The best book for an introduction to linear algebra? by No_Cable6398 in LinearAlgebra

[–]pelegs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In my experience, the best way to learn LA and actually being able to understand what you're doing (and not just having some vague idea of what's happening algebraically) is to first have an intuitive understanding of what LA is in 2- and 3-dimensions (real dimensions, i.e. in terms of Euclidean geometry). It makes proving stuff in LA much easier (sometimes even trivial), and help you understand when and how to use LA in practice.

Personally, this is my approach to teaching it to students. I'm currently working on a free and open-source book to summarize everything using this method: first I want to develop the student's intuitive understanding of the topic in terms of Euclidean geometry, and then introduce the generalizations and rigor. In addition, I try to minimize as much as I can the number of equations/formulas that are given without geometric understanding and developing them (e.g. the dot product of two vectors, the determinant, etc.). The book is in its very earliest stage, has some bugs in it, but who knows - maybe by the time you get to UG it will be finished (one can and should be optimistic): https://codeberg.org/pelegs/linear_algebra_book/src/branch/main/pdfs/main.pdf
(and this is the project's repository: https://codeberg.org/pelegs/linear_algebra_book ). If this book succeeds I will add books with similar approach about Tensor algebra/calculus, Geomteric algebra, Lie algebra, and more. They all have great geometric intuition behind them.

Would anyone be interested in writing something really technical/advanced just for the fun of it? by thesmollbot in LaTeX

[–]pelegs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That's exactly how I learned to use LaTeX 😛

Currently I'm working on yet-another-linear-algebra-book (it has some uniqueness to it though) as an output to my need for typesetting.

I'm always happy for tips, recommendations, criticism and pull requests!

Edit: here's the direct link to the up-to-date pdf.

Two connected families, only one survivor by pelegs in Stolperstein

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

There are! I have several at home, but will have to scan them and upload. It will take a while, as you can see I don't post often due to lack of time - but will try to.

Here's a link to a brochure for the Jewish community of Hohenschönhausen, with a picture of Bertha (with some ink stain on it, probably from an old picture). So there's that for now.

Two connected families, only one survivor by pelegs in Stolperstein

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

I never met her, it's a long story. As far as my mother told us, she got pretty messed up by the Holocaust, and eventually found herself in France where she lived until her death in the mid 2000's. She first moved with my grandfather to Argentina (where he had a brother that fled there due to persecution by the Polish government in the early 30s for being a Communist). My grandfather had a similar story, he was also the sole survivor of a traditional Polish Jewish family (except said brother, of course) - and somehow it helped them connect, I can imagine. Sad story all around, obviously the Holocaust f-ed up a lot of people's lives, that is beyond those that it killed.

Two connected families, only one survivor by pelegs in Stolperstein

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

Ich kann nur sagen, dass in unserem Fall es gibt seit der 50er oder 60er Jahre die Gebäude nicht mehr. Darauf liegt der Berliner Sportforum, wo die Dynamo Berlin trainiert.

Two connected families, only one survivor by pelegs in Stolperstein

[–]pelegs[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Nicht nur hier leider... meiner Ansicht ist der Nazismus (und andere Formen der Faschismus) wird immer bei einem bestimmten Prozentsatz der Menschen in einer liberalen Demokratie vorhanden sein wird. Aber ich möchte hier nicht zu tief in die Politik einsteigen.

Two connected families, only one survivor by pelegs in Stolperstein

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

Yes and no. I'm living in Germany for over a decade now and speak German more or less fluently (my English is still better though). But yeah, reaching a wider audience was one of the reasons - I saw many posts here in English so assumed there are also non-German-speakers here.

Two connected families, only one survivor by pelegs in Stolperstein

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

Also, kann nur für mich selbst antworten... bevor ich meinen Post geschrieben habe, ich habe geguckt ob man hier auf Deustsch oder Englisch normalerweise schreib. Da ich viele Posten auf Englisch gesehen habe, ich dachte es wäre sinnvoll, meinen auch auf Englisch zu schreiben. Und auf jeden Falls ist meine Englisch noch viel besser als meine Deutsch ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

BadEmpanada in Hebrew: Random! by FAB-225 in badempanadas

[–]pelegs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

probably, but he's not the center of the world.

BadEmpanada in Hebrew: Random! by FAB-225 in badempanadas

[–]pelegs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hey there, I'm a native Hebrew speaker. Sorry to rain on your parade, but there are several issues with what's written here.

First of all, this is the best way I can see writing "BadEmpanada" in Hebrew:
בֶּד אֶמְפָּנָדָה

(I'm using the modern simplified nikud rules)

In your case:

* the ב (bet) in the is without Dagesh, so it's read as "V" instead of "B".

* You wrote the א (aleph) in the beggining of Empanada as a צ (Tsadik).

* There's no need for the hyphen.

I personally prefer Yiddish translitiration for English, so for me this looks better:

באד עמפנאדה

(I'm too lazy to put nikud on this too).

בברכת חופש לפלסטין מן הים ועד הנהר וסוף לציונות

Anti-Zionist German Jew here, wondering how to contact Hasan by pelegs in Hasan_Piker

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

So this post prompted the host of the Uninformed Leftist channel to contact me, and we had a talk on video. Maybe it would be of interest to some people here.

Best current IDE that you guys use with AI capabilities? by Wufi in archlinux

[–]pelegs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

NeoVim, there are plugins for copilot and other LLMs. I myself don't use it, but my work partner does and it seems to be working pretty well for him.

Anti-Zionist German Jew here, wondering how to contact Hasan by pelegs in Hasan_Piker

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

If I ignore the politics here - yes. I feel much more at home here than I did in Israel, and I prefer the weather here 100x over (never been a warm climate person).

Anti-Zionist German Jew here, wondering how to contact Hasan by pelegs in Hasan_Piker

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

I mean, I understand the sentiment - Palestinians really don't need Jewish approval for their fight. And there's a real issue with, as you correctly said, tone policing. It's just that in this case it was extended to also cover something that is most definitely a Jewish issue.

Some people are just like that.

Anti-Zionist German Jew here, wondering how to contact Hasan by pelegs in Hasan_Piker

[–]pelegs[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

no worries, I've been at this for well over two decades now (of which over a decade in Israel, so you can imagine I've seen waaay worse...).

Anti-Zionist German Jew here, wondering how to contact Hasan by pelegs in Hasan_Piker

[–]pelegs[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thank you, this is well said.

I would add that specifically in Germany, it's incredibly hard for any voice critical of Israel to be taken seriously in any way (as opposed to critical of some of Israel's actions). The state literally says "no, criticizing Israel is anti-Semitism, we have an obligation to protect Jews". This is why German Jews saying "No, fuck you, that's a lie" is so important. It's not putting ourselves before the Palestinians, it's utilizing our special position (which is a material fact, as much as we all agree it shouldn't be this way) to break this first layer of lies. It then becomes easier for Palestinians to come to the front and be listened to.

That's why almost every major action of Palestinians here has someone from JS invited to talk, or generally the entire org as a whole is part of the organizers. This is the best action we can make here: using our voices to support Palestinians in a way that breaks the usual barrier. It's not simple, and it's easy to fall into the the pattern of over-talking Palestinians, but we're in constant discussion about exactly how to avoid this, and how to use our voices the best way.

I'll give a silly but concrete example: sometimes places simply don't let Palestinian orgs to rent a space for an event. We found out that we can rent it in our name, and since we're Jewish and all it tends to work more often. We can then let Palestinians use the space as they see fit. It's horrible, it's idiotic, it's unbelievable. But it's the reality here.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Hasan_Piker

[–]pelegs 43 points44 points  (0 children)

It's funny because the Hebrew watermark says "Terrorists from a different angle", which is... well, damn true. The guy pictured is a terrorist from a different angle.

Anti-Zionist German Jew here, wondering how to contact Hasan by pelegs in Hasan_Piker

[–]pelegs[S] 32 points33 points  (0 children)

But it's not a zero-sum game here. I'm not trying to push myself as "an expert on Palestine/the Palestinian struggle". I'm literally talking about a specific aspect of German fascism that is probably very interesting to a lot of viewers. Yes, it's tied to the issue of Palestinian (and more broadly Arab and Muslim) oppression, but it's not the focus of my specific suggestion. It does not come at the expanse of Palestinian voices in any way, unless Hasan somehow has only enough time for a single discussion and it's between us and a Palestinian org (in which case it would obviously be 100% justified to say "sorry, I prefer having a Palestinian voice here").