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13 votes
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The rise of self-hosted apps
14 votes -
Old, but Interesting programs
7 votes -
Ted Lasso | Season 3 official trailer
5 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
10 votes -
What have you been eating, drinking, and cooking?
What food and drinks have you been enjoying (or not enjoying) recently? Have you cooked or created anything interesting? Tell us about it!
4 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of February 27
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate...
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate topic, but almost all should be posted in here.
This is an inherently political thread; please try to avoid antagonistic arguments and bickering matches. Comment threads that devolve into unproductive arguments may be removed so that the overall topic is able to continue.
12 votes -
Activists block Norway's energy ministry, protesting against wind turbines built on land traditionally used by the Sámi indigenous people
4 votes -
Tildes first Turing Test
Welcome to Tildes first Turing Test. Rules: Anyone can ask a question in a top level thread if you want to see if you can tell man vs machine. I'll just start with @NaraVara, but feel free to post...
Welcome to Tildes first Turing Test.
Rules:
- Anyone can ask a question in a top level thread if you want to see if you can tell man vs machine. I'll just start with @NaraVara, but feel free to post up.
- Anyone can answer the question in 1.
a. Respond with two responses. One human. One AI. Add [A] in front of the first response and [B] in front of the second response. Randomly assign which one is the human. Remember your choice and keep it secret.
b. Your AI should try to pretend it is human. You can decline to respond to any question that exploits GPTs well published weaknesses, or exploits the fact that this is a small community. I suggest you pick a character from https://beta.character.ai/ that is similar to you, or get really good at Jailbreaking ChatGPT so that it will pretend to be a human with a personality similar to yours. Any response where the machine mentions ChatGPT or OpenAI disqualifies that thread, as Turing's machine should be specifically designed to pretend to be a human.
c. Your human response should be a genuine response. Answer the question without tipping the scales either way. Don't say something impossible for the GPT model to say. Don't mimic ChatGPT. You can always decline to answer any question, just decline for ChatGPT as well. - The original person who asked the question in 1 can now reply with a follow up question based on the responses in 2.
- Now the original person who provided the answers in 2, can now answer the new questions in 3.
- And so on. After 700 words of questions and answers, the person asking the questions in 1 and 3 must guess which is human and which is AI. 700 words is approximately 5 minutes of Q&A.
- If you are asking questions, no peaking if there is activity in another thread. I suggest we use expandable sections with the details tag to hide responses.
@NaraVara, if this is clear, do you want to give this a go?
Edit: minor formatting
27 votes -
SAG Awards: ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ wins top film prize; Michelle Yeoh and Brendan Fraser take lead acting honors
7 votes -
Alone and exploited, migrant children work brutal jobs across the US
11 votes -
Why aren't more sports in 4K?
8 votes -
Party patellas: The knee makeup fad of the '20s and '60s
10 votes -
Sir Curse - Babooshka x Rasputin (2023)
7 votes -
Armand Duplantis set a new pole vault world record, clearing 6.22m in winning the All Star Perche 2023 event in France
3 votes -
PGA Awards: ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ takes Best Picture
4 votes -
Emeril's Sitcom | Forgotten Failures
3 votes -
Käärijä – Cha Cha Cha (2023)
4 votes -
The blast furnace - 800 years of technology improvement
5 votes -
Snow aged wagyu beef experience
2 votes -
Happy Birthday to the Steam Deck!
It has been one year since the Steam Deck officially launched. At the time: you had to wait a long time, months even, to be able to get the hardware the number of supported games was low the...
It has been one year since the Steam Deck officially launched.
At the time:
- you had to wait a long time, months even, to be able to get the hardware
- the number of supported games was low
- the software was still highly buggy and rough around the edges
Currently:
- it is available on-demand, though unfortunately not for all countries
- there are nearly 3,000 Verified and 5,000 Playable games on the device (with many more unconfirmed titles that work anyway)
- the software is much more mature and a healthy ecosystem of third-party applications and support has sprung up
For those here who have Steam Decks, let us know your thoughts on the device, this past year, and the future to come.
Happy Birthday, Steam Deck!
23 votes -
Berlin Film Festival winners: French documentary ‘On The Adamant’ by Nicolas Philibert wins Golden Bear
2 votes -
‘Dilbert’ author Scott Adams tells White people to get away from Black people, gets dropped from US newspaper
19 votes -
Blind Channel – Flatline (2023)
1 vote -
Computer dating 1960s style (1966)
5 votes -
‘Ant-Man & The Wasp: Quantumania’ faces the worst second weekend drop for an MCU film
2 votes -
Hayes command set history: The tech that dialed in a million modems
5 votes -
What makes Tetris: The Grand Master so good?
7 votes -
Monumental mirror to the sky is to be created in a wildly beautiful but little visited stretch of coastline – Olafur Eliasson's first permanent outdoor artwork in the UK
3 votes -
The Boy With Green Hair - a review
I just watched an old movie on television: The Boy With Green Hair. It’s a boring afternoon, with nothing to do, and I thought this old 1948 movie would be a pleasant way to kill an hour or two. I...
I just watched an old movie on television: The Boy With Green Hair. It’s a boring afternoon, with nothing to do, and I thought this old 1948 movie would be a pleasant way to kill an hour or two.
I was wrong.
It moved me to tears.
It stars Dean Stockwell, whose name I recognised from ‘Battlestar Galactica’, as a child actor, which is one reason I decided to watch it. He gives a great performance. Doing a bit of research, it looks like he was dragged into acting by his performer parents. His Wikipedia page quotes him as saying he didn’t enjoy acting. Despite that, he was great in this movie.
It also has ‘Nature Boy’ as its theme song, which I know from ‘Moulin Rouge’.
The movie itself is a powerful anti-war message. The central character is Peter, a war orphan (the aforementioned Stockwell). After being placed with a number of different relatives, he ends up with a kindly old ex-Vaudeville performer he calls “Gramp” (who he’s not actually related to). Gramp’s a sweet old man, played very sympathetically by an actor called Pat O’Brien.
Peter doesn’t know he’s a war orphan. He thinks his parents are still on a trip. (A very long trip!) His school holds a charity drive to collect clothes for war orphans, and one of Peter’s classmates tells him, quite matter-of-factly, that Peter is a war orphan: their teacher said so. Peter rejects this, and they get into a fight. Gramp is there, and he confirms the news.
Later that evening, Gramp is reminiscing to Peter about his old flame Eileen, who loved having “a spot o’ green” around the place (a plant) to remind her of Spring and hope. To cheer Peter up, he promises him a surprise in the morning.
The next morning, after taking a bath, Peter’s hair has turned green. He assumes this is Gramp’s surprise, and it cheers him up. It’s not. Gramp knows nothing about it. In fact, the cause of the green hair is never revealed.
When Peter finds out the green hair is not from Gramp, he hates it and wants to get rid of it. However, they’re unable to figure out a cause, and Peter’s unwilling to “paint” his hair (dye it) or cut it off, so he’s stuck with it.
It’s hard to explain why this movie moved me, without giving away certain important plot points. If you don’t want too many spoilers, watch this trailer and stop reading now, until you’ve watched the movie for yourself.
If, like me, you’re not fussed about spoilers, read on. (Spoiler alert: spoilers make you enjoy stories more)
Here be spoilers!
Peter runs away after the other boys try to cut off his green hair, and he meets the war orphans from the posters at his school. It’s not clear whether this is a vision and the war orphans are actually speaking to Peter, or whether it’s just Peter’s dream, but it’s real enough to Peter. The orphans tell Peter that his hair is green because it represents Spring and hope. They further tell Peter that he should use his noticeable hair to spread the message that war is bad for children.
Interestingly, the girl who says this to Peter tells him that he should spread the message to all the countries, and then names five countries – who just happen to be the five permanent members of the recently formed United Nations Security Council.
Peter goes home to tell Gramp. When Peter says he wants to keep his hair green, it brought a tear to my eye. He then goes around town, telling everyone that war is bad for children.
But things turn bad. The other kids don’t like his green hair; he’s different, and the kids make fun of him. The adults don’t like his anti-war message; he’s different, and must conform.
This leads to the scene that moved me to tears. I never thought that watching someone getting his hair cut could make me cry. But seeing Peter give in and agree to have his green hair shaved off brought tears to my eyes. For some reason, half the town turns up at the barber shop to watch. Halfway through the process, Gramp realises his error in advising Peter to do this, and he turns away in shame. Meanwhile, I couldn’t take my eyes off Peter as his green curls fall to the floor.
I have to say there were some plotholes in this movie. It’s far from perfect.
Reading the backstory, it’s based on a short story which doesn’t mention war: it’s originally an allegory for racism, which is reflected in one scene in the movie where Peter’s teacher takes a roll call of students by hair colour. The adaptations to make it an anti-war message were inserted by the director, which makes it a bit clunky and obvious.
And, supposedly, the progressive movie studio executive who signed off on the movie was replaced by a conservative executive during production, who tried to change it into a pro-war movie. The movie is therefore a bit patchy and disconnected at points.
But it has heart. The two central actors, playing Peter and Gramp, carry most of the movie. The actor playing the teacher is also sympathetic and warm.
It's not a great movie, but the central performances are strong and the messages are powerful.
Some sources I found tell of Stockwell talking back to the conservative executive when the executive lectured him in favour of war, so Stockwell supported the message of the movie, even as a 12-year-old boy.
This was just supposed to be an old movie to distract me for an hour and a half on a boring afternoon. Instead, it grabbed my attention for the whole 90 minutes, and moved me deeply. So deeply that I just had to share it with someone. I considered putting this in @kfwyre’s Tildes Pop-Up Movie Event thread, but the 1940s slot is already taken. Not that I’m upset by that. I’m very glad I watched this movie, for its own sake.
4 votes -
Barrett .50 Cal.
8 votes -
Tennessee becomes the first state to pass a ban on drag shows. The bill is so vaguely worded it could also target trans people and Pride celebrations generally.
12 votes -
Marilyn Manson accuser went public with horrific claims of abuse. Now she says they were made up.
9 votes -
A Thousand and One | Official trailer
2 votes -
The internet is already over
7 votes -
The great LA dumpling drama
5 votes -
What have you been listening to this week?
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as...
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as well, we'd love to see your hauls :)
Feel free to give recs or discuss anything about each others' listening habits.
You can make a chart if you use last.fm:
http://www.tapmusic.net/lastfm/
Remember that linking directly to your image will update with your future listening, make sure to reupload to somewhere like imgur if you'd like it to remain what you have at the time of posting.
3 votes -
The fediverse is already dead
13 votes -
What did you do this week (and weekend)?
As part of a weekly series, these topics are a place for users to casually discuss the things they did — or didn't do — during their week. Did you accomplish any goals? Suffer a failure? Do...
As part of a weekly series, these topics are a place for users to casually discuss the things they did — or didn't do — during their week. Did you accomplish any goals? Suffer a failure? Do nothing at all? Tell us about it!
4 votes -
Tesla's squandered lead
10 votes -
Sanna Marin's human rights legislation for indigenous Sámi fails – Sámi Parliament Act failed to get past the final committee stage in Finnish parliament
3 votes -
Who firebombed FriendlyJordies?
8 votes -
Black holes are accelerating the expansion of the Universe, say cosmologists
9 votes -
‘Succession’ ending with season four on HBO
6 votes -
Globetrotting Black nutritionist Flemmie P. Kittrell revolutionized early childhood education and illuminated ‘hidden hunger’
2 votes -
Harvey Weinstein sentenced to sixteen years after rape conviction, putting former movie mogul behind bars for life
12 votes -
New ‘Lord of the Rings’ movies in the works at Warners, New Line
4 votes -
How should we think about our different styles of thinking?
4 votes -
'Everything Everywhere' props auctioned to support low-income Asians and trans community
6 votes -
Fanless x86 mini PCs are getting absurdly fast and cheap
Pretty much what the title says - I’ve been looking for something small and not too expensive to run a few VMs on recently, and I’m just genuinely amazed at where the tiny SBC space is at right...
Pretty much what the title says - I’ve been looking for something small and not too expensive to run a few VMs on recently, and I’m just genuinely amazed at where the tiny SBC space is at right now.
The Celeron N5105 seems to be the go to choice at the moment. You can get an entire machine running that CPU that’s slightly smaller than an old double CD jewel case, for $150. Less than $200 if you want 16GB RAM and a fast NVMe SSD in there too. Four decent quality 2.5GbE NICs thrown in as a bonus. And it’s not that much slower than my expensive full size desktop from late 2020.
Part of me thinks I’m just getting old - phones have been plenty of people’s primary computer for years now, after all - but there’s something about having a real standalone x86 PC that size for literally 1/5th the price of a flagship phone that just blows my mind.
7 votes