the dark as is proper for a game like this.
All 21 players absolutely committed, bringing vintage costumes and props across the Atlantic for this one night. I created a deck of character cards for each of them, as well as a number of other special prop and event cards, and as they were all getting dressed I texted them their roles.
This was the first hangup. The castle had very poor cell and wifi reception so the texts didn't go through. But all 22 of us had iPhones so I ended up AirDropping everyone's character and gave them personal, private notes. I wouldn't mention the tech glitch otherwise, but this absolutely changed my own strategy as the dead victim, Lord Reginald Springfield. I thought I would be in a kind of control room with my laptop receiving texts from the butler or others when they found certain props. But because they couldn't communicate like that, I had to shadow them through the rooms and sprint like the devil in anticipation of their next moves to certain parts of the castle and its grounds.
Having never done this, and certainly not at this scale, I was surprised by several of their own strategies. At the outset, the butler convened (most of) the group and announced the reading of the will. Then the cops showed up to tell everyone the will was missing, Lord Springfield was poisoned and dead in bed, and that they were all suspects. The Inspector and Constable then began interviewing the subjects one by one.
I'm aware that normal police procedure is to isolate suspects for interviews, specifically to compare notes and find the lies afterward. But I didn't think these two players were aware of that. Turned out I was wrong. Instead of interviewing everyone in front of each other, they squirreled each suspect away and gave them the business, taking copious notes that they shared with no one.
Taking their own cues from this, when the suspects began making their own conjectures and discovering clues, they shared them with absolutely no one unless forced. It was perfect game theory. I just didn't expect these competitive bastards to be so very competitive. It was fantastic. The chaos agents played their parts beautifully, muddying the waters, and the spiritualists spent all their time trying to find all seven of their number to convene a seance. Once they did, I raced into my room and put on a long white nightgown and drew a kind of kabuki corpse makeup on my face. They were racing around in the courtyard outside in the last of the sun and I tap...tap...tapped on the window until one of them saw me, an apparition in a castle window. Classic imagery. She pointed and screamed.
All seven spiritualists (except for the devilish Colonel, who only pretended to be one so he could eavesdrop on the seance) piled into the parlor and held hands. I started walking down the upstairs hall toward them moaning a very haunting melody line from an early Frank Zappa album over and over, then entered the parlor. They said their hair stood on end lol. I whispered my answers then disappeared and later, my widow Lady Eleanor found the burned note in the fireplace of that room.
Tremendous dramatic moment here: That's the note that revealed I wrote them all out of the will and left the entire estate to Madame DuBois. But Eleanor of all people found it and you could see her internal torment. Then she turned away from them all and didn't share it. For nearly another hour they labored to puzzle out the clues while she acted out very well the utter destruction of her life. Absolutely choice stuff.
The twist I had planned is that most of the clues pointed toward Vicar Atkinson and he himself only knew that he blacked out after an argument with the victim. So his card tells him that he is almost certainly guilty and if they accused him, to flee. The line of his card at the end is my personal favorite: But if they actually do accuse you, your only chance is to run. That Inspector is old and the Constable is a woman. How fast can she be? I don't think that Tyler (the vicar) knew that his west coast cousin Lena (Constable Wright) was a huge track star, 100 meters champion, crowned fastest girl in San Francisco two years in a row. I wanted to see her run his ass down like The Flash.
But alas, the real murderer, Hanne (Ingrid) is from Hamburg, Germany and although her card told her she had poisoned the victim while leaving no clues, and that all she had to do was keep a poker face and she was in the clear, she simply couldn't do it. Asking a proper German hausfrau to lie to the police, even in a FUCKING GAME, was too stressful for her and she broke down and confessed the entire thing. I'd hoped to finish this neat and tidy Agatha Christie affair with an accusation and arrest of the vicar, delighted by the idea that justice was NOT served and the wrong man was convicted. Very post-modern take on the whole thing. Two days later I shared all my notes as planned and that was when I'd expected them to realize they'd let the real killer slip away... But never count on duplicity from a Teutonic mind.
We took antique photos of everyone's insane costumes which I can't share for privacy. But they were perfect. It was an absolute smash hit, with people spending the rest of the week recounting the plots and sub-plots and attacking each other in character. The next night was a family trivia night. The following night was a filming of two musical scenes from Rocky Horror. The following night we rented a traditional Irish band and they gave us a concert in the 15th century hall. We took day trips to Dingle and Limerick and Cork and I hiked and biked and two days ago I was swimming in the Shannon River outside Killaloe.
An excellent trip all around. Thanks for reading. Happy to answer any and all questions and yeah now I guess I have a side hustle as a murder mystery game designer if anyone needs me.
Follow-up to my one gallon post here.
And technically, it's 5 gallons and 3 pints after this morning's platelet donation. I'd hit the five gallon milestone with my last one but didn't realize it. Never too late to celebrate though!
One of my co-workers is also a regular donor, and we've bonded over it. One time we were at lunch, eating in the teachers' lounge with a bunch of our colleagues. We were having a group conversation about blood donation, the pain of sticks, the fears of something going wrong, etc. It was kind of a downer conversation about the whole thing. After the group moved on to a different topic, she quietly leaned toward me and whispered "this is going to sound weird, but I actually like doing it."
She couldn't have found a better person to confide in! I feel exactly the same way.
It sounds weird that I like having someone stick needles in my arm and withdrawing my life force. It sounds even weirder when I say that I like donating platelets, in which I can't move my arms for two hours, and also the tape they use rips out my arm hair (this genuinely is worse than the needle sticks, by the way).
I think that's framing it the wrong way though.
I like doing it because it's something I can easily do, it doesn't cost me anything, and I know I'm helping people out. I read a comment online once about donating that stuck with me. It said something to the effect of:
The person who will be getting your donation is undergoing much worse, and they also don't have a choice in the matter.
I think about this in those times where I am a little anxious or nervous that things might hurt.
Yes, the sticks are painful sometimes. Yes, my arm hair getting ripped out is uncomfortable. Yes, sometimes I need to scratch my nose and I simply can't and I want to crawl out of my skin for a few minutes until the feeling subsides.
But that's nothing compared to the person with cancer who's getting my platelets. Or the car-crash victim who gets my blood.
I also think about it in terms of the bystander effect. It's easy to just assume that blood or platelets will be there for people who need it, but that only happens if people deliberately choose to donate.
I want to be one of those people who does it deliberately.
And so far I have: to the tune of FIVE GALLONS!
The last thing I'll say is that part of why I like doing it is because I really like my donation center. The staff there are excellent. I prefer doing it at a place like that than one of the closer, more convenient pop-up options because I feel like if something were to go wrong (god forbid), then a designated site is likely to have the supplies, preparation, and expertise in dealing with the issue.
For example: I have had a few times where the phlebotomist has whiffed one of the sticks for my arm. Each time, they've immediately called over the manager (who you can tell is esteemed by ALL of the staff for being VERY good at getting sticks right -- one time I heard a phlebotomist audibly "ooh" in amazement as she fixed their stick in my arm). She's been able to fix the issue each time.
Thankfully, those issues have been infrequent. Most of the time they do everything great and I barely feel a thing.
They also follow cleanliness and administrative protocols to a well-crossed, perfectly symmetrical T. It's comical, but I'll get asked my name and date of birth probably four different times during a platelet donation, because at each new step of the process they make sure that they've got the right paperwork, vials, and patient. It's always funny to me that they ask me this before they take the needles out of my arms, after I've been stuck in the chair unable to move for two hours. Do they think I somehow snuck out and someone else took my place when they weren't looking?
Of course, they're doing it not for me but to make sure everything gets properly labeled, but I genuinely appreciate the thoroughness. I feel very safe with them because they consistently operate with such a high level of care. If you've been turned off of donating due to bad experiences in the past, I recommend finding a good permanent donation center near you if you're willing to revisit it.
Anyway, that's all I have to say. I wanted to share my personal milestone. Again, as a gay guy who wasn't allowed to donate blood for DECADES, it feels really, REALLY good to be able to finally give back in this way.
I'm one of those mythical Linux users who has been using it for years but has little to no idea what's going on behind the scenes or under the hood.
In my time using it, I've sort of passively gleaned that certain things are controversial, but I don't necessarily know why. It's also hard for me to know if these are just general intra-community drama/bikeshedding, or if these are actually big, meaningful issues.
If you're someone who's in the know, here's your chance to lay out a Linux controversy in a way that's understandable by someone like me, who can't tell you why people always make "GNU/Linux" jokes for some reason whenever people mention "Linux."
Here are some things that have pinged for me as controversial in my time using Linux:
There are certainly more -- these are just the ones I can remember off the top of my head.
Replies don't have to be limited to the above topics. I'm interested in getting the lay of the land about any Linux controversy.
This topic is intended for learning, not bickering.
It's fine to discuss these in good faith, but I do not want this topic to become yet another Linux battleground online. There are plenty of those already!
Optional sentence stems in the comments- feel free to add your own.
I will know if you cheat or use AI because I know how you write. Graphic organizers are available but not required. I don't care if you're texting your mom, put it away. Also, my name isn't bruh, but lately I find myself responding to it anyway.
Disclaimer: I do not like LLMs. I am not going to fight you on if you say LLMs are shit.
One of the things I find interesting about conversations on LLMs is when have a critique about them, and someone says, "Well, it's no different than people." People are only as good as their training data, people misremember / misspeak / make mistakes all the time, people will listen to you and affirm you as you think terrible things. My thought is that not being reliably consistent is a verifiable issue for automation. Still, I think it's excellent food for thought.
I was looking for new music venues the other day. I happened upon several, and as I looked at their menu and layout, it occurred to me that I had eaten there before. Not there, but in my city, and in others. The Stylish-Expensive-Small-Plates-Record-Bar was an international phenomenon. And more than that, I couldn't help but shake that it was a perversion of the original, alluring concept-- to be in a somewhat secretive record bar in Tokyo where you'll be glared into the ground if you speak over the music.
It's not a bad idea. And what's wrong with evoking a good idea, especially if the similarity is just unintentional? Isn't it helpful to be able to signal to people that you're like-that-thing instead of having to explain to people how you're different? Still, the idea of going just made me assume it'd be not simply like something I had experienced before, but played out and "fake." We're not in Tokyo, and people do talk over the music. And even if they didn't, they have silverware and such clanging. It makes me wonder if this permutation is a lossy estimation of the original concept, just chewed up, spat out, slurped, regurgitated, and expensively funded.
other forms of conceptual perversion:
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any films you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
Find yourself watching tons of great videos on [insert chosen video sharing platform], but also find yourself reluctant to flood the Tildes front page with them? Then this thread is for you.
It could be one quirky video that you feel deserves some eyeballs on it, or perhaps you've got a curated list of videos that you'd love to talk us through...
Share some of the best video content you've watched this past week/fortnight with us!
Main event - Saturday June 21st:
CEST/GMT+2
Track Information: 25.378 km combined circuit located in Nürburg, Germany
Streaming/Radio
ADAC RAVENOL 24h Nürburgring (YouTube) - Official ADAC race streams and many on-board streams available.
Nürburgring (YouTube) - More official race streams/24h Classic race stream.
Live Timing
Will try to update info/links as the race goes on.
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like linux, rockets.reusable and louvre. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was keenly observing.
But one of my favourite tags happens to be offbeat! Taking its original inspiration from Sir Nils Olav III, this thread is looking for any far-fetched offbeat stories lurking in the newspapers. It may not deserve its own post, but it deserves a wider audience!
In short: the prospect of generative AI becoming increasingly prevalent has been gnawing away at me for a long time now. It's looking like there are no limits that will matter in the near future. But interfacing with generative AI in basically any capacity instills in me a kind of existential horror and revulsion that I don't think I can live with in my day-to-day life. Unfortunately, it seems that generative AI will soon become unavoidable in any white-collar career path, to say nothing of casual exposure in everyday life. I try as hard as possible to shield myself, but I doubt that will be realistically possible for much longer.
I'm in a graduate program, but I'm not confident that my field will still be relevant in five years. Even if it is, I'll almost certainly spend a lot of time interfacing with generative AI, the thought of which makes me nauseous.
Frankly, I'm so disgusted with what the world has become and what it is becoming that it's turning me into kind of a nasty person IRL.
So I'm musing on ways to get out. On finding a way to make enough money to stay alive while having as little contact with the digital world as possible.
Anyone have any experience/ideas?
Disclaimer: I don't quite know how to address the topic, so I want to state I'm trying to approach this with sensitivity; I hope this might lead to a helpful and insightful conversation on a potentially difficult issue. Apologies if I don't quite get it right!
I noticed the absence of a name I'd become familiar with on Tildes and wanted to start a discussion on how the community should handle situations where a person of community renowned abruptly departs.
The user in question is @daychilde, who is one of the users I'd seen around quite a bit. I've been on Tildes for quite a while now, and would like to think I've had a positive - if not vast - contribution. Overall, I probably read more than I respond; I bring this up because I am aware that I probably represent the voice of a significant portion of the userbase here: I'm figuring stuff out as I go and probably am not in the loop on the majority of stuff going on on Tildes. All in all, I don't recognise a lot of names on Tildes, but @daychilde is/was a character who stuck out and seemed to have a significant impact on the community.
From what I deduce, @daychilde has been banned some time in the past week, and I thought it worth discussing given there are at least a couple of things left in the lurch as a result that people might seek information on. The ones that have crossed my vision are the following:
https://tildes.net/~tech/1od9/personal_offer_do_you_have_a_website_based_project_youve_been_wanting_to_do_but_worried_about_cost
and
https://tildes.net/~life/1n7e/daychildes_walking_thread
At the risk of broaching a difficult topic - I'm not looking to cause drama or speculate - we should probably discuss the fallout of a situation like this. Hopefully at the very least this topic might be something others can find if they also become aware of the departure of a notable person and are looking for confirmation or where might be appropriate to discuss any fallout that might occur.
For @daychilde in particular, this website seemed to be a resource that helped him manage his life. I wonder if we should consider whether there is some duty of care to users to depend on Tildes in some capacity?
There are also people who might be looking to discuss the hosting that he had offered/agreed, and might now be left in the lurch.
Unfortunately I don't have solutions, but I didn't see any discussion or information on this kind of a topic, nor any precedent for this kind of a situation!
Hi Everyone, This is just a reminder that A House With Good Bones is scheduled for the end of June. I'm looking forward to discussing it with you.
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like dsa, marine corps and chainmail. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone gave two hoots.
But one of my favourite tags happens to be offbeat! Taking its original inspiration from Sir Nils Olav III, this thread is looking for any far-fetched offbeat stories lurking in the newspapers. It may not deserve its own post, but it deserves a wider audience!
A while ago some of the keys on my Dell XPS laptop started working poorly, they were only registering the presses half of the time or if I pushed them really hard. I tried removing the keycaps and cleaning the keys on the inside, but to no avail. Well, I thought, that means it's time to get a new laptop. So I was choosing the next laptop to get. One of the options I considered was the Framework laptop, which is supposed to be super repairable - I mean, if only I could just replace my laptop keyboard, I wouldn't have to buy a whole new laptop just because of a few broken keys!
Then I thought about it again. I realized that a repairable laptop is only useful if you actually try to repair your laptop, which I've never done. So, I looked it up, and turns out Dell, while obviously not as easily repairable as Framework, has very well-detailed official service manuals as well!
Two weeks of waiting for a Chinese copycat keyboard from AliExpress and three hours of work later, I finally have a fully working laptop! Turns out it isn't hard at all to replace a broken keyboard - but I'm still very proud of myself for doing it, mostly for even deciding to do it instead of just turning a fully functional laptop into e-waste as I would've done otherwise. I was also really surprised that Dell laptops are that easy to fix (though they don't officially sell replacement parts to consumers), since it's known to be a company that makes a ton of money on expensive support offerings.
I don't really know what the lesson of this post is, I just wanted to share this small achievement with y'all.
MLMs = "multi-level marketing" companies, which is essentially a euphemism for "pyramid scheme." These are flat out illegal in many countries, but are, notably, quite legal in the US.
They used to be huge in the 2010s, but I don't hear much about them anymore (granted, I haven't been on social media since 2016). I know several IRL people who got into them, and I even regrettably bought products from some of them before I really understood what they were or how they worked.
I recently read Hey, Hun by Emily Lynn Paulson who was toward the top of the pyramid at Rodan + Fields.
In the book she mentions that algorithmic changes from social media companies ended up downgrading a lot of MLM postings, which cut off oxygen to the cycles of recruitment that these companies rely on. For example, Rodan + Fields moved to an affiliate model in 2024.
I'm curious about what the MLM landscape looks like right now.
People don't have to limit responses to just those questions -- consider this a general MLM discussion topic where anything related to them is fair game.
Canadian Grand Prix
Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve
June 13-15, 2025
Grand Prix Qualifying:
Saturday, June 14, 2025 - 20:00 UTC / 4:00p US EDT
Grand Prix:
Sunday, June 15, 2025 - 18:00 UTC / 2:00p US EDT
| Pos | No | Driver | Car | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Laps |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 63 | George Russell | Mercedes | 1:12.075 | 1:11.570 | 1:10.899 | 21 |
| 2 | 1 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 1:12.054 | 1:11.638 | 1:11.059 | 20 |
| 3 | 81 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren Mercedes | 1:11.939 | 1:11.715 | 1:11.120 | 23 |
| 4 | 12 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 1:12.279 | 1:11.974 | 1:11.391 | 21 |
| 5 | 44 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 1:11.952 | 1:11.885 | 1:11.526 | 27 |
| 6 | 14 | Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 1:12.073 | 1:11.805 | 1:11.586 | 27 |
| 7 | 4 | Lando Norris | McLaren Mercedes | 1:11.826 | 1:11.599 | 1:11.625 | 22 |
| 8 | 16 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 1:12.038 | 1:11.626 | 1:11.682 | 27 |
| 9 | 6 | Isack Hadjar | Racing Bulls Honda RBPT | 1:12.211 | 1:12.003 | 1:11.867 | 21 |
| 10 | 23 | Alexander Albon | Williams Mercedes | 1:12.090 | 1:11.892 | 1:11.907 | 30 |
| 11 | 22 | Yuki Tsunoda | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 1:12.334 | 1:12.102 | 15 | |
| 12 | 43 | Franco Colapinto | Alpine Renault | 1:12.234 | 1:12.142 | 20 | |
| 13 | 27 | Nico Hulkenberg | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 1:12.323 | 1:12.183 | 18 | |
| 14 | 87 | Oliver Bearman | Haas Ferrari | 1:12.306 | 1:12.340 | 19 | |
| 15 | 31 | Esteban Ocon | Haas Ferrari | 1:12.378 | 1:12.634 | 21 | |
| 16 | 5 | Gabriel Bortoleto | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 1:12.385 | 11 | ||
| 17 | 55 | Carlos Sainz | Williams Mercedes | 1:12.398 | 13 | ||
| 18 | 18 | Lance Stroll | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 1:12.517 | 12 | ||
| 19 | 30 | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls Honda RBPT | 1:12.525 | 10 | ||
| 20 | 10 | Pierre Gasly | Alpine Renault | 1:12.667 | 12 |
Source: F1.com
| Pos | No | Driver | Car | Laps | Time/retired | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 63 | George Russell | Mercedes | 70 | 1:31:52.688 | 25 |
| 2 | 1 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 70 | +0.228s | 18 |
| 3 | 12 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 70 | +1.014s | 15 |
| 4 | 81 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren Mercedes | 70 | +2.109s | 12 |
| 5 | 16 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 70 | +3.442s | 10 |
| 6 | 44 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 70 | +10.713s | 8 |
| 7 | 14 | Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 70 | +10.972s | 6 |
| 8 | 27 | Nico Hulkenberg | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 70 | +15.364s | 4 |
| 9 | 31 | Esteban Ocon | Haas Ferrari | 69 | +1 lap | 2 |
| 10 | 55 | Carlos Sainz | Williams Mercedes | 69 | +1 lap | 1 |
| 11 | 87 | Oliver Bearman | Haas Ferrari | 69 | +1 lap | 0 |
| 12 | 22 | Yuki Tsunoda | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 69 | +1 lap | 0 |
| 13 | 43 | Franco Colapinto | Alpine Renault | 69 | +1 lap | 0 |
| 14 | 5 | Gabriel Bortoleto | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 69 | +1 lap | 0 |
| 15 | 10 | Pierre Gasly | Alpine Renault | 69 | +1 lap | 0 |
| 16 | 6 | Isack Hadjar | Racing Bulls Honda RBPT | 69 | +1 lap | 0 |
| 17 | 18 | Lance Stroll | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 69 | +1 lap | 0 |
| 18 | 4 | Lando Norris | McLaren Mercedes | 66 | DNF | 0 |
| NC | 30 | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls Honda RBPT | 53 | DNF | 0 |
| NC | 23 | Alexander Albon | Williams Mercedes | 46 | DNF | 0 |
Fastest Lap: George Russell (1:14:119, Lap 63)
DOTD: Kimi Antonelli
Source: F1.com
Next race:
Austrian Grand Prix
Red Bull Ring
Sunday, June 29, 2025
Listened to Craig Ferguson on his podcast "Joy" talking with Diedrich Bader, last known for playing Jethro in the Beverly Hillbillies movie (which flopped).
The most interesting part was their discussion about gaining and losing that "Hollywood aura" - they agreed it was like someone handing you a magic hat, and while you're wearing it, you're the most special person in the room and everyone wants your attention. And then the hat goes away and you're back to being very ordinary and in at lot of cases, become an actor somewhat desperately looking for more work. Which is why they attend so many parties and awards. It's not so much about the glamor, its about getting a chance to network and try to find a new gig with the producers and directors and financiers in attendance.
Bader asked Ferguson if there was anyone he interviewed that gave him that sense of awe, someone who still wore that magic hat? Nope. Ferguson said after years of doing his Late Night show they were all just people. New "star", old "star", none of them really made a big impression.
Although he DID say when Sean Connery shook his wife's hand her chest visibly blushed and Craig asked her later what that was all about. She said, "Well it doesnt do it for YOU but THAT was Sean Connery!" Pretty funny.
But it was interesting to hear some insiders talking about other insiders the way they did. They're all just actors looking to stay employed. Which makes sense when you see an A list actor in a B movie and wonder why they took that role. Probably had bills to pay, that's why.
Post news and reviews Talk about your own experiences with the new system and games Add some Tildes friends on your Nintendo account Fawn over Cow
It's that time again for the greatest race of the year.
Race Start:
Saturday, 14 June 2025 - 16:00 CET (14:00 UTC)
| Position | Class | Number | Driver | Team | Qualifying | Hyperpole 1 | Hyperpole 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hypercar | 12 | Alex Lynn | Cadillac Hertz Team Jota | 03:22.8 | 03:23.6 | 03:23.2 |
| 2 | Hypercar | 38 | Earl Bamber | Cadillac Hertz Team Jota | 03:23.5 | 03:23.1 | 03:23.3 |
| 3 | Hypercar | 5 | Mathieu Jaminet | Porsche Penske Motorsport | 03:23.5 | 03:24.0 | 03:23.5 |
| 4 | Hypercar | 15 | Dries Vanthoor | BMW M Team WRT | 03:22.9 | 03:24.1 | 03:23.7 |
| 5 | Hypercar | 4 | Nick Tandy | Porsche Penske Motorsport | 03:24.6 | 03:23.5 | 03:24.0 |
| 6 | Hypercar | 20 | Sheldon van der Linde | BMW M Team WRT | 03:23.8 | 03:23.2 | 03:24.0 |
| 7 | Hypercar | 30 | Antonio Fuoco | Ferrari AF Corse | 03:23.5 | 03:23.3 | 03:24.2 |
| 8 | Hypercar | 311 | Felipe Drugovich | Cadillac Whelen | 03:23.9 | 03:22.7 | 03:24.4 |
| 9 | Hypercar | 36 | Frédéric Makowiecki | Alpine Endurance Team | 03:23.9 | 03:23.5 | 03:24.4 |
| 10 | Hypercar | 8 | Sébastien Buemi | Toyota Gazoo Racing | 03:24.0 | 03:23.5 | No time |
| 11 | Hypercar | 51 | Alessandro Pier Guidi | Ferrari AF Corse | 03:23.2 | 03:24.1 | |
| 12 | Hypercar | 35 | Paul-Loup Chatin | Alpine Endurance Team | 03:24.7 | 03:24.2 | |
| 13 | Hypercar | 83 | Yifei Ye | AF Corse | 03:24.0 | 03:24.3 | |
| 14 | Hypercar | 101 | Ricky Taylor | Cadillac WTR | 03:24.0 | 03:24.8 | |
| 15 | Hypercar | 9 | Marco Sørensen | Aston Martin THOR Team | 03:24.9 | 03:25.3 | |
| 16 | Hypercar | 7 | Nyck de Vries | Toyota Gazoo Racing | 03:25.1 | ||
| 17 | Hypercar | 94 | Stoffel Vandoorne | Peugeot TotalEnergies | 03:25.2 | ||
| 18 | Hypercar | 93 | Jean-Éric Vergne | Peugeot TotalEnergies | 03:25.5 | ||
| 19 | Hypercar | 99 | Neel Jani | Proton Competition | 03:25.5 | ||
| 20 | Hypercar | 7 | Harry Tincknell | Aston Martin THOR Team | 03:26.3 | ||
| DSQ | Hypercar | 6 | Kévin Estre | Porsche Penske Motorsport | 03:23.4 | ||
| 22 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 29 | Mathias Beche | TDS Racing | 03:36.2 | 03:35.9 | 03:35.1 |
| 23 | LMP2 | 43 | Tom Dillmann | Inter Europol Competition | 03:37.0 | 03:34.7 | 03:35.3 |
| 24 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 199 | Louis Delétraz | AO by TF | 03:35.5 | 03:35.3 | 03:35.4 |
| 25 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 23 | Ben Hanley | United Autosports | 03:35.7 | 03:36.5 | 03:35.5 |
| 26 | LMP2 | 22 | Pietro Fittipaldi | United Autosports | 03:36.5 | 03:35.5 | 03:35.6 |
| 27 | LMP2 | 37 | Tom Blomqvist | CLX – Pure Rxcing | 03:37.7 | 03:36.4 | 03:36.2 |
| 28 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 183 | Matthieu Vaxivière | AF Corse | 03:37.4 | 03:36.3 | 03:37.0 |
| 29 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 16 | Ryan Cullen | RLR MSport | 03:37.1 | 03:36.5 | 03:38.9 |
| 30 | LMP2 | 28 | Sebastián Álvarez | IDEC Sport | 03:37.0 | 03:36.7 | |
| 31 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 45 | Nicky Catsburg | Algarve Pro Racing | 03:36.0 | 03:36.8 | |
| 32 | LMP2 | 48 | Franck Perera | VDS Panis Racing | 03:36.6 | 03:36.8 | |
| 33 | LMP2 | 25 | Lorenzo Fluxá | Algarve Pro Racing | 03:36.6 | 03:37.1 | |
| 34 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 11 | Bent Viscaal | Proton Competition | 03:37.8 | ||
| 35 | LMP2 | 18 | André Lotterer | IDEC Sport | 03:37.9 | ||
| 36 | LMP2 | 9 | Reshad de Gerus | Iron Lynx – Proton | 03:38.5 | ||
| 37 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 34 | Luca Ghiotto | Inter Europol Competition | 03:39.3 | ||
| 38 | LMP2 Pro-Am | 24 | Colin Braun | Nielsen Racing | 03:40.3 | ||
| 39 | LMGT3 | 27 | Mattia Drudi | Heart of Racing Team | 03:57.1 | 03:54.7 | 03:52.8 |
| 40 | LMGT3 | 21 | Alessio Rovera | Vista AF Corse | 03:58.1 | 03:54.7 | 03:53.1 |
| 41 | LMGT3 | 46 | Valentino Rossi | Team WRT | 03:56.9 | 03:54.3 | 03:55.0 |
| 42 | LMGT3 | 61 | Maxime Martin | Iron Lynx | 03:58.7 | 03:54.7 | 03:55.0 |
| 43 | LMGT3 | 92 | Richard Lietz | Manthey 1st Phorm | 03:57.3 | 03:54.7 | 03:55.1 |
| 44 | LMGT3 | 81 | Rui Andrade | TF Sport | 03:57.7 | 03:54.6 | 03:55.7 |
| 45 | LMGT3 | 95 | Marino Sato | United Autosports | 03:59.0 | 03:55.2 | 03:56.0 |
| 46 | LMGT3 | 78 | Jack Hawksworth | Akkodis ASP Team | 03:57.3 | 03:54.9 | 04:03.7 |
| 47 | LMGT3 | 193 | Chris Froggatt | Ziggo Sport – Tempesta | 03:58.0 | 03:55.9 | |
| 48 | LMGT3 | 88 | Giammarco Levorato | Proton Competition | 03:57.8 | 03:56.2 | |
| 49 | LMGT3 | 59 | Sébastien Baud | United Autosports | 03:58.1 | 03:56.2 | |
| 50 | LMGT3 | 54 | Francesco Castellacci | Vista AF Corse | 03:58.6 | ||
| 51 | LMGT3 | 77 | Bernardo Sousa | Proton Competition | 03:59.0 | ||
| 52 | LMGT3 | 87 | Răzvan Umbrărescu | Akkodis ASP Team | 03:59.0 | ||
| 53 | LMGT3 | 57 | Takeshi Kimura | Kessel Racing | 03:59.1 | ||
| 54 | LMGT3 | 31 | Yasser Shahin | The Bend Team WRT | 03:59.3 | ||
| 55 | LMGT3 | 10 | Derek DeBoer | Racing Spirit of Léman | 03:59.5 | ||
| 56 | LMGT3 | 85 | Célia Martin | Iron Dames | 04:00.0 | ||
| 57 | LMGT3 | 90 | Andrew Gilbert | Manthey | 04:00.4 | ||
| 58 | LMGT3 | 13 | Antares Au | AWA Racing | 04:01.1 | ||
| 59 | LMGT3 | 150 | Custodio Toledo | Richard Mille AF Corse | No time | ||
| 60 | LMGT3 | 33 | Orey Fidani | TF Sport | No time | ||
| 61 | LMGT3 | 60 | Stephen Grove | Iron Lynx | No time | ||
| 62 | LMGT3 | 63 | Ben Keating | Iron Lynx | No time |
| Finishing Positon | Number | Team | Driver 1 | Driver 2 | Driver 3 | Class | STATUS | LAPS | Total Time Raced | Gap To Previous Car |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 83 | AF Corse | Robert KUBICA | Yifei YE | Philip HANSON | HYPERCAR | Classified | 387 | 24:02:53.332 | |
| 2 | 6 | Porsche Penske Motorsport | Kévin ESTRE | Laurens VANTHOOR | Matt CAMPBELL | HYPERCAR | Classified | 387 | 24:03:07.416 | 14.084 |
| 3 | 51 | Ferrari AF Corse | Alessandro PIER GUIDI | James CALADO | Antonio GIOVINAZZI | HYPERCAR | Classified | 387 | 24:03:21.819 | 14.403 |
| 4 | 50 | Ferrari AF Corse | Antonio FUOCO | Nicklas NIELSEN | Miguel MOLINA | HYPERCAR | Classified | 387 | 24:03:22.998 | 1.179 |
| 5 | 12 | Cadillac Hertz Team JOTA | Will STEVENS | Norman NATO | Alex LYNN | HYPERCAR | Classified | 387 | 24:05:11.971 | 1:48.973 |
| 6 | 7 | Toyota Gazoo Racing | Mike CONWAY | Kamui KOBAYASHI | Nyck DE VRIES | HYPERCAR | Classified | 386 | 24:03:08.984 | 1 Laps |
| 7 | 5 | Porsche Penske Motorsport | Julien ANDLAUER | Michael CHRISTENSEN | Mathieu JAMINET | HYPERCAR | Classified | 386 | 24:03:45.861 | 36.877 |
| 8 | 38 | Cadillac Hertz Team JOTA | Earl BAMBER | Sébastien BOURDAIS | Jenson BUTTON | HYPERCAR | Classified | 386 | 24:04:30.532 | 44.671 |
| 9 | 4 | Porsche Penske Motorsport | Felipe NASR | Nick TANDY | Pascal WEHRLEIN | HYPERCAR | Classified | 386 | 24:05:28.957 | 58.425 |
| 10 | 35 | Alpine Endurance Team | Paul-Loup CHATIN | Ferdinand HABSBURG | Charles MILESI | HYPERCAR | Classified | 385 | 24:06:16.781 | 1 Laps |
| 11 | 36 | Alpine Endurance Team | Mick SCHUMACHER | Frédéric MAKOWIECKI | Jules GOUNON | HYPERCAR | Classified | 384 | 24:03:37.826 | 1 Laps |
| 12 | 94 | Peugeot TotalEnergies | Loïc DUVAL | Malthe JAKOBSEN | Stoffel VANDOORNE | HYPERCAR | Classified | 384 | 24:04:18.871 | 41.045 |
| 13 | 009 | Aston Martin Thor Team | Alex RIBERAS | Marco SORENSEN | Roman DE ANGELIS | HYPERCAR | Classified | 383 | 24:03:51.079 | 1 Laps |
| 14 | 99 | Proton Competition | Neel JANI | Nicolas PINO | Nicolas VARRONE | HYPERCAR | Classified | 383 | 24:05:04.367 | 1:13.288 |
| 15 | 007 | Aston Martin Thor Team | Harry TINCKNELL | Tom GAMBLE | Ross GUNN | HYPERCAR | Classified | 381 | 24:02:56.333 | 2 Laps |
| 16 | 8 | Toyota Gazoo Racing | Sébastien BUEMI | Brendon HARTLEY | Ryo HIRAKAWA | HYPERCAR | Classified | 380 | 24:05:28.156 | 1 Laps |
| 17 | 93 | Peugeot TotalEnergies | Paul DI RESTA | Mikkel JENSEN | Jean-Eric VERGNE | HYPERCAR | Classified | 379 | 24:03:16.528 | 1 Laps |
| 18 | 20 | BMW M Team WRT | René RAST | Robin FRIJNS | Sheldon VAN DER LINDE | HYPERCAR | Classified | 375 | 24:02:56.020 | 4 Laps |
| 19 | 43 | Inter Europol Competition | Jakub SMIECHOWSKI | Tom DILLMANN | Nick YELLOLY | LMP2 | Classified | 367 | 24:04:09.023 | 8 Laps |
| 20 | 48 | VDS Panis Racing | Oliver GRAY | Esteban MASSON | Franck PERERA | LMP2 | Classified | 367 | 24:06:04.776 | 1:55.753 |
| 21 | 199 | AO by TF | PJ HYETT | Dane CAMERON | Louis DELETRAZ | LMP2 | Classified | 366 | 24:05:56.819 | 1 Laps |
| 22 | 9 | Iron Lynx - Proton | Jonas RIED | Maceo CAPIETTO | Reshad DE GÉRUS | LMP2 | Classified | 365 | 24:03:03.559 | 1 Laps |
| 23 | 29 | TDS Racing | Rodrigo SALES | Mathias BECHE | Clément NOVALAK | LMP2 | Classified | 365 | 24:05:44.469 | 2:40.910 |
| 24 | 11 | Proton Competition | Giorgio RODA | Rene BINDER | Bent VISCAAL | LMP2 | Classified | 365 | 24:06:09.797 | 25.328 |
| 25 | 22 | United Autosports | Renger VAN DER ZANDE | Pietro FITTIPALDI | David HEINEMEIER HANSSON | LMP2 | Classified | 364 | 24:03:43.736 | 1 Laps |
| 26 | 25 | Algarve Pro Racing | Matthias KAISER | Lorenzo FLUXA | Théo POURCHAIRE | LMP2 | Classified | 364 | 24:04:06.445 | 22.709 |
| 27 | 183 | AF Corse | François PERRODO | Matthieu VAXIVIERE | Antonio FELIX DA COSTA | LMP2 | Classified | 364 | 24:04:41.940 | 35.495 |
| 28 | 34 | Inter Europol Competition | Nicholas BOULLE | Jean-Baptiste SIMMENAUER | Luca GHIOTTO | LMP2 | Classified | 363 | 24:03:03.480 | 1 Laps |
| 29 | 23 | United Autosports | Daniel SCHNEIDER | Oliver JARVIS | Benjamin HANLEY | LMP2 | Classified | 363 | 24:06:04.223 | 3:00.743 |
| 30 | 16 | RLR M Sport | Michael JENSEN | Ryan CULLEN | Patrick PILET | LMP2 | Classified | 362 | 24:02:54.768 | 1 Laps |
| 31 | 45 | Algarve Pro Racing | George KURTZ | Nicky CATSBURG | Alexander QUINN | LMP2 | Classified | 362 | 24:04:06.381 | 1:11.613 |
| 32 | 15 | BMW M Team WRT | Dries VANTHOOR | Raffaele MARCIELLO | Kevin MAGNUSSEN | HYPERCAR | Classified | 361 | 24:04:22.255 | 1 Laps |
| 33 | 37 | CLX - Pure Rxcing | Aliaksandr MALYKHIN | Tom BLOMQVIST | Tristan VAUTIER | LMP2 | Classified | 358 | 24:06:11.786 | 3 Laps |
| 34 | 92 | Manthey 1ST Phorm | Ryan HARDWICK | Riccardo PERA | Richard LIETZ | LMGT3 | Classified | 341 | 24:03:22.925 | 17 Laps |
| 35 | 21 | Vista AF Corse | François HERIAU | Simon MANN | Alessio ROVERA | LMGT3 | Classified | 341 | 24:03:56.184 | 33.259 |
| 36 | 81 | TF Sport | Tom VAN ROMPUY | Rui ANDRADE | Charlie EASTWOOD | LMGT3 | Classified | 341 | 24:04:34.635 | 38.451 |
| 37 | 27 | Heart of Racing Team | Ian JAMES | Mattia DRUDI | Zacharie ROBICHON | LMGT3 | Classified | 341 | 24:05:38.047 | 1:03.412 |
| 38 | 87 | Akkodis ASP Team | Petru UMBRARESCU | Jose Maria LOPEZ | Clemens SCHMID | LMGT3 | Classified | 340 | 24:02:57.829 | 1 Laps |
| 39 | 90 | Manthey | Antares AU | Loek HARTOG | Klaus BACHLER | LMGT3 | Classified | 340 | 24:05:17.091 | 2:19.262 |
| 40 | 33 | TF Sport | Ben KEATING | Jonny EDGAR | Daniel JUNCADELLA | LMGT3 | Classified | 339 | 24:04:43.509 | 1 Laps |
| 41 | 57 | Kessel Racing | Takeshi KIMURA | Daniel SERRA | Casper STEVENSON | LMGT3 | Classified | 339 | 24:05:03.870 | 20.361 |
| 42 | 77 | Proton Competition | Bernardo SOUSA | Ben TUCK | Benjamin BARKER | LMGT3 | Classified | 338 | 24:03:30.810 | 1 Laps |
| 43 | 13 | AWA Racing | Orey FIDANI | Lars KERN | Matthew BELL | LMGT3 | Classified | 338 | 24:03:33.531 | 2.721 |
| 44 | 150 | Richard Mille AF Corse | Custodio TOLEDO | Lilou WADOUX | Riccardo AGOSTINI | LMGT3 | Classified | 338 | 24:05:03.140 | 1:29.609 |
| 45 | 61 | Iron Lynx | Martin BERRY | Lin HODENIUS | Maxime MARTIN | LMGT3 | Classified | 337 | 24:06:46.484 | 1 Laps |
| 46 | 10 | Racing Spirit of Leman | Derek DEBOER | Valentin HASSE CLOT | Eduardo BARRICHELLO | LMGT3 | Classified | 336 | 24:03:05.865 | 1 Laps |
| 47 | 193 | Ziggo Sport Tempesta | Jonathan HUI | Christopher FROGGATT | Edward CHEEVER | LMGT3 | Classified | 335 | 24:04:20.784 | 1 Laps |
| 48 | 63 | Iron Lynx | Stephen GROVE | Brenton GROVE | Luca STOLZ | LMGT3 | Classified | 334 | 24:03:12.269 | 1 Laps |
| 49 | 85 | Iron Dames | Celia MARTIN | Rahel FREY | Sarah BOVY | LMGT3 | Classified | 334 | 24:03:57.025 | 44.756 |
| 50 | 59 | United Autosports | James COTTINGHAM | Grégoire SAUCY | Sébastien BAUD | LMGT3 | Not classified | 314 | 22:52:42.255 | 20 Laps |
| 51 | 28 | IDEC Sport | Paul LAFARGUE | Job VAN UITERT | Sebastian ALVAREZ | LMP2 | Retired | 308 | 20:18:29.995 | 6 Laps |
| 52 | 78 | Akkodis ASP Team | Arnold ROBIN | Jack HAWKSWORTH | Finn GEHRSITZ | LMGT3 | Retired | 268 | 19:02:41.151 | 40 Laps |
| 53 | 311 | Cadillac Whelen | Jack AITKEN | Felipe DRUGOVICH | Frederik VESTI | HYPERCAR | Retired | 247 | 16:00:31.169 | 21 Laps |
| 54 | 18 | IDEC Sport | Jamie CHADWICK | Mathys JAUBERT | André LOTTERER | LMP2 | Retired | 206 | 13:34:12.511 | 41 Laps |
| 55 | 54 | Vista AF Corse | Thomas FLOHR | Francesco CASTELLACCI | Davide RIGON | LMGT3 | Retired | 192 | 14:04:56.647 | 14 Laps |
| 56 | 101 | Cadillac WTR | Ricky TAYLOR | Jordan TAYLOR | Filipe ALBUQUERQUE | HYPERCAR | Retired | 189 | 11:55:38.240 | 3 Laps |
| 57 | 24 | Nielsen Racing | Naveen RAO | Cem BÖLÜKBASI | Colin BRAUN | LMP2 | Retired | 170 | 11:10:29.565 | 19 Laps |
| 58 | 31 | The Bend Team WRT | Yasser SHAHIN | Timur BOGUSLAVSKIY | Augusto FARFUS | LMGT3 | Retired | 168 | 13:17:27.884 | 2 Laps |
| 59 | 46 | Team WRT | Ahmad AL HARTHY | Valentino ROSSI | Kelvin VAN DER LINDE | LMGT3 | Retired | 156 | 11:02:28.095 | 12 Laps |
| 60 | 95 | United Autosports | Darren LEUNG | Sean GELAEL | Marino SATO | LMGT3 | Retired | 80 | 5:35:58.499 | 76 Laps |
| 61 | 60 | Iron Lynx | Andrew GILBERT | Lorcan HANAFIN | Fran RUEDA | LMGT3 | Retired | 57 | 6:05:02.685 | 23 Laps |
| 62 | 88 | Proton Competition | Stefano GATTUSO | Giammarco LEVORATO | Dennis OLSEN | LMGT3 | Retired | 46 | 3:11:36.304 | 11 Laps |
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any films you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
Hi, so I've been thinking about this for several days now, and thought it might be an interesting topic for Tildes.
Earlier this week, YouTube suggested this AI Sitcom video to me. Some of the jokes are actually very cohesive "Dad jokes", and it got me wondering how much of the video was AI generated. Are the one-liners themselves AI generated? Was this script generated with AI, and then edited before passing it on to something else to generate the video and voice? Or are we at the phase where AI could generate the whole thing with a single prompt? If it's the latter I find this sort of terrifying, because the finished product is very cohesive for something with almost no editing.
I'd also be interested in discussing where this video might have come from. The channel and descriptions have almost no information, so it seems like this may be a channel that finds these elsewhere and reposts? Or maybe the channel is the original and just trying to be vague about technology used?
Also side note, I have no idea if this belongs in ~Tech, so feel free to move it around as needed.
Welcome to the inaugural thread! It is important to me that this is an inclusive space; and it should evolve to serve the needs of the community.
What is this space?
It is intended as a community space, primarily for those of us with ADHD and/or autism; but it should be open to evolution on what is explicitely encouraged (because all are welcome). It intended as a space to vent about your struggles and challenges in a space where there is implicit understanding of the issues we face with these diagnoses. It is intended as a space to celebrate your achievements and victories with those who understand why those are as meaningful as they are, even the little ones. It is intended as a space to seek support with related issues — like requesting accountability partnering, chunking, rubber-ducking, et cetera. It is a place to post news and articles about ADHD and autism that are of interest to the community. A place for discussion. And a place to be serious and silly together with folks who understand.
All are welcome to participate here. While generally on Tildes I would expect most participants to accept that ADHD and autism and the like are real diagnoses, I would expect those participating here to either have those diagnoses, understand those diagnoses, or if someone wants to learn more, to ask questions here with an open mind — i.e. this is a positive and supportive space.
All are welcome to participate here. Not just those with these diagnoses. The self-diagnosed are welcome. Support is welcome to be sought by those with ADHD-adjacent issues: for example, depression can cause executive function issues such that accountability partnering could be helpful. Feel free to seek such help here.
Your feedback is requested and valued. This community will evolve to fit the needs of those who participate here. What works will be retained; what doesn't work will be dropped. I am your facilitator, not dictator; and while for this first thread I am speaking with my voice, as we evolve things and figure out what works, I will rephrase whatever text that gets posted each time into a passive voice. I just want to reassure you that while I'm taking a leadship position to get the ball rolling here, I will be removing myself from this so it truly is a community space for us all. But to start, you gotta have someone doing the thing. :)
For now, I'll create one top-level reply that requests for support should be posted under. The idea is that it makes it easier for those wishing to volunteer to help can find the requests more easily. We'll see if that works or not.
It is my humble opinion that one should be encourged to post as you wish. If you want to post multiple things in a top level reply that are going on, great. If you want to make two little top level replies about different topics, even on the same day? I think that's also fine. Don't be shy about posting.
I think a fortnightly thread feels about right to start. Too frequent and things can get lost. Too infrequent and the thread might die out before we get a new one. But as with everything else, feedback is desired. By coincidence of when the idea was had, I'm posting this one on a Friday. If you'd prefer a different day, that's feedback that is welcome.
Welcome to your space! Help make this space be what you want it to be. <3
edit: Forgot to post where this came from:
Most recently: https://tildes.net/~health.mental/1oac/proposal_adhd_support_thread_reoccurring
Less recently: https://tildes.net/~life/1o92/how_my_life_changed_with_adhd_medication#comments
That first thread had such a sense of community that I want that to keep going, basically. :)
Find yourself watching tons of great videos on [insert chosen video sharing platform], but also find yourself reluctant to flood the Tildes front page with them? Then this thread is for you.
It could be one quirky video that you feel deserves some eyeballs on it, or perhaps you've got a curated list of videos that you'd love to talk us through...
Share some of the best video content you've watched this past week/fortnight with us!
This is the thirteenth of an ongoing series of book discussions here on Tildes. We are discussing Elder Race by Adrian Tchaikovsky. Our next book will be A People's Future of the United States by Victor LaValle, at the end of May..
I don't have a particular format in mind for this discussion, but I will post some prompts and questions as comments to get things started. You're not obligated to respond to them or vote on them though. So feel free to make your own top-level comment for whatever you wish to discuss, questions you have of others, or even just to post a review of the book you have written yourself.
For latecomers, don't worry if you didn't read the book in time for this Discussion topic. You can always join in once you finish it. Tildes Activity sort, and "Collapse old comments" feature should keep the topic going for as long as people are still replying.
And for anyone uninterested in this topic please use the Ignore Topic feature on this so it doesn't keep popping up in your Activity sort, since it's likely to keep doing that while I set this discussion up, and once people start joining in.
Between Meta announcing that its AI, Meta AI, reached 1 billion users[1] and Google saying that AI Overviews are used by 1.5 billion[2], I’m curious to know how many of these people intentionally use the feature, or prefer it to what the AI replaces.
AI Overviews appear at the top of searches, with no option to turn them off. Meta AI, I suspect many people trigger accidentally by tapping that horrible button in WhatsApp, in search results across its three core apps, or when trying to tag someone in a group by typing an @ symbol.
It’s very easy to reach enormous numbers when you already have a giant platform. I don’t think that’s even part of the discussion. The issue is trumpeting these numbers as if they were earned, rather than imposed.
[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2025/05/28/zuckerberg-meta-ai-one-billion-monthly-users.html
[2] https://www.theverge.com/news/655930/google-q1-2025-earnings
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like right to repair, friendship and warfare.drone. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was in doubt.
But one of my favourite tags happens to be offbeat! Taking its original inspiration from Sir Nils Olav III, this thread is looking for any far-fetched offbeat stories lurking in the newspapers. It may not deserve its own post, but it deserves a wider audience!
I’m starting a new 5e campaign with some friends, and I think I have some performance anxiety. I’m not the most creative person, and the last thing I want to do is kill the fun. The only other time I've played a ttrpg was years ago in high school.
I’m curious what you all have found detracts from a session as well as any advice that enhances the experience for everyone.
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any films you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like psychology.social, adhd and words. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was documenting these.
But one of my favourite tags happens to be offbeat! Taking its original inspiration from Sir Nils Olav III, this thread is looking for any far-fetched offbeat stories lurking in the newspapers. It may not deserve its own post, but it deserves a wider audience!
Hello to everyone who's reading this post :)
Now LLMs are increasingly so useful (of course after careful review of their generated answers), but I'm concerned about sharing my data, especially very personal questions and my thought process to these large tech giants who seem to be rather sketchy in terms of their privacy policy.
What are some ways I can keep my data private but still harness this amazing LLM technology? Also what are some legitimate and active forums for discussions on this topic? I have looked at reddit but haven't found it genuinely useful or trustworthy so far.
I am excited to hear your thoughts on this!
I am arguing here in regards to personally owned hw.
I personally think that the arguments in recent years were very heavily skewed in support of this and I would like to propose here counterarguments that I don't feel are considered enough are when I see this come up in various places. Or at least not said enough.
First and foremost what forcibly pushing updates actually means is the developer being given blank check to change the functionality of your device in any way they please. In case of various locked down hw such as smart things, game consoles, tvs, ereaders or others there is often not even a choice to use different sw because it is artificially blocked. Only real check against negative effects of this is legislation and potential of enough public outrage to impact future sales. From the state of various mainstream sw products it can be seen how well it works.
It creates a culture where pushing anti features is significantly easier and tech literacy is significantly harder to attain if only as a secondary effect of less transparent, more obtuse and more complicated systems, frequently with no actual need for more complexity which is not rooted in desire to increase monetization.
It also means it is harder as a user to guard against faulty updates.
Normalization of this behavior also means that any can do this with no pushback because it is the fabled default, the one where fundamental flaws are brushed aside while alternatives are rejected over cosmetic problems.
There could be argument meant for critical parts of critical sw such as os or browser, but if so it should be made individually and not be implicit. There is usually no meaningful individual control over feature updates, not just security ones. I also don't think forced updates for games on Steam for example can be argued to be something that benefits security.
One of the tags that I almost always remember to include in my posts here on Tildes is the author.authorname tags. I wonder which author is cited the most through the tagging system here on Tildes. I know that journalists in ~society show up a lot, but there are also quite a few repeat authors in ~games
Just a quick PSA, if anyone noticed massive amounts of shows disappeared from Netflix the past week or two. Apparently they're getting stricter with VPN detection, and blocking per region licensed shows if we're on VPN.
I sometimes feel like I am the only person who loses interest in a video game as soon as I have to spend any amount of time consulting an online guide or wiki to figure out how to progress.
Maybe it’s because I grew up playing games like Super Mario 64 and Ocarina of Time, along with their equivalents and sequels on the Gamecube, and later the Wii. I got either to 100% completion or close to on those, without getting any outside help.
The games themselves made it very clear what the objectives were and what collectibles and unlockables were available.
But at some point in recent years, it just became impossible to play a video game without having to consult a guide or a wiki to figure out not just how to progress in it, but sometimes even how to play it. 💀
And a good year ago or so, I began to subconsciously fight against this, because it annoyed me to no end. I began to just take breaks from a game if I couldn’t figure out how to progress, rather than go online and read some guide or wiki, because it was making me feel like I was wasting my time reading about the game, rather than just playing it, taking me out of the immersion in the process.
You know what? I’m making this a resolution. If I can’t figure out how to progress in a game on my own, then I just won’t. I’ll go play something else.
I have recently played some indie games where I needed zero assistance, and boy did it feel good to figure those games out on my own. Those are the best games (for me), games that “explain themselves”.
Anyone else feel similarly?
Tangentially related side note: I hate, hate, hate “Fandom” wikis. They’re probably a big part of the reason why I began to hate consulting online guides. They’re impossible to navigate, are riddled with ads, and link to unrelated content, everywhere on their pages. There is a good alternative to these for some Nintendo franchises, which are independent wikis, in case anyone is as frustrated by the Fandom slop as I am.
Looking at the submission rules for Clarkesworld Magazine, I found the following:
Statement on the Use of “AI” writing tools such as ChatGPT
We will not consider any submissions translated, written, developed, or assisted by these tools. Attempting to submit these works may result in being banned from submitting works in the future.
EDIT: I assume that Clarkesworld means a popular, non-technical understanding of AI meaning post-chatGPT LLMs specifically and not a broader definition of AI that is more academic or pertinent the computer science field.
I imagine that other magazines and website have similar rules. As someone who does not write directly in English, that is concerning. I have never translated without assistance in my life. In the past I used both Google Translate and Google Translator Toolkit (which no longer exist).
Of course, no machine translation is perfect, that was only a first pass that I would change, adapt and fix extensively and intensely. In the past I have used the built-in translation feature from Google Docs. However, now that Gemini is integrated in Google Docs, I suspected that it uses AI instead for translation. So I asked Gemini, and it said that it does. I am not sure if Gemini is correct, but, if it doesn't use AI now it probably will in the future.
That poses a problem for me, since, in the event that I wish to submit a story to English speaking magazines or websites, I will have to find a tool that is guaranteed to be dumb. I am sure they exist, but for how long? Will I be forced to translate my stories like a cave men? Is anyone concerned with keeping non-AI translation tools available, relevant, and updated? How can I even be sure that a translation tool does not use AI?
I've been deep in learning how to rewire sections of my house, trying to understand the logic behind my older (1950s-era) electrical system. In the process, I came across a free game on Steam called Wired developed by the University of Cambridge's Engineering Department. It's a puzzle game that gradually introduces core concepts in circuitry and logical flow. It doesn't replace proper training, but it is an engaging supplement compared to reading electrical code books.
But anyways, I though I would ask about games that don't just entertain but also teach. Not strictly edutainment in the shallow sense, but games that impart understanding, intuition, or practical knowledge through their mechanics.
What are some games you've played that taught you something substantial? I'm thinking anything from real world skills, conceptual insights, functional knowledge, or anything that stuck with you after playing.
I rarely ever used graters before, but in the past month or so I've been on a spring roll rampage. You've gotta have some whiskered cucumbers and carrots, and a mixture of impatience and inadequate knife skills means using a grater. Previously I had a super cheap one from Daiso, but that one broke so I got a nice new one from Oxo. And even though it's technically a lot more featured than the Japanese dollar store version I was using before, it's actually way worse. Today I tried to do a technique I've heard of, shredding tofu, and even though I was using extra-firm it crumbled instead of shredded.
The big difference between the Daiso and Oxo graters is that the Daiso one had maybe 3-4 rows of "teeth" doing the grating and the Oxo one has something like 15-20 of them. That gives you a heck of a lot more friction and you need to put a lot more force to use it. This doesn't just mean that your delicate food will be destroyed, it also means you have to press so hard that you risk your hand slipping and getting shredded. It also means you can't try to get large shreds because it will gum the process up.
In contrast, the fewer holes in the Japanese one would take more passes to shred the same amount of food, but each pass is so much easier because you have the benefit of being able to build up speed and momentum as you shred. It feels like you're making slices instead of trying to force food through a mesh. The holes are also in the center of the grater so each shred is going to be the full length of the thing you're grating.
Why is it that every western grater is built like this? Don't people realize how bad it is?