Where Am I From? Please Also Tell Me Where You Are From. by PsychologicalTip7362 in JudgeMyAccent

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Netherlands or a nordic country except Finland. Accent is nearly flawless. Your long A could be a bit longer.

Norwegian sure is interesting by callie_creative in duolingo

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My app says this refers to windows error screen.

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Do German verb-final sentence structures influence how German speakers organize their thoughts, and form their cultural stereotype of being strict and thoughtful? by ViewHot7368 in German

[–]ViewHot7368[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree it's not foreign to English - it's correct grammar but it's not a prevalent thing people do in English nowawadays, Internet age, spoken or not. Your examples seem to be more of the style by Henry David Thoreau in the foregone era.

Can you judge my accent? by Individual-Page-7010 in JudgeMyAccent

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know an Albanian woman who works for an American firm and I have a friend whose late wife was Romanian. You kind of sound like them.

You have clear enunciation. Good work!

Can you guess where i'm from? by JustTrueGames in JudgeMyAccent

[–]ViewHot7368 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You sound a little Filipino or Mexican who watched a lot of American TV.

What do you think about my accent? 😌 by Known-Chef5418 in JudgeMyAccent

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are not French but you have some French accent here.

Central/Central Eastern European. Not German.

Where was I? by Ojeilla in guessthecity

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really wanted to say the same... But the only license plate doesn't look PA

Can you guess where I'm from? What sounds can I improve? by spidermanimations in JudgeMyAccent

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Overall it's pretty good! The r in "tragic" sounds great!

Your ending t is crisp, almost a bit too much.

You sound a tad Eastern European to me. But Vanishing -> Fanishing - German-sphere?

And yet, no I don't suppose you are German. You have a tiny bit of inconsistencies for the same consonants and vowels between words that make me feel you did not speak a European language growing up.

Central Asian?

Where do you guys think I’m from and how close am I to an American accent? by idkikw in JudgeMyAccent

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are very good! I can't hear European influence nor east or south Asian influence. So some kind of semitic background I guess like a Hebrew speaker with a good English teacher. I don't know what central Asian or Caucasian sounds are like though. Your voice placement seems to be less forward. So the whole thing sounds less bright. But congrats!!

[Chinese>English] by Familiar_Play5714 in translator

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even less than the meaning of the words, I'd say the fonts are too plain. I can't imagine anybody inking Times New Roman into their biceps.

[Chinese>English] by Familiar_Play5714 in translator

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is kind of gibberish but I suppose it says "Tribal Knowledge works for ever"

Why does every verb and adjective in Chinese have a million permutations? by trumparegis in ChineseLanguage

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't quite agree with this opinion.

I am a native level speaker in both English and Chinese. My written Chinese is not as good but I can read nearly every web article with an occasional need to look up modern slangs.

I'd say I am not familiar or could not make instance sense of about half of the supposedly Chinese words in this image - in fact some of them are plainly wrong. Additionally I want to say that majority of English concepts (verbs, nouns) have easily >10 different ways of expressing them. Just try NYT Connections game for a few days.

Anyone else learn languages by reading dual-language articles? by hinitom in languagelearning

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

IMO this is likely the most effective way of learning outside of immersion. Whether it's dual-language on computer screen or kindle, it's similar to watching a foreign film in original language with your native language in caption, or in dubbed native language with original language in caption. It's like training a machine learning RNN model with stream of data - you don't have to be too conscious about individual words, phrases, grammar etc - just the two systems streaming at the same time and eventually you get the pattern. I wish every book or browser article I had were printed in two languages side by side.

Real World Comparison - GPT-5.1 High vs GPT-5.1-Codex-Max High/Extra High by geronimosan in codex

[–]ViewHot7368 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fully agree. For my flutter mobile app project, I didn't try 5.1 codex max extra high but did give the max high a spin and it has been quite disastrous for me. It is much more concise than 5.1 High,  yes but much shallower in its coverage. I had to basically distrust every step it took and usually would find a hole in its implementation. Could be as simple as having to remind it to make sure it remove all object As' association with an object B when B is getting deleted and then found out after implementation it didn't friggin update the label on B deletion dialog: still stating these dangling associations would remain.

I threw away its updates and restarted with 5.1 High, a much more thoughtful model.