-
9 votes
-
Elected officials, please stop drinking Silicon Valley's kool-aid
4 votes -
In about twenty years, half the population will live in eight US states
14 votes -
'Data is a fingerprint': why you aren't as anonymous as you think online - So-called ‘anonymous’ data can be easily used to identify everything from our medical records to purchase histories
7 votes -
Cultural appropriation justified through DNA tests?
Good morning! I was listening to the CBC radio on my way to work and there was a very interesting discussion about how people choose to interpret the results of DNA tests. I did a quick search and...
Good morning!
I was listening to the CBC radio on my way to work and there was a very interesting discussion about how people choose to interpret the results of DNA tests. I did a quick search and unfortunately couldn't find the radio broadcast on CBCs site.
Points mentioned (from my memory):
- People don't look at the results of a DNA test and go "this is who I am", instead they use it to cherry-pick who they want to be
- Statically, "white" people tend to identify with a more "exotic" finding in their test
- Example used included a person that chose to identify with who they thought they would pass as; results showed Native and Celtic blood, and person went with Native because he didn't believe they physically passed for Celtic
The cultural appropriation part:
- When non-minorities, who have generally not been raised or have much interaction with the minority they are now choosing to identify with, they can skew, more specifically flatten stats. For example, for a person who's always identified as caucasian to start checking off boxes for a minority, they are potentially 1) disregarding the consequences there are to race (discrimination), and 2) pumping up the stats for minority representation.
As a visible minority myself, I just find it in poor taste. I would love to think people who find a little bit of Asian blood will go and try to discovery more of what it is to be Asian, but I would definitely roll my eyes, if you just come up to me and say "I'm 1/64th like you".
So thoughts? Has anyone done a DNA test and how did it go?
19 votes -
Larry Heard special Gilles Peterson. Gilles is joined by Chicago's Larry Heard for an extended focus on one of the originators of House music.
3 votes -
What are the predominant foreign tv soaps in your country /area and what are the common plots on these shows?
during the 90s and early 00s we had an overwhelmingly south american supply of tv soaps, their themes most commonly center around money, intrigue, poor vs rich and the evil characters are...
during the 90s and early 00s we had an overwhelmingly south american supply of tv soaps, their themes most commonly center around money, intrigue, poor vs rich and the evil characters are cartoonishly evil and good characters are the pariahs of pariahs. Today we have Korean tv soaps where the theme mostly center on romcom and incredibly lighthearted and often humourous compared to the south american ones. the evil guys are not truly evil, their just the enemy because of the circumstance and the goog characters are not pariahs. my country is the Philippines by the way.
4 votes -
Blood Red Shoes - Call Me Up Victoria (2018)
1 vote -
Stig of The Dump author Clive King dies at 94
4 votes -
Debunking UBI funding schemes
10 votes -
Devin Townsend Project - By Your Command (Live in Plovdiv 2017)
4 votes -
"Find Your Passion" is Awful Advice - A major new study questions the common wisdom about how we should choose our careers
14 votes -
Margaret Atwood - Bad feminist?
8 votes -
Now is a fun time to look back at Chase Utley's history of tormenting Mets
4 votes -
‘My son is not the same’: New testimony paints bleak picture of family separation
23 votes -
Like a car aerial: Tuning in from the quietest place on the planet. In the extreme hush of the WA desert, a tiny team of scientists is engaged in an experiment of cosmic proportions.
4 votes -
Albert Einstein's boyhood proof of the Pythagorean Theorem
3 votes -
Chinese police break up US$1.5 billion cryptocurrency World Cup gambling ring
8 votes -
Amna Karra-Hassan has taken the GWS Giants women's team to the AFLW
1 vote -
I built a keychain LED flashlight to practice my soldering
Someone recently asked me to replace the battery in their old iPod, and I found myself wondering what I should do with the old battery. It still works, but has less capacity than when it was new....
Someone recently asked me to replace the battery in their old iPod, and I found myself wondering what I should do with the old battery. It still works, but has less capacity than when it was new. So I looked around my workshop and found some of these surface mount LEDs and decided to test the limits of my soldering skills and make a flashlight out of them.
These LEDs are very hard to solder, since they're surface-mount and the pads are on the bottom of the LED. They were never meant to be soldered by hand, but rather placed by machine onto a specific amount of solder paste, which is then baked in a fancy oven at very specific temperatures for very specific times. To solder these by hand, you need to create a liquid puddle of solder and sorta float the LED on top, while being careful to not short the pads which are very close together as well as not overheating the LED. The temperature the plastic melts at seems to be only a few degrees higher than the solder melts at.
I wired up 5 of the LEDs in parallel, each with its own 6.8ohm resistor wired in series with the LED. This should limit the current to 150mA per LED. I hot glued this in place, as well as a lithium battery charging circuit I got off ebay for a dollar. Here's one such listing.
I slapped on a pushbutton, and Bob's your uncle! It worked first try!
Here's a blurry picture of the finished product. I'm pretty proud of how it came out, considering how tiny and fiddly the soldering was. And, I think I'll actually get some use out of it too. The battery ought to last at least an hour of runtime, and the thing is seriously bright.
Anyone here into electronics as a hobby?
Edit: Better-ish pic: https://i.imgur.com/Kxqy1jg.jpg
No potatoes were harmed in the making of this photo.
9 votes -
Industry brands Australia's 10% migration intake drop 'disappointing'
0 votes -
George Hotz is on a hacker crusade against the "scam" of self-driving cars
6 votes -
Microsoft urges Congress to regulate use of facial recognition
9 votes -
Basics of Futexes
5 votes -
Walmart's newly patented technology for eavesdropping on workers presents privacy concerns
18 votes -
What game(s) had the best, or your favourite, leveling system?
Which games had really well thought out and engaging leveling system? Skyrim was a good baseline I believe, not perfect but engaging and not too punishing. Path of Exile seems convoluted to me, to...
Which games had really well thought out and engaging leveling system?
Skyrim was a good baseline I believe, not perfect but engaging and not too punishing. Path of Exile seems convoluted to me, to many skills the dont make any real impact. Fable was effective but very simple. Oblivion tried hard for a deep leveling system but was basically broken. Witcher 3 was pretty run of the mill (I thought, despite the praise the game gets).
I'm trying to find something where there are several viable different playstyles. And it's always good when combat isn't the only way to proceed.
17 votes -
Finding and exploiting hidden features of Animal Crossing's NES emulator
18 votes -
The Uncluded - Delicate Cycle (2013)
2 votes -
Fun Fact: Friday the 13th is more common than many other days
The calendarepoch for the gregorian calendar (that the western world has been used since the 16th century) is 400 years. After that, the whole calendar repeats itself. It is exactly 146097 days in...
The calendarepoch for the gregorian calendar (that the western world has been used since the 16th century) is 400 years. After that, the whole calendar repeats itself. It is exactly 146097 days in these 400 years. (Including all 4/100/400-rules.)
Out of these, there are 28 that are slightly more common than all others. One of those, is Friday the 13th, occuring 688 out of the 146097 days.
The least common day is a Wednesday the 31st, which happens 398 out of 146097 days.
5 votes -
'Serious questions' over whether Australia's emissions cuts are real
2 votes -
Octopath Traveler | Overview launch trailer
6 votes -
VPNFilter, malware that targets network infrastructure discovered in May, deployed against Ukranian water system.
7 votes -
We are all public figures now
31 votes -
US Justice Department reopens Emmett Till murder investigation
9 votes -
The woman in the #PlaneBae saga says she's been 'shamed, insulted, and harassed' since the story went viral and asks for her privacy
4 votes -
The Strokes - Someday (2001)
4 votes -
Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker says her Thirteenth Doctor is 'fizzing with wonder
9 votes -
Daily Tildes discussion - please help find omissions from the issue tracker
I'm continuing to inch closer to finally open-sourcing the site, and one of the aspects of having it open-source is that other people will be able to start contributing fixes/improvements/etc. To...
I'm continuing to inch closer to finally open-sourcing the site, and one of the aspects of having it open-source is that other people will be able to start contributing fixes/improvements/etc. To keep this process organized, I want to treat the issue tracker as the "definitive source" of what needs to be done, who's working on it, etc. A lot of the existing plans and known issues are already in there, but there are certainly some things missing.
I'm not expecting anyone to register a GitLab account to help with this, but I'd appreciate it if some of you would take a quick look through the issue tracker (which you don't need an account to do), do some quick searches for features/fixes that you know should be planned, and make sure that they seem to be present: https://gitlab.com/tildes/tildes/issues
If you notice anything missing (or aren't sure if it's there), please just leave a comment here about it, and I can make updates.
Thanks, any help is appreciated (and if you have any other general questions about how the open-sourcing/contributions/etc. are going to work, please feel free to ask as well).
29 votes -
Major broadcast TV networks mentioned climate change just once during two weeks of heat-wave coverage
8 votes -
Grain-free dog food causing heart problems with certain dog breeds
5 votes -
CS:GO update blocks players in Netherlands and Belgium from opening loot boxes
12 votes -
Elon Musk criticized for trying to help. Accused of selfish PR stunt.
23 votes -
Judge orders Health Canada to release 'confidential' pharmaceutical data
8 votes -
Ice Nine Kills - Thank God It's Friday (2018)
1 vote -
How to invest for the next recession
4 votes -
Epic announces Unreal Engine marketplace 88% / 12% revenue share
9 votes -
Bo Burnham’s Age of Anxiety
3 votes -
Little upside for Malcolm Turnbull in debate over religious freedom
2 votes -
What is your mentality when it comes to character creation and roleplay in games?
This question stemmed from a friendly argument my S.O. and I had involving The Sims. She thought it was the weirdest thing ever to try and create myself within the game. I understand the idea of...
This question stemmed from a friendly argument my S.O. and I had involving The Sims. She thought it was the weirdest thing ever to try and create myself within the game. I understand the idea of truly creating a new character, but my first impulse is always to create myself and then behave how I normally would in whatever game I'm playing. I don't know if this is laziness on my part, or some sort of subconscious effort to maximize immersion.
Disclaimer: I do often create characters that don't just emulate myself, but it's almost always after I've finished my first play-through. I'm not averse to role-play AT ALL.
I noticed it spans further than character creation too. Like, if there's a pool of characters to pick from, I almost always pick one that looks the most like me, or one that I relate the most with. My S.O. will pick whichever one she's feeling at that time (usually the cutest). I've also noticed that I'm more apt to consistently pick that same character, while she is more likely to switch it up every so often.
One last observation I made that I think ties closely to this topic: When I'm playing a game, my mentality is always "I'm going to do this, then I'm going to do this. Did you see what I just did?!" etc. I see it from a first-person perspective, even if I happened to create a character that does not emulate myself. When she plays, it's always "Look what he's doing, oh man my guy did this" and verbalizes the game from a third-person perspective.
What's your take on this? What's your mentality when you game? Do you think there is a fundamental mental split among players? Is it because I game drastically more than her or started gaming sooner in my life? I'd love to hear some other perspectives on this.
19 votes -
Paper straws are in demand as Indiana producer battles plastic pollution
11 votes