isaaclyman

joined 1 year ago
[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 23 hours ago) (1 children)

Numenera is fun. For anyone else reading, Cypher is the Numenera system generalized for multiple genres and settings. Numenera is still one of the most popular settings but they’ve also done setting books for The Magnus Archives, Old Gods of Appalachia, and Mystery Flesh Pit National Park, along with a bunch of original settings.

 

I started with Cypher System (medium-low crunch, cinematic, genre-agnostic TTRPG) a few years ago because someone on Reddit recommended it for people with GM fatigue. I’ve been really into it ever since. The system makes it easy to homebrew monsters and adventures, and there are tons of different setting and genre books. The new version addresses some long-standing complaints about the old one—for example, taking damage gives you “wounds” instead of directly reducing your stat pools.

The crowdfunding campaign is doing great, I’m really excited about it.

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Same. I use Kagi because search is an essential function of my job and I can’t extract decent results from Google anymore, but if there were another engine with equally good results and a better ethical track record I’d switch.

(There isn’t. I’ve tried Qwant, Ecosia, DuckDuckGo and a handful of others. Was not impressed.)

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 6 points 2 weeks ago

The year of Linux on the gas stop

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 15 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Though my sample size is small, these stories fit my thesis that the real AI jobs crisis is that the drumbeat, marketing, and pop culture of "powerful AI” encourages and permits management to replace or degrade jobs they might not otherwise have. More important than the technological change, perhaps, is the change in a social permission structure.

Agreed. If a company says “we’ve automated this job and it’s now done by AI,” they mean “we’ve decided to take advantage of media trends by dramatically lowering the quality and reliability of our processes, consistent with our policy of doing things as cheaply as our customers will tolerate.”

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 3 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

No. The number of users who have a real email with no TLD is far less than the number of users who will accidentally type an email with no TLD if you don’t validate on the front end.

I’m here to help 99.9% of users sign up correctly, not to be completely spec-compliant for the 0.1% who think they’re special.

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 31 points 4 weeks ago (4 children)

Let us recite the email validator’s oath:

If it has something before the @, something between the @ and the ., and something after the ., it’s valid enough.

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 26 points 1 month ago (12 children)

Clearly LLMs are useful to software engineers.

Citation needed. I don’t use one. If my coworkers do, they’re very quiet about it. More than half the posts I see promoting them, even as “just a tool,” are from people with obvious conflicts of interest. What’s “clear” to me is that the Overton window has been dragged kicking and screaming to the extreme end of the scale by five years of constant press releases masquerading as news and billions of dollars of market speculation.

I’m not going to delegate the easiest part of my job to something that’s undeniably worse at it. I’m not going to pass up opportunities to understand a system better in hopes of getting 30-minute tasks done in 10. And I’m definitely not going to pay for the privilege.

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I’ve seen a handful of new startups posting about their 4-day, 32-hour work weeks. I can only imagine they’re bringing on a scuzzton of top talent at middle-of-the-road prices.

When one of them IPOs for a billion dollars, I hope their employees are incredibly annoying about it. I hope they never shut up. I hope my LinkedIn feed is wall-to-wall “look what you can do on four days a week.” I hope they go door to door with a Rolex on both wrists and say “hello, sir/madam, I just wanted you to know I haven’t worked a Friday in five years.” I hope they post pictures of themselves relaxing with a martini at the start of every three-day weekend and people go ballistic in the comments and they don’t even notice because they’re too busy doing interviews with Forbes and Fortune Magazine. I hope I get sick and tired of hearing about four day weeks.

I’m sure as hell tired of hearing about execs that want their employees to burn out.

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 11 points 2 months ago

This is very important if you’re a dad. You can’t just start reading the book straightaway. You gotta read it upside down in a nasal nonsense voice until your kid yells for you to stop. Then act confused. Then when they turn it around for you, open it from the last page and say “the end,” then close it again. Then, depending on the vibe, you might say, “oh, I get it now” and start reading upside down again. On a good day you can keep it going for a few minutes before you actually start reading the book.

It’s peak comedy. No one has ever been as funny as a dad pretending they don’t know how to read a book

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

Pronounced REE-poe-SOH-tuh-ree

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

Yes, I know I’m doing something illegal (stealing and reselling IP) but it’s in service of something legal (continuing to be rich). You can’t punish me for doing bad things while rich, it would undermine your entire legal system.

[–] isaaclyman@lemmy.world 5 points 3 months ago (5 children)

The article does not mention paraplegia.

 

Most days I receive zero packages. Two is so extravagant as to almost not be dull.

 
 

The box never clarifies what the difference between “floating” and “flying” is, but surely he doesn’t need both.

Even so, the unicorn charm might be the weak link of the bunch. The world is already colorful. Get a job, unicorn.

 

Bit of a nailbiter there at the end, eh?

25
Hail Chonkus (www.motherjones.com)
 

One microorganism in particular has captured scientists’ attention. UTEX 3222, nicknamed “Chonkus” for the way it guzzles carbon dioxide, is a previously unknown cyanobacterium found in volcanic ocean vents.

 
 

[Alt text: GIF from the music video for “Love Shack” by the B-52s. The video depicts people dancing in a convertible, multiple people in suits and dresses dancing (visible from the waist down), martinis, a duck shaking its tail, and two men playing saxophones. The subtitles read:

The Crowdstrike is a kernel-space app that

has no testing process

Crowdstrike! Baby Crowdstrike!

Crowdstrike! Baby Crowdstrike!]

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