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31 votes
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Pathologic 3 announced with time travel mechanic, due for release in 2025
10 votes -
Yorushika (ヨルシカ) - Aporia (2024)
5 votes -
Acoustic cameras, motion amplification, and reading someone’s pulse through a video call
10 votes -
Ненаписаний лист (The Unwritten Letter) - 1985
5 votes -
OWZA – Hush Hush (2024)
1 vote -
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.
19 votes -
Using randomizers to play Zelda like it's 1987
10 votes -
The rapidly growing tram system of Helsinki – taking a look at the network's history, lines, technical details, tram fleet, ridership, and the future
12 votes -
Russia is changing its nuclear doctrine - atomic coercion, Ukraine and the nuclear threshold
18 votes -
The Technical Difficulties are back! | Reverse Trivia 1x01
19 votes -
First ever Rebirth (loopback from level 255 to Level 0) achieved in NES Tetris by Michael Khanh aka dogplayingtetris
33 votes -
Monophonics - Sage Motel (2022)
4 votes -
Siamese – This Is Not A Song (2024)
4 votes -
Kill Bill x Rav x Hatsune Miku - THINGS WILL GET MUCH WORSE FROM HERE (2024)
15 votes -
Fact check: Greta Thunberg ‘vegan grenades’ TV interview is deepfake
18 votes -
The Rocky Horror Video Game | Announcement trailer
10 votes -
Meta Movie Gen
9 votes -
We've been helping rewild this quarry for a few years now and the transformation has been wonderful to witness
19 votes -
America’s first cross-country auto race
2 votes -
Mokoma – Haluamanilainen (2024)
2 votes -
German Navy Enigma machine systems were different to the Army, making them tougher to crack. In this video, James Grime discusses the differences and what Alan Turing achieved in breaking the code.
8 votes -
How Japanese square watermelons are made
7 votes -
Babel Lecture 2022 with Stephen Fry: 'What we have here is a failure to communicate' (17/06/22)
8 votes -
NEØV – A Little Taste (2024)
3 votes -
Why are bands mysteriously disappearing?
20 votes -
The Dog Days Are Over - #Florence+TheMachine
13 votes -
The Moon's orbit is weird
15 votes -
Aron Can – MONNÍ (2024)
2 votes -
Origami Angel - Wretched Trajectory (2024)
6 votes -
The Legend of Vox Machina Seasons 1 and 2
21 votes -
The Sojourn - Volume One
2 votes -
A cool YouTube channel, called Tool de Japan, showcasing the skills of Japanese craftsmen
21 votes -
Joe & The Shitboys – Mr. Nobody (2024)
5 votes -
Ubisoft needs the next ‘Assassin’s Creed’ to be a hit
14 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.
25 votes -
Denmark became the world's first country to offer legal recognition of gay partnerships on 1 October 1989 – a day when "something shifted in human affairs"
13 votes -
Cyan Kicks – Don't You Say I Didn't Warn You (2024)
2 votes -
Viossa and venting about Etymology Nerd
The first half of this post is a vent about recent events I have to get out of my system. Below is some hopefully actually interesting content about the constructed conpidgin Viossa. If you are...
The first half of this post is a vent about recent events I have to get out of my system. Below is some hopefully actually interesting content about the constructed conpidgin Viossa.
If you are interested in languages & linguistics and, like me, are not immune to the draw of short-form video content, you are probably familiar with the creator Etymology Nerd. He makes shorts on TikTok and other platforms about all things linguistics, usually pointing out some cool facet or etymology. The videos are, due to the their length, often very surface level, but they’re informative and fun, and for the most part, accurate enough – at least as far as I can tell. However, two days ago, he posted this short on TikTok and then a bit later to YouTube: conlangs are so back. It points the spotlight on a constructed language by the name of Viossa: A collaborative con-pidgin, that is, a conlang created by users attempting to establish communication despite speaking different languages. This is rather meaningful to me, as I was one of the original co-creators of Viossa – more on that below. At first, I was quite happy about this, until I went to check out the Discord server and found it effectively on fire. While there were about 1700 members on the discord server, the number of active members was much smaller, certainly less than 100.
In the first day after the TikTok video, over 1000 users sought out the discord server and joined it.
Etymology Nerd didn’t ask for permission, he did not even give a heads-up. He found and joined the server on the 27th, asked a few questions, and then posted his short on TikTok two hours later. And while he learned that the server’s moderation was getting overwhelmed, he reposted the video to YouTube unchanged the next day anyway, merely leaving a pinned comment asking people to be respectful. The Viossa discord is currently on lockdown (invites paused) until things settle down. In the meantime, the short has amassed close to two million views on TikTok & Youtube combined. While I don’t think this can be called malicious, it speaks of a lack of care of the impact it can have to shine a spotlight on a small community when you have such a big following. Who cares what happens to them, I got my clicks, right?
But that’s enough venting. Time for some history. As I mentioned above, I was one of the people who started this whole thing. Back in 2014, before Discord, there was a Skype group for people interested in conlangs. I was in high school at the time, as were most other members – reddit demographics. We realized that many of us spoke at least one language other than English, and decided to conduct an experiment: Could we establish communication through those other languages by finding common grounds and learning each other’s words for things? So on Christmas Eve that year, six of us hopped into a video call and tried to communicate without using English. Each of us would contribute with one or two languages: Norwegian, Finnish, Japanese, Irish, Albanian&Greek and Swiss German. Within the first night, we had a few words and could ask simple questions. Within the first week, we had a few hundred words and were able to hold uninterrupted, if simple, conversations. We had some other people join the project over the course of the first year, and presented the results on reddit:
Things continued quietly from then on. The number of members grew slowly, while others got bored and dropped out of the project. At some point, Discord rolled around and the community moved there – a far easier platform to join than Skype. Some copycat projects sprung up, but to my knowledge, sadly none really persisted. In 2017, I held a talk at the Language Creation Conference about this style of language creation, and on Viossa in particular. The conference was livestreamed, so you can watch it on Youtube here (ca. 30 minutes):
A major influx of new members came in 2020, when Jan Misali made a video on the language as part of his Conlang Critic series. His video is extremely well put-together, and created in close collaboration with many regular members of the community, and it really is the best showcase of what Viossa had become in the six years since its inception. You can find it here:
This video put the project on the radar for many more people, and it has definitely changed the language. When you get many learners in a short amount of time, the things they pick up tend to reinforce each other, and you get sudden drastic shifts. I’m finding that I struggle with understanding a lot more of the language used by people who joined after this video than from other oldtimers. Then things settled again, until the etymologynerd post two days ago.
And that’s the history of, weirdly, one of the more successful constructed languages, built on just two rules:
- If you can understand it, it’s correct Viossa.
- Learn Viossa through Viossa, no translation.
20 votes -
Blood Incantation (feat. Tangerine Dream) - The Stargate (2024)
10 votes -
The Cosmere Begins - A Parody Song
13 votes -
My latest instrument, the fron2, on its first day out
15 votes -
The 2024 European Tram Driver Championships
15 votes -
TheFatRat - Unity 10th Anniversary Mixtape (2024)
7 votes -
How to setup a local LLM ("AI") on Windows
12 votes -
Ukraine's ammo depot strikes - How complacency (and drones) destroyed Russian bases
14 votes -
Archaeologist Cat Jarman, a Viking Age specialist, joins WIRED to answer the internet's burning questions about the Vikings
13 votes -
Problems of scale: How to get a better grasp on numbers?
Inspired by the post about "petty reform" platforms, I noticed a trend, that matched with my own brain musings. People have an inherent problem with number conceptualization(Poor natural magnitude...
Inspired by the post about "petty reform" platforms, I noticed a trend, that matched with my own brain musings.
People have an inherent problem with number conceptualization(Poor natural magnitude conception?).
I recall this being a problem as old as time. Things that have helped me grapple with this are things like Fermi Problems and someone who used a grain of rice to represent the scale of wealth discrepancy in the world, using Bill Gates or Elon Musk as an example (can't find the original video, all the derivatives have been turned into TikTok-esque drivel).
I ask the people of Tildes, what types of scale descriptors, demonstrations, etc. have you found moving in your life? Really putting something into perspective. I will give bonus points for "positive" examples, not just doom and gloom, but welcome anything that tickles your fancy.
13 votes -
The unique undersea tunnels that link the Faroe Islands
21 votes -
My hated AI video
15 votes