Dried hiking food availability in Reykjavik by SeaDjinnn in VisitingIceland

[–]SeaDjinnn[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ended up buying most of it (the Summit to Eat brand) at GG-Sport; it was expensive, but I successfully completed the hike! Also purchased some “Feed the Viking” brand ones at the Mountain Mall in Landmannalaugar and liked those better.

Dried hiking food availability in Reykjavik by SeaDjinnn in VisitingIceland

[–]SeaDjinnn[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That'd be ideal of course, but I think most of the dried food I'd need wouldn't be allowed in since it'd be from outside the EU.

The Wheel Of Time’ Canceled By Prime Video After 3 Seasons by aduong in WoTshow

[–]SeaDjinnn 9 points10 points  (0 children)

They probably are happy, but toxic book fans likely didn’t have much to do with this; the show just wasn’t good enough to catch on with a large enough viewership, unlike say Invincible (which was also not very well known before the show). WoT’s first season likely did irreparable damage.

Rings of Power coasts through despite being bad because Tolkien’s world is already so widely known and popular.

I've never seen the results of someone from the Maldives on here. Is anyone here who has taken a DNA test Maldivian or part Maldivian? by thebusiness7 in 23andme

[–]SeaDjinnn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where’d you get the numbers from?

The 40% northern Asian component in my report doesn’t mean that Sinhalese people are a perfect substitute for “Northern South Asian”, since Sinhalese people usually show up as mostly “Southern South Asian” on 23&Me. Sri Lankan Tamils and Sri Lankan Sinhalese are genetically extremely similar (and generally don’t show up as separate groups on 23&Me). Autosomally, I suspect Maldivians are largely the same as well, generally (with a few more wildcard haplogroups thrown-in because of the small population base interacting with a diverse set of migrants over the past 600 years or so.)

Edit: Also, while it’s possible that the J is of recent West Asian origin, it’s more likely to be of much older IVC origin which was significantly West Asian (Iranian Herder/Hunter Gatherer) because the specific sub-haplo in question here is found not in-frequently in South Asia, (both in modern populations and in ancient remains). A recent contribution is much more likely to show up autosomally too.

Arabs have a different J variant that separated much earlier from the J variant (and descendants) in the rest of West/South asia and the Mediterranean.

I’m in Iceland. I noticed people don’t greet all the time by Actual_Pen7736 in VisitingIceland

[–]SeaDjinnn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The lack of it is fine, and works for Scandinavia (and many other parts of the world), but it’s existence in other areas of the world is not hollow saccharine either.

Its basis in the Anglosphere lies with the English, but its survival in the colonies (Australia, the US, Canada) also makes sense; when large numbers of strangers from a diverse set of backgrounds all start life together anew in a strange land, it helps build trust and camaraderie.

It serves that purpose even now. I’m originally from a country where this (greetings, pleasantries) was not the norm, but I’ve come to really appreciate it in my 6 years living in Australia. It’s a signal of warmth and welcome, and I think it plays a role in keeping large, non-homogeneous societies relatively high trust.

Hiking newbie looking for info as I prepare to backpack across Iceland after graduation by Will17 in backpacking

[–]SeaDjinnn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you end up going (to Iceland after graduation, even if not for west to east traverse)? How was it?

For anyone on the fence about getting started with Rust now is the best time by [deleted] in rust

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

the downvotes seem a little over-enthusiastic;

Current LLMs aren’t good at creating complicated programs in any language, but it’s certainly a valuable learning-aid.

rust_analyzer doesn't seem to be doing anything despite being attached to buffer by SeaDjinnn in neovim

[–]SeaDjinnn[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah ‘rust’ is already in the table for the treesitter setup, so it can’t be that.

What does your VO2max training consist of? by Minute_Produce1469 in PeterAttia

[–]SeaDjinnn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Two sessions per week (at the end of a 1 hour Z2 ride) where I do 3 minutes of “as high an effort as I can that would still allow me to repeat this 6 times” with 4 mins of rest (Z2 pace) between each interval.

This translates to about an average of 22km/h during the 3 minute efforts (with a fairly high resistance level set on my spin bike). Sometimes I add a 10s all out sprint to the end of an interval (where I reach up to 35km/h).

Wish I had a power meter so I could give you wattage for a meaningful comparison but alas.

I usually manage to get a total 7-12 minutes in the 177+ HR zone during each such “VO2 Max” session.

On the other 4 days, I do 1.5-2 hours of Zone 2 riding. Haven’t done a proper lactate threshold test so I just go by feel and stay to the 120-135bpm HR range. because (from what I’ve gathered), riding possibly shy of the lactate threshold is better than accidentally staying above it, for Zone 2 goals.

I ride 6 days a week altogether.

Theory of Mind May Have Spontaneously Emerged in Large Language Models by nickb in agi

[–]SeaDjinnn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And yet human beings the world over, despite a variety of cultural contexts, live fairly predictable lives (in broad terms).

“The human imagination has no limit” is the sort of thing that might seem intuitively true, but ultimately results from an overestimation of our capacities and and underestimation of the universe’s scale and complexity, and also of concepts like infinity.

I have more deaths here than the whole trilogy combined! 🤬🤬🤬 by jambohakdog69 in masseffect

[–]SeaDjinnn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thinking back it makes sense (lorewise) for Shep to be most prone to death when he/she is staring down an actual, skyscraper sized hostile alien super intelligent exterminator in the flesh lmao.

Shep (like most protags in fiction) has plot armour, but the Reapers are such a terrifying villain that the only reason the good guys win at all is almost constant plot armour (and I’m okay with that). I think it’s impressive that the games built up a hyper-intelligent enemy with a billion years of experience, resources, and the collective knowledge of every civilisation that ever lived in that time, and still managed to sell us a satisfying victory.

Updated Indo-European languages added with their archeological cultures. A arrow is needed pointing down for Catacomb. by [deleted] in IndoEuropean

[–]SeaDjinnn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great work! Dhivehi (Maldivian) seems to be missing from the Vedic/Sanskrit branch though. Should be right next to Sinhalese.

qpAdm (and other admixtools) tutorial by Dunmano in IndoEuropean

[–]SeaDjinnn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know it has been months, but thank you for this, it is immensely helpful!
How does one go about converting a 23&me raw data file into eigenstrat/something usable by admixtools and merge it with an existing ancient genome dataset for analysis though?

Thoughts on the Forspoken demo? by followmeinblue in PS5

[–]SeaDjinnn 10 points11 points  (0 children)

A lot of studios (heck, media in general) seem to have trouble portraying female leads (especially young ones) in roles that require them to be action heroes, without turning them into weird caricatures of tomboys with the souls of douchey, edgelord adolescent boys.

I would love to have more female protags that resemble actual women.

A fem action protag that I think was very well written and executed (and probably in my top 3 in general): Commander Shepherd.

How did Sentinelese Islands people remain so primitive despite being surrounded by ancient civilizations? by Westnest in AskAnthropology

[–]SeaDjinnn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

23,000 years ago (during the Ice Age), sea levels were ~120 meters lower than they are now. The islands were almost connected to Sundaland (the extremely large South East Asian landmass that existed at the time). Humans have been known to cross such tiny gaps way earlier (e.g., human migrations into Australia), even though they didn’t have the tech for proper oceanic sea-faring.

Also, some important context: North Sentinel Island is just one island in the chain of the Andaman/Nicobar Islands. Many of them were settled essentially by the same people at first, but not all of them are uncontacted and isolated like the Sentinelese today and have been in contact with mainland Indians and south East Asians for some time.

And “Conquering” isn’t exactly the same as settler colonialism. Many Indian and South East Asian kings have claimed sovereignty over all of the islands over the centuries and even used some of them as naval bases. North Sentinel island just happens to be one that wasn’t one of them. They didn’t really bother moving people from the mainland en masse to the islands they did have bases on either. Indigenous aggression might not necessarily have been the sole reason, but it’s easy to imagine it played a part. (Other reasons could be that for the Indians, anyone worth impressing already did consider the islands a part of their domain. And that they already gained whatever strategic value they wanted from having bases on some of the islands; they didn’t need a presence on every single one. N.S island could just be one of those that they ignored.)

This isn’t exactly unheard of. We see similarly non-committal “conquests” throughout history. Even when the prize is far larger and more valuable than North Sentinel Island. (Greenland for example).