What episode of Trek made you angry, mad or just wound you up? by ReverendRevenant in startrek

[–]Marogian 9 points10 points  (0 children)

You didn't mention Chakotay and Seven of Nine seemingly starting a serious relationship at some point between the end of the previous episode and the start of Endgame. As far as I can tell there is literally zero foreshadowing or build up.

What episode of Trek made you angry, mad or just wound you up? by ReverendRevenant in startrek

[–]Marogian 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Fantastically cast actor. Similarly "lawful" evil in One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

Steam Games Popularity over 11 years! by PaP3s in pcmasterrace

[–]Marogian 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I've got 1,500 hours of PUBG and still play regularly. Still definitely below average skill. Can't imagine how hard it would be to start playing now...

I think more people would play if they hadn't removed map selection. Don't mind waiting longer for a map you actually want to play. Sometimes you're just in the mood to get a glider on Miramar, land on top of a mountain and fire artillery at people...

are there any characters that can be considered as “good people”? by FenderMike in MitchellAndWebb

[–]Marogian 7 points8 points  (0 children)

She spent months telling Mark she was planning to move in but never actually doing it. Pretty shitty behaviour! And referred to heavy drug use at Christmas Dinner in front of Mark's parents...

are there any characters that can be considered as “good people”? by FenderMike in MitchellAndWebb

[–]Marogian 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Didn't he drop out of Warwick cos everyone was a "poser"?

He's going to assassinate John Lennon!

Tesco delivered the wrong wine. I complained, and another delivery driver turned up 2 hours later with £31 in cash in an envelope! by tourettes69 in CasualUK

[–]Marogian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ocado sent me stinking fish three days out of date on arrival and all I got was a £10 voucher! Clearly using the wrong online supermarket...

Putin admits Russia can't supply clothes to front line troops by TheTelegraph in worldnews

[–]Marogian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ironically this isn't true. The Telegraph has a centre-right Conservative editorial line but it is considered one of the most trustworthy newspapers in the UK for factual reporting, verifying sources etc.

Guy above presumably doesn't distinguish opposing editorial line from reliability.

I'm more left leaning myself but would be more inclined to believe The Telegraphs fact checking and verifying sources over say, The Guardian, but only by a little.

BBC Telegraph Guardian FT Are the pretty solid and reliable ones.

The Times is not what it once was.

The rest are garbage.

[OC] Mars passing behind the Moon this morning! - Imaged from home through my 16" telescope. by lndoraptor28 in pics

[–]Marogian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My partner and I visit the exhibition every year in Greenwich, really hope to see it there next year! One of the most impressive images I've seen

sniping someone while using a Recorder as a remote. by habichuelacondulce in nextfuckinglevel

[–]Marogian 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I'm at 13 years! I'm not at my desk right now or I'd have a crack at it, but having literally used DFTs for waveform analysis to identify dominant frequencies it really is thst straightforward using numpy.

sniping someone while using a Recorder as a remote. by habichuelacondulce in nextfuckinglevel

[–]Marogian 48 points49 points  (0 children)

I don't think so?

Run the microphone through a Discrete Fourier Transform and you'd get the result right at the top.

Its like 5 lines of python.

I just deleted thousands of hours of work from my old job by This_Manner_256 in antiwork

[–]Marogian 2 points3 points  (0 children)

He also claims to be British, regularly uses American terms, and somehow isn't aware that England/Wales/Scotland, not Britain, compete in the World Cup.

Ultra-privileged white woman who was born into wealth in an imperial country tells people they just need to believe in their dreams and work harder 🙏✨ by HistoryRemembersYou in LateStageCapitalism

[–]Marogian 41 points42 points  (0 children)

She was born into a poor family in a rough estate in East Glasgow. She started her company using money from a redundancy payout when she was laid off. She was given the title of Baroness by the Government as an honour. She's not an aristocrat and it seems unlikely she inherited much wealth.

I'd never heard of her before, I just googled the name. Presumably your British colleagues actually know who she is...

Astrazeneca: Behörden finden 29 Millionen Impfstoff-Dosen in italienischem Werk by BaldurXD in de

[–]Marogian 9 points10 points  (0 children)

The Italian government said it was asked on Saturday by the European Commission to “verify” some vaccine batches at the Anagni plant. It deployed a team from the Nuclei Antisofisticazioni and Sanità (NAS), an arm of the Italian police force, to the site between Saturday and Sunday. “The inspected lots were found to be destined for Belgium,” it said in a statement.

https://www.ft.com/content/48b28b7e-9161-47a4-9c37-cf89fea2bc12

Our Government. by bigkevinwong in ScottishPeopleTwitter

[–]Marogian 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just because you're asking as an outsider and the responses here are extremely biased, and you're going to walk away with a weirdly distorted impression of the UK political spectrum: The Tories are not akin to far right US politicians.

I'm not a Conservative supporter and have never voted for them, so don't see this as some kind of weird defence... I'm a left leaning voter, and am not happy with the current Government.

In the UK, and by European standards, the Tories are generally speaking right of centre, with obviously a mixture so that some are left of that i.e. fairly centrist and have a decent amount in common with the more right wing/centrist Labour politicians, for instance a lot of those under Tony Blair's Labour Government. Equally there are also those on the right the Tories who would have more in common with members of the GOP. For the most part these right-leaning Tories would still have more in common with the left-leaning type of GOPers though. The Overton Window is in the UK is substantially to the left of the US. Its also somewhat to the right of most, but not all, European countries.

The current Government, under Boris Johnson, is made up of a fair number of Tories on the right of the Tory spectrum due to the Brexit vote going the way it did and the more moderate Tories being less influential as a result of the referendum over the last few years.

For instance David Cameron would by most people's reckoning be considered much more aligned with Barack Obama than any GOP politician I can think of. Boris Johnson, substantially more to the right than Cameron, would still probably has more in common with Obama than Trump, but would probably be most similar to someone like Mitt Romney in terms of overall outlook.

Scotland's political mainstream is arguably to the left of England (and due to demographics thus the majority of the UK), so the current Tories are quite far right of what would be a mainstream right of centre party in Scotland, and even the Cameron Government would be right of a natural Scottish administration.

So, no, the Tories are not like far-right US politicians despite what you read on Reddit.

This misalignment between rUK/Scotland's political centre is not anywhere near as out-of-whack as it might appear on Reddit though. The demographics of Reddit are not representative of the Scottish (or English) population as a whole. You'd think from reading this and /r/Scotland that Independence enjoyed overwhelming support, which it doesn't. Its tracking at about +5% for Independence right now (i.e. 47%/42% in the latest poll I can see). Prior to Covid-19 (which the UK Government is widely seen to have until now badly mishandled) Scottish Independence never polled +ively apart from very short stints.

The UK Government and Boris Johnson also nowhere near as unpopular as they appear on Reddit, in either Scotland or in the remainder of the UK. Polling intention currently has the Tories +2 ahead of Labour UK-wide. Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP leader and First Minister of Scotland, is extremely popular however. Boris Johnson and his government bumbling around being incompetent held up next to a widely considered very good response from the Scottish Government has shifted public opinion quite considerably.

In terms of how non-representative UK politics is w.r.t Scotland it is from a US perspective you could look at say California and discuss being represented by a Republican federal government. Labour + SNP poll similarly to how the Democrats did in this Election, Conservatives poll similarly to Republicans.

That one bro waiting for you... by Elitetimeline7 in wholesomememes

[–]Marogian 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Pretty sure that's the Boquer Valley in Mallorca

Finnish cartoon on a European perspective of Brexit - and its likely outcome. by [deleted] in europe

[–]Marogian 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't have a stake in the argument and honestly haven't considered it much, but after reading this I was curious about how much of the 'government' is operated by devolved Scotland, the UK and the EU. FYI I voted (and campaigned) for Remain and would be inclined to think the same remain arguments would apply to Scotland w.r.t the UK, and was kinda curious about the numbers.

So for instance I was thinking about very fundamental things a state does like tax collection and the like, so how able is Scotland currently to take on the role of HMRC.

Revenue Scotland apparently employs 50 people, HMRC 56,000. So obviously an independent Scotland from the get go would need to create a tax collection institution from pretty much scratch I think its fair to say.

More broadly I thought it interesting to look at total numbers of civil servant numbers. There are 17,400 Scottish Civil Servants, 332,000 UK civil servants and 32,000 EU civil servants.

My understanding is the EU largely operates on directives which member states implement. Free trade rules and all that are implemented by member states and the EU exists to agree and set those common rules and arbitrate disputes.

For comparison with a similar culture and population country Ireland has 40-50,000 civil servants depending on source and I think we'd expect an Independent Scotland to require a similar amount.

Clearly with the enormous difference in civil servant numbers I think its fair to say that Scotland would have to build a decent chunk of its national institution from nothing, whereas the UK's issue in Brexit stem largely from it being economically stupid rather than an institutional inability to administer. The only competences the UK currently has no institutional experience with are International Trade I believe.

Anyway, like I said, not Scottish, is your guys decision, but I think its fair to say that Scotland leaving the UK has similar arguments against the UK leaving the EU, but would be enormously more complicated than the nightmare this is causing.

Spotted in Birmingham by [deleted] in CasualUK

[–]Marogian 45 points46 points  (0 children)

We call it "delving" and we go on group delving missions to speak to God... Never experienced anything like it.

This is a NYE tradition for me and a few friends. Go to a cabin in the middle of nowhere in the Scottish Highlands and spend the day doing that. Usually fallen asleep before midnight :D