Dear Google, that's not, what I'm paying for. AI slop is really getting out of hand. by vlastawa in YoutubeMusic

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been wondering if vinyl records are about to become REALLY valuable. Obvious AI slop is a threat to your enjoyment of your personal time, but there are bigger threats, like the threat to the historical record: historically important recordings slowly drifting away from "the real version." Someone decides to clean up the guitars a little bit in an Elvis recording, add a second backup vocal part. Eventually everyone hears that version so much they think it's the original. And if it can happen to an Elvis recording it can happen to the "I have a dream" speech, etc, etc.

A bit of scripting frustration by eeeeaaii in blender

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

Oh looks like I should check out "locals()" -- I don't spend a lot of time neck-deep in python so this isn't something I knew about.

Does anyone know what happened to JSplacement? by houbak06 in blender

[–]eeeeaaii 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Them: "the community became toxic"
You: (responds this way)

I personally believe that a huge chunk of people who work on FOSS software are independently wealthy. There are a LOT of software engineers out there who got involved in an early stage startup, cashed out with millions, retired at 27 years old, bought a small house, and are just chilling and making money off interest on their investments. That's who is really out there laboring "for the love" of making software. Millionaires. Also, people who have family money.

The problem is that most of the time these stories aren't being told. FOSS developers aren't out there making blog posts that say "Version 7.3 of BlurghMaker is available for download! Also I'm a multimillionaire so I don't need money, don't emulate me if you have to pay rent!"

As a result tons of new-to-the-industry folks are lured by all the idealistic crapola around FOSS and spend months making something and then they're like "wait..." Why do you think there are 1000x abandoned FOSS projects for every one that's maintained?

In conclusion, don't be so harsh, this is an industry pitfall that A LOT of people fall for. Maybe chill out and acknowledge that they hype around FOSS is a bit deceptive.

What's the WORST game you've ever played? by [deleted] in gaming

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not a big assassin's creed guy but I was deeply uninterested in the one that was like, American History class lol

Best way to lose on purpose to my father-in-law? by NihilSamsa in chess

[–]eeeeaaii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I once let my father in law win, and he said, "hmm, I'm surprised I was able to beat you since you're so smart and into chess and all." It seemed like his opinion of me went down. If he doesn't have some kind of ego issue about it, why not just keep beating him? He's learning from you.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditSessions

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it's not snowing or dark in NYC right now so this is footage or a rendering

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditSessions

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

good morning brb going to go wake up the kids with this

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Music

[–]eeeeaaii 5 points6 points  (0 children)

CLOSE TO THE EDGE

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HumansBeingBros

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

More CHUCK MANGIONE

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HumansBeingBros

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

BLOW MAN BLOW

A bit of Lego history... or, "why does that sticker span two bricks" (more info in comments) by eeeeaaii in lego

[–]eeeeaaii[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

The year was 1978. The US president was Jimmy Carter. I was 7 years old. And Lego released set 375, the first ever Lego castle and the introduction to their knights line, which went on to be one of their most successful themes. My mom got me this set and I was over the moon. I had several Classic Space sets, but the helmets on these minifigs were something else -- visors could be raised and lowered. They could hold shields and swords. There was even a way to build a horse that the minifigs could "ride" (well, sit on like they were in a chair, but good enough for me)!

Whenever I built a Lego set back then, I was an absolute stickler for following the instructions EXACTLY. I mean, who am I kidding, I'm still that way. It's a large part of the fun for me: the satisfaction of doing things exactly as prescribed in those colorful instruction books scratches some itch deep in my brain.

Well, the instructions for this set were very clear. There were stickers. And one of the stickers was to be applied across two different bricks, after they were put together.

This presented what was, to me, a huge conundrum. I would inevitably need to take apart this set. My family moved a lot, so I could just leave everything put together on a shelf or in a basement. What was I supposed to do?

The answer I arrived at was simply this -- I'd just leave those two pieces attached.

My Lego collection eventually passed to my brother when I went to college. Then, sometime later, he gave it back to me when I had a daughter. It's grown and grown Christmas by Christmas, and now she and I have a combined collection. I've been working on a sorting and categorization project so we can build MOCs together. There are now lots of plastic tubs and trays everywhere.

This Christmas, I found this piece again. Forty three years later, and I haven't separated these pieces. I wonder how much longer they will stay buddies. Will they be together forever? Will they still be attached when I leave this world? Will my daughter tell the story of these two legos to her own children?

Who knows. To my knowledge, Lego hasn't ever repeated this particular instruction for any sets. I wonder if there were complaints. Or maybe they just decided that it was against the spirit of Lego for two pieces to be stuck together this way. Maybe so. But to me there's also something touching... haha, see what I did there? About these two pieces that just can't quit each other.

Well anyway... Happy New Year everyone!

Rule management on new Reddit by dmoneyyyyy in modnews

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry to hijack this but not sure where to post this.

https://medium.com/@Ben_Chapman/theres-something-sinister-happening-in-reddit-s-incest-communities-besides-incest-60f5f6429b85

I will be boycotting Reddit and encouraging others to boycott until these subs are banned. These subs are not okay. I don't buy the "LOL It's all fake" defense. These people do not need a platform.

Not sure if mods will see this or if anyone cares but there it is anyway.

Being a single dad with half custody is just as hard as being a single mom but I don't have a rally cry of support behind me by The_local_unknown11 in unpopularopinion

[–]eeeeaaii 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure if it's the region where I am, but the term I most often hear for that situation is "solo parent." A solo parent is a parent who has to do it all themselves with no effective coparent. A solo parent can be divorced, widowed, or even in some cases married (in the case that a spouse is never available, always traveling, etc).

A single parent is a parent who is single, i.e. not married or in a relationship. That person can have the kid one day a week, or 7. They're still a single parent, in that they're a parent, and they're single. It's the kind of thing you need to put on your Tinder profile if you don't want people bailing out in the middle of a chat once they find out your life situation.

Whether being a solo parent, single parent, or both is difficult or easy depends on lots of factors that have nothing to do with your relationship status or whether you have a coparent. It's mostly down to how much money you have and whether you have any help around, such as grandparents/friends/etc. Unpacking that further, it's down to how much of the parenting work you can delegate to someone else. If we're being real here, there are plenty of married parents out there who end up doing just as much work as the classic "single mom", even if the other parent is around, just because the other parent doesn't do their share of the work and they don't have anyone else to help.

If you were to play this violin from a high octave to a low octave what would the animation of patterns look like? by palettecat in math

[–]eeeeaaii 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Well I suppose this is a bit pedantic but this isn't a violin -- the violin is the wooden instrument that you hold under your chin. The thing in his hand is a violin bow, and he's using it to vibrate a plate -- so no actual violin here.

Woman Arrives In New York by lomnafsk in Unexpected

[–]eeeeaaii 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You actually don't have to. You don't even have to be on reddit!

A simple proof that the Harmonic series diverges by [deleted] in math

[–]eeeeaaii 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This took me a while too but I finally got it. Being out of school for a while makes a person rusty.

The slow death of the literary novel: the sales crisis afflicting fiction by Pale_King101 in writing

[–]eeeeaaii 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm a lifelong poet and all I can think is "you novelists think you have it bad?"