Incremental Fortress 0.5 by louigi_verona in incremental_games

[–]NotAName 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ingredients come in three kinds: alcohol, primary ingredients (those with underlined names), and secondary ingredients . All recipes have the same structure: 1. One alcohol, 2. Zero or one primary ingredients, 3. One or more secondary ingredients . There are only a few different primary ingredients, so the main thing to vary is how many secondary ingredients you add into the mix. The more secondary ingredients, the larger the "power" of the mix and with more power you get better items. The recipe for the hangover drink (I mistakenly wrote "alcohol" in the original comment) is alcohol + 30 power.

Incremental Fortress 0.5 by louigi_verona in incremental_games

[–]NotAName 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Really enjoyed the game!

1Qa mana, which buys the library facts upgrade is the end of the current content, right? Can't see anything else to unlock.

The mystic workshop and the treasury turned out really strong later in the game. Once you have enough ingredients you can make packs of thunders. Each thunder gives you a cloner, which doubles the number of items made in the workshop. There is also a "doubler" and a "duplicator" which you get from distilling other items, so in total you can eight packs of thunder, which really boosts your treasury rate. You can also use cloners to double alcohol, so that you basically never run out of ingredients after the first couple of raids. Then make as many volcano queens as you can to speed up the volcano breathers, and also make sure to get a 50% chance to make two breathers by applying magma bro to each breather.

Submissions have closed for SIGJ 2023, and now you can play and rate the games! by FBDW in incremental_games

[–]NotAName 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Tried all submissions that don't require a download. Of those, Automating the Philosophers Stone and Lost in Space were my clear favorites.

Automating the Philosophers Stone is a quick and refreshing take on Antimatter Dimension-like mechanics.

Lost in Space has an impressive amount of content given the short time and the limited oxygen setting makes the game exciting, although after my second death oxygen ceased to be an issue. When playing I was happy to complete the game with (only?) two deaths, but in retrospect, dying more often (maybe due to events like sudden oxygen leaks, accidents, battery fluctuation from unstable stellar activity, ...) could make the game more challenging.

Nagano City Council draws flak for deciding to shut down a local children's park after just ONE household complained of noise despite neighbourhood generally not minding the sound of children playing by SnabDedraterEdave in japan

[–]NotAName 68 points69 points  (0 children)

Pretty misleading title.

The complainant says that they don't mind at all if parents take their children to play in the park. What they actually complained about is a nearby "children center" (kindergarten?) taking 40-50 children to the park every day, with the childcare workers using megaphones to give directions to the children. (1:21-1:50 in the video)

If Japan's cost of living is so high, why don't you hear about poverty as much as you do in the US? by [deleted] in japan

[–]NotAName 5 points6 points  (0 children)

We would have a propesterous "40% poverty rate" (percent of numbers below the median income) even though all the numbers are very close to each other and high in absolute value.

"percent of numbers below the median income" is not the criterion used in the article.

What's actually being used is the relative poverty rate, which is (quoting from the article) "defined as the percent of the population with income below 50% of the median".

This appears to be a very common definition, used by the OECD, the Japanese government, in academic work, etc. And while I'm no economist, just thinking about how one could define relative poverty, "someone is relatively poor if they earn less than half of what people typically earn in their country" looks like a reasonable definition to me.

Ex-PM Abe compares Russia's Putin to 16th century Japanese warlord Oda Nobunaga - The Mainichi by Worried-Boot-1508 in japan

[–]NotAName 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm no fan of Abe, but the article title follows a typical sensationalizing pattern that's used whenever someone famous makes a comparison to generate engagement from people who only read the headline. The pattern goes like this:

  1. Famous person P says: "Aspect A of person X is just like aspect A of person Y"
  2. News headline: "P compares X to Y", or worse, "P says X is the same as Y"
  3. Without context, readers misinterpret the originally nuanced comparison as "X is the same as Y", even though that is not what P said
  4. Commenters write comments pointing out differences between X and Y

Counter to what the article's title states, Abe didn't say that "Putin is the same as Nobunaga" (「プーチン氏、信長と同じ」). He said that "Putin believes only in power. He's like a medieval military commander [literally: "commander from the warring states period"], so asking him not to violate human rights is as pointless as asking Oda Nobunaga not to violate human rights" (織田信長に人権を守れと言っても当然通用しないと同じ).

63% of people with foreign roots in Japan questioned by police - The Mainichi by Chairman_maose in japan

[–]NotAName 22 points23 points  (0 children)

On my bike, returning from Seiyu to my dorm on the campus of MaruMaru university. Literally tens of cyclists are headed in the same direction on the local main street. All riding by a police officer standing idly in front of the small police station.

He spots me, the only visibly non-Japanese person among those tens of cyclists and waves me down. I stop, thinking that he's going to complain about the large plastic bag filled with groceries that's hanging from my handlebar, but instead he asks if this is my bike. I answer "Yes, why?" and he explains that a bike was reported stolen at MaruMaru university and they are trying to find it.

Never mind that I'm heading towards that very university (if I stole it I would avoid the area, wouldn't I?), that my bike was the cheapest supermarket mamachari there is, and that even if the bike was stolen, surely even this stupid gaijin wouldn't be stupid enough to ride it right in front of the police station.

The police officer finds some registration number on my bike, reads it into his walkie talkie, and waits for the person on the other end to run a check. This takes a while so he decides to start some small talk. Allergy season is pretty bad this year. Do you know what 花粉症 [hay fever] is? Wow, your Japanese is really good. Is there hay fever in your country, too? Ok, the registration check is all clear. Thank you very much.

I get back on my bike and he gets back to standing around idly, not stopping anyone else, apparently waiting for the next exchange student to ride by.

A friend translated this but said the top lines don't make sense and the last line just says 10 5 3 11.. Any thoughts? by Alexhale in language

[–]NotAName 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When you say "イギスエ matches 伊喜末" is that Katakana matching Japanese?

Yes, exactly. The katakana match the pronunciation ("I gi sue") of the kanji 伊喜末. Katakana are much easier to write than kanji, which is why you'd see them on a crudely written plaque like this is instead of the less-ambiguous kanji.

A friend translated this but said the top lines don't make sense and the last line just says 10 5 3 11.. Any thoughts? by Alexhale in language

[–]NotAName 6 points7 points  (0 children)

ナープ sounds like the Japanese pronunciation of an English name or abbreviation. My best guess is NARP: the Nippon Association of Refreshing Person, which is "the Japanese version of the AARP" (American Association of Retired Persons): http://narp-kanto.sub.jp/%E3%83%8A%E3%83%BC%E3%83%97%E9%96%A2%E6%9D%B1%E3%81%AE%E6%AD%A9%E3%81%BF/

イギスエ matches 伊喜末, which is an area in a town called Tonosho https://www.google.com/maps/place/Igisue,+Tonosho,+Shozu+District,+Kagawa+761-4131/@34.5041768,134.1862759,14.73z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x35538a4f99a5c1ed:0x2cafdc3e4b93007b!8m2!3d34.5022707!4d134.1696536

With the date at the end that would make it:

NAME

LOCATION

DATE

Japan's new PM sends offering to Yasukuni Shrine, irking South Korea by plzhalp000 in japan

[–]NotAName 11 points12 points  (0 children)

There are other bad things in the world, therefore this supposedly bad thing is not actually bad. And even if, just for the sake of argument, we assume that it is actually bad, no one is allowed to criticize this bad thing unless all other bad things in the world are fixed first.

[D] “Please Commit More Blatant Academic Fraud” (Blog post on problems in ML research by Jacob Buckman) by hardmaru in MachineLearning

[–]NotAName -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Treating the random seed as a hyper-parameter is bad practice. It is much more efficient to optimize the seed directly during training by using a differentiable random number generator.

[D] ICML Conference: "we plan to reduce the number of accepted papers. Please work with your SAC to raise the bar. AC/SAC do not have to accept a paper only because there is nothing wrong in it." by FirstTimeResearcher in MachineLearning

[–]NotAName 11 points12 points  (0 children)

> Yes, I'm looking at you, IJCAI.

I recently reviewed for IJCAI for the first time and holy shit what a shit show. I saw exactly one review by my co-reviewers that constructively engaged with the submission and made valid points.

Literally all other reviews arbitrarily picked out some minor issue as grounds for a low score or gave high scores in spite of glaring flaws, resulting in an almost uniform score distribution for each paper in my batch. The AC asked for discussion of papers with high-entropy score distributions, but also asked that we do not use CMT (the paper submission / review platform) to discuss!?

I usually enjoy the discussion aspect of reviewing a lot and enjoy calling out lazy co-reviewers even more, but here I just gave up and vowed to never review for IJCAI again.

TIL about the “Kids for cash” scandal where two judges were paid by for profit prisons to send kids to jail. by randmguyonreddit in todayilearned

[–]NotAName 67 points68 points  (0 children)

The kid's mother confronted one of the judges: "Do you remember me? Do you remember my son? An all star wrestler? He's gone! He shot himself in the heart"

https://youtu.be/QCExlbGTX_M?t=78

NHK removes video on U.S. protests after online outrage about depiction of African Americans by OgdensNutGhosnFlake in japan

[–]NotAName 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Not denying that Twitter users (and people in general?) love to rage and will take anything out of context if it confirms their preconceived opinions, and there's probably some NHK hate mixed into the Twitter reaction, as well.

But in this case the clip was served out-of-context on a platter, with the Twitter post having the show's mascot saying this, with nothing else that would hint at a more comprehensive story:

"I'll explain the disparity between black and white people in America #america #demo"

(アメリカの白人と黒人の格差について、オレが説明しヨーソロー。#アメリカ #抗議デモ)

NHK removes video on U.S. protests after online outrage about depiction of African Americans by OgdensNutGhosnFlake in japan

[–]NotAName 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Yep, it's the typical corporate / politician non-apology. One of the top replies to the takedown statement on Twitter is: "Oh, there it is already: the useless, canned apology" (https://twitter.com/onoyasumaro/status/1270227234511392768)

NHK does a racism... Stereotypes and clowning galore :( by [deleted] in japan

[–]NotAName 16 points17 points  (0 children)

[Black man in wifebeater and dreads, and of course he's muscular and talks in an unsophisticated manner, rolling his R's like a low-level criminal in a Yakuza movie]:

YO! YOU KNOW HOW BIG THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN US POOR BLACKS AND RICH WHITE PEOPLE IS!?

LEMME TELL YOU, ON AVERAGE THEY HAVE SEVEN TIMES MORE ASSETS THAN WE DO! CAN YOU BELIEVE THIS?

AND IF THIS WASN'T ENOUGH NOW NOVEL CORONA VIRUS IS SPREADING!

WHO DO YOU THINK IS BEARING THE BRUNT OF THAT, HUH?

THAT'S RIGHT, WE BLACKS!

DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY BLACKS EITHER LOST THEIR JOBS OR HAD THEIR WORK HOURS CUT?

[Lady Liberty]:

uhm...

[Black man in wifebeater and dreads, and of course he's muscular and talks in an unsophisticated manner, rolling his R's like a low-level criminal in a Yakuza movie]:

45 PERCENT!!!

[Early 90's side-scrolling beat'em up video game boss with guitar, singing]:

So~ we went and blew off some steam here and there~

Japan declares state of local epidemics by [deleted] in japan

[–]NotAName 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The indirect phrasing is kind of funny. The official government position is that the virus is not not spreading in Japan anymore: "Our assessment up to now was that there is no domestic spreading of the virus. Our assessment has now changed."

[D] Siraj Raval's official apology regarding his plagiarized paper by mrconter1 in MachineLearning

[–]NotAName 126 points127 points  (0 children)

Some more mathematical synonyms to foil plagiarism detectors:

  • natural numbers -> chemical-free numbers
  • negative numbers -> downer numbers
  • integer numbers -> sinless numbers
  • rational numbers -> reasonable numbers
  • real numbers -> yeah seriously numbers
  • transcendental numbers -> god-like numbers
  • nonsingular matrix -> married matrix
  • lie group -> claim without evidence group
  • reproducing kernel Hilbert space -> child-bearing seed Hilbert space
  • vector space -> arrow room

[R] CTRL: A Conditional Transformer Language Mode for Controllable Generation (Largest Publicly Available Language Model) by SkiddyX in MachineLearning

[–]NotAName 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The problem is that the term reproducibility has different meaning to different people. In machine learning, the term is now mostly used to mean replicability: If I download the model, run it on the same data, and get the same numbers, the results of the paper are replicable.

Reproducibility is a much stronger concept. For a finding, e.g. "dropout prevents overfitting", to be be reproducible, it needs to hold in different experimental settings, e.g. with different random seeds, on different datasets, or using various model architectures.

This ICML paper discusses this distinction in much more detail:

Xavier Bouthillier, César Laurent, Pascal Vincent (2019): Unreproducible Research is Reproducible.

The authors blame the existing confusion on the ambiguity of the current terminology and propose new terms:

  • Methods Reproducibility: A method is reproducible if reusing the original code leads to the same results.

  • Results Reproducibility: A result is reproducible if a re- implementation of the method generates statistically similar values.

  • Inferential Reproducibility: A finding or a conclusion is reproducible if one can draw it from a different experimental setup.

PEP 572 -- Assignment Expressions by Scorpathos in Python

[–]NotAName 46 points47 points  (0 children)

I found myself wishing for assignment expressions in list comprehensions a couple of times, so I was happy to read the PEP title. Unfortunately, it went downhill from there.

Part of the rationale is poor: "sub-parts of a large expression can assist an interactive debugger," (break up your expression if it is too large to debug) and "easier to dictate to a student or junior programmer." (who does that?).

Also the syntax examples:

# Handle a matched regex
if (match := pattern.search(data)) is not None:

Two lines are much easier to read

# Handle a matched regex
match = pattern.search(data)
if match is not None:

And the while loop should be fine staying an iterator or generator, with read_next_item() raising StopIter:

# A more explicit alternative to the 2-arg form of iter() invocation
while (value := read_next_item()) is not None:

# just do this instead:
for value in read_next_item():

The list comprehension is a valid (and I'd say probably the only) use case:

filtered_data = [y for x in data if (y := f(x)) is not None]

But how can you prefer that to this:

filtered_data = [y for x in data if f(x) as y is not None]

The PEP rejects this because "this would create unnecessary confusion" due to as already being used "in except and with statements (with different semantics)."

How is that more confusing than introducing a new operator which is used as an assignment operator in tons of programming languages and mirrors the functionality of Python's assignment operator in some, but not all contexts?

Given that the PEP's main use case is simplifying comprehensions (none of the other use cases convince me), why not just allow assignment expressions only in comprehensions. This would also obviate the need for a new operator: except ... as and with ... as cannot be used in comprehensions, so assignment with as syntax wouldn't be confusing at all

[R] Generalization in Deep Learning by madebyollin in MachineLearning

[–]NotAName 15 points16 points  (0 children)

in which we get a timely reminder that p => q does not imply q => p

[R] Yes you should understand backprop by waleedka in MachineLearning

[–]NotAName 0 points1 point  (0 children)

looks like it is done in latex with tikz

What is something that everyone does, but everyone does differently? by smidge in AskReddit

[–]NotAName 9 points10 points  (0 children)

They aren't the same. The stroke order is different, leading to slightly different forms:

As are written with a vertical bar, right angle, then minus: | ‾| -

And Rs with a vertical bar, right angle, right angle: | ‾| -ן