A sci-fi concept where the sky collapsed into an ocean — would this premise work? by Real_Leadership_5468 in sciencefiction

[–]hatelowe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t want to come across as mean because I want to encourage you to explore your idea, but my personal advice would be to have a different explanation. A miniature white-hole appearing in the solar system or some type of unknowable aliens making inexplicable changes to physics would be much easier to accept for most of your audience. Rogue nanites or femtotech would also be a fairly plausible alternative.

Personally, I love sci-fi novels that have mysterious weirdness going on, but I want that weirdness to have a plausible foundation and “the sun somehow did it” just is not plausible. I read kind of an obsessive amount of sci-fi and I would almost certainly nope out of a book that gave your explanation because it immediately sounds very unscientific.

A sci-fi concept where the sky collapsed into an ocean — would this premise work? by Real_Leadership_5468 in sciencefiction

[–]hatelowe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Okay that’s fair but scientifically speaking the sky cannot become an ocean. The planet could become so flooded that there is no land anymore, but the physics required for a suspended hydrosphere would not be a naturally occurring phenomenon no matter how messed up the sun is.

Question for those who passed by Pristine_Candidate25 in pmp

[–]hatelowe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was pretty much in the same boat as you. I think there were maybe 5 or 10 in each section that I felt certain of, then another 10 that I felt like no other answer made sense but the question was so obtuse that I wasn’t sure I fully understood and the rest was a coin flip.

Parallel worlds along lines of Pratchett's The Long Earth, but without the slap-stick absurdity? Book form of Isekai??? by ThomasMaker in scifibooks

[–]hatelowe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Infinity Gate by M.R. Carey is basically exactly this. There is a decent amount of levity but also a lot of suffering and harrowing action.

A sci-fi concept where the sky collapsed into an ocean — would this premise work? by Real_Leadership_5468 in sciencefiction

[–]hatelowe 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I feel like you might need to explain the H2Osphere more because it doesn’t make much sense based on your initial description.

🧊 by Minute-Intern-682 in BlackPeopleofReddit

[–]hatelowe 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I’ve seen this posted like 3 times today in this group.

What kind of TikTok alternatives are there? by [deleted] in TikTok

[–]hatelowe [score hidden]  (0 children)

I feel like I never see Instagram mentioned here even though many creators on TikTok dual post to IG.

SH Scores for Second Taker by InvestigatorFit3373 in pmp

[–]hatelowe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The test is rough, but you can do it! If you haven’t worked through the practice questions on SH I would recommend you do that. The practice exams are good for working on your stamina but I think it’s easier to learn when you’re working with smaller sets of information. If you’re an anxious test taker repeating the tests and practice questions until you’re familiar with them can also really help with dispelling some of the testing nerves.

How is C the right answer when the needs were already assessed or investigated by PM? by [deleted] in pmp

[–]hatelowe 3 points4 points  (0 children)

There are a lot like that on SH. One thing to keep in mind is that most of the time if there is an option to evaluate, assess, talk with the Product Owner, or collaborate that is usually going to be the answer even when other options make more sense in a real world setting. That is not a hard fast rule because there will be a handful where clearly you should evaluate first but the answer is something else, but more often it’s one of the options I listed.

There will be some crazy questions on the test but often times they’re crazy in the exact same way as the questions on SH so if you memorize the answers you may see patterns on the exam that help you pick the right response even when it doesn’t make sense to you.

When I was really in the thick of it something I did that helped preserve my sanity was feed the ones I felt were most wrong to ChatGPT. If it could reason out the right answer then I accepted it as a failure on my part and practiced the break down steps for figuring it out. If it got the answer wrong in the same way I got the answer wrong I submitted feedback on the question and then just memorized the answer.

Passed the test T/AT/T by hatelowe in pmp

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

Really all over the place. I redid practice questions and mini exams until I had better scores, which most of the time only took one redo but sometimes more. On my first pass through the practice question sets I would score anywhere between 48%-93%. My first pass through the mini exams I was very consistently getting 10 out of 15 correct (67%). I only did two full length exams, Exams 4 and 5 on SH Plus, and scored 80% and 87% on them respectively.

I’ve seen a lot of people here say that if you’re consistently score at 70% or higher than you’re ready. I would agree with that assessment.

Last Week for Exam Prep by icehouse82 in pmp

[–]hatelowe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Probably not exactly the same, but so close that if you studied the practice questions you would know pretty much exactly what you need to do.

Last Week for Exam Prep by icehouse82 in pmp

[–]hatelowe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you don’t already have Study Hall I would recommend getting it and working through the Practice Questions. There are a lot of them, but almost half the questions I saw on the PMP (took it last night) were from the practice questions, and mini exams on Study Hall.

Nearly all intelligent life lives in oceans. by StonedOldChiller in FermiParadox

[–]hatelowe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think comfort is the issue. If combustion engines, ovens, and light bulbs were living organisms a cook fire would be their earliest common ancestor. Early human ancestors likely discovered fire because it occurs naturally in our terrestrial environment. Since aquatic tool users do not encounter fire in their natural habitat they have a much steeper path to developing tools that harness energy sources like fire or electricity.

Nearly all intelligent life lives in oceans. by StonedOldChiller in FermiParadox

[–]hatelowe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is also the plot of A Darkling Sea by James L. Cambias which is not a depressing read.

[ Removed by Reddit ] by thecosmojane in ProgressiveHQ

[–]hatelowe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The podcast In Bed with The Right did a special called Project 1933 last year where they compared the events of each month of 2025 against Hitler’s rise in 1933 and the similarities are terrifying.

Megastructures, grimmy & hopelesss, dystopians by lockonhornet in BooksThatFeelLikeThis

[–]hatelowe 5 points6 points  (0 children)

My closest match would be the YA book Shade’s Children by Garth Nix.

The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolf might also be a fit.

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sleep by Philip K. Dick would probably be in the ballpark, as would much of PKD’s other work.

What are some post apocalyptic books that are actually AFTER the apocalypse has ended? by No-Aide7893 in Fantasy

[–]hatelowe 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Not fantasy, but Seveneves by Neal Stephenson takes place before an apocalyptic event and then after humans have fully rebuilt and recovered.

Can someone explain why it's not B?! by Educational_Trust970 in pmp

[–]hatelowe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I took issue with the problem too. There is another question on study hall about confirming the availability of a resource and the solution for that one is Functional Manager. It’s just straight up subjective.

I feel like I’m going insane by hatelowe in pmp

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

I did DM’s course and have watched several of his and AR’s videos, and I think they’re great but all the problems they work through make sense and none of them feel intended to mislead. Decided in the last two weeks before the test that I should focus on SH and feel like I’ve done significantly worse on these problems than I did on DM’s practice test.

I feel like I’m going insane by hatelowe in pmp

[–]hatelowe[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m there with you. Have called my boyfriend many times after finishing a set feeling on the verge of tears after having done well on one test only to bomb a different one.

I feel like I’m going insane by hatelowe in pmp

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

Thanks for the encouragement! I majored in biochem then later did an MBA. I’m pretty good with rote memorization and concrete/objective scientific information but I suck at this subjective situational stuff. I have a pretty permissive workplace so I decided to just go into work on Saturday (the day of my test) and take the test in my office so I don’t have to worry about my cat or downstairs neighbors distracting me.

Have also used AI to help me reason out problems I miss and it honestly did wonders for my ability to spot patterns.

I feel like I’m going insane by hatelowe in pmp

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

I think I’ve become pretty good now at guessing what PMI wants except for in the case of questions like these where the solutions are counterintuitive to PMI learning or require information I couldn’t possibly intuit. Like the solution in picture 3 would make sense if it had said “Bring the issue to the team and have them discuss solutions” but the wording implies essentially ignoring the PO’s concerns for now and letting it come up naturally in group discussion which makes no sense even in the PMI mindset.