Programmer and sysadmin (DevOps?), wannabe polymath in tech, science and the mind. Neurodivergent, disabled, burned out, and close to throwing in the towel, but still liking ponies 🦄 and sometimes willing to discuss stuff.

  • 0 Posts
  • 130 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 26th, 2023

help-circle




  • The following is somewhat similar, but it keeps changing, and there is a decent evolution of the characters (hard to pull off in just 8 episodes, but they did it). Basically it’s 3 shows in one: in-vault, surface, flashbacks. Each one has its own conspiracy, which all come to a joint conclusion at the end, with a slight cliffhanger for the second season.

    It’s not the best show I’ve ever seen, but I’d say they did a good job.


  • There is an anecdote about a judo teacher from where I live: he also liked his motorbike, so one day he was joining the highway, when some car rear-ended him at twice the speed, crushing the bike into the barrier. Driver was all panicky, then weirded out when the guy showed up to check if everyone was all right. Turns out he instinctively jumped out of the bike, did a somersault over the car, and landed rolling, then got up and ran to check on the driver.

    No game physics needed.

    So yeah, go ahead and be “100% certain”. I’ve seen actual martial arts masters IRL, and you wouldn’t believe how quick a fight can end with a thug biting the dust, or a lamppost. Technique beats muscles any day.

    If anything, that fight on the show was slowed down and drawn out for “dramatic effect”.




  • No they aren’t, as @chloyster@beehaw.org explained.

    But I wanted to point a tangent, from the article you linked:

    outstretched middle, ring, and pinky fingers to represent a Roman numeral “3.”

    Coincidentally, the Romans would count like 👍👉👌… instead of “thumb, index, middle” for the numeral “3”, because that resembled the letters “IV”, which were the first two letters of “IVPITER”, or “Jupiter”, formerly known as “Zeus”, the God of Gods, and making the “IV” sign in vain was considered a blasphemy… similar to how Jewish people wouldn’t “use the name of God in vain”, which lead to the expression “hallelujah” from “hallelu-Yah***”, meaning “praise Yah***”… in order to also not say the whole name of God. Curiously, Muslim people have no problem with saying “Allah” or writing “ﷲ”, just with depictions of their prophet, go figure.

    These sign shenanigans have been going on for thousands of years, only difference is now a “meme” with 10 comments on 4chan, can become a hate sign used by thousands or millions in less than a decade.

    PS: another curious one, is the ✋ “Hi!” vs. the Greek 🖐 “I smear 💩 on your face”… best not to confuse them 😉 (“oops, got something in my eye” /s)


  • Game asset development is one of the places where versioning systems are least used. Not only versionong “binaries” is taxing for the system, but even game code itself (¹) is often not version tracked, or controlled at all, with more of a “cowboy coder” approach.

    It all stems from most non-online games (²) being sold “as is”, with no intent of supporting them long term; the moment a studio/producer gets the money, they stop caring about their user base, until it’s time to promote the next game. Even games with post-release DLCs, are regularly developed this way, and they end up as a giant clusterf… mess.

    If Deck Nine was the “lowest bidder”, with 70-80 hours a week “crunch” months, chances are they cut corners on everything, starting with proper asset versioning.

    (¹: engine code is a separate thing, which gets suported across multiple games, so tends to be properly developed

    ²: online games, and games with microtransactions, tend to be kept in better shape, since their income depends on them working for more than a single playthrough)





  • I guess a “patriotic story” could be made in any country about its respective fight for independence, and/or any war. Something like every character having a well built background, then sacrificing it for the greater good.

    Maybe with the goal being to unmask the traitor, but the traitor being an NPC, then everyone learning of everyone else’s sacrifices as the game progressed, empathizing and ending up crying?

    Dunno, I guess there could be many ways to make a mostly scripted game a patriotic one, when nobody can say “I throw a box of lit dynamite sticks into the air and cry Leeeroooy!!”, or “A book? I read aloud whatever it says. Ph’nglui mglw’nafh…”



  • Coming from CS with a focus on formal logic, I’m familiar with RFC2119 and understand the importance of precision… but also try not to put too much of it in “informal” conversations. I don’t really think it’s needed for the comment I made, but I’ve added a disclaimer and a clarification to it anyway.

    If people are able to create business around this, it’s clearly […]

    That’s a high assumption; people create bullshit businesses all the time. Litigating a non-compete can be a bullying tactic on part of an employer, but redacting a contract full of BS clauses, then litigating an unenforceable contract afterwards, is at its core a way for lawyer firms to milk employers for extra “services”. Judges have less leeway than people often assume, for the most common decisions they’re bound by precedent or encoded law (depending on the legal system), and the main cause for different rulings on the same case, is either a lawyer who doesn’t present the case correctly, or someone deciding to represent themselves.

    (PS: as a scientist, if you ever do work for the private sector, you should get familiar with the basics of non-competes and NDAs, even before consulting a lawyer… and if you ever get into litigation, you’ll want to ask for counsel, but also to oversee your lawyer)


  • Sure, IANAL. Do we need to preface every discussion of legality with that?

    I speak from personal experience with non-competes and NDAs, as a Spanish resident having worked some 20 years both as contracted and as freelance, for people from all over the world, as well as having seen the effects of breaking non-competes both for me as for others (as in: worst case scenario, they get thrown out in court; best case scenario, they get laughed out at the preliminary hearing), and some people breaking NDAs (spoiler: don’t). Other clauses, vary a lot depending on jurisdiction.

    As for the list you linked… not sure if you realize that it’s from a company selling non-compete redacting services; their marketing information might be “a bit” biased.


  • Check my other comment. Once you know non-competes are unenforceable, you can simply gloss over them and say “uh-huh, whatever” while signing the contract. On NDAs, just check the expiration date; if you don’t like it, don’t sign it.

    where non-competes are upheld are for very specific instances (very high-level employees handling sensitive client data or very new innovations, patents, etc,

    Those would be NDAs… except patents are public (aka: disclosed) by definition.

    or alternatively going to work for the direct competitor right across the street)

    That’s what is not enforceable.


  • IANAL, this is not legal advice, for legal advice consult with a lawyer authorized in your applicable jurisdiction

    know the law in your country at a level well above that of a layperson

    Not really. From my experience the thing is actually very simple:

    • Non-competes: simply ignore them.
    • NDAs: only apply to information made available to you before your employer discloses it publicly.

    It’s a good idea to keep a copy of every document you sign, particularly of every NDA… but a very simple rule of thumb is: when you leave a job, erase all “work data” from that job. No need to worry about disclosing data you don’t have. Also, don’t talk to anyone about whatever you worked on until the last NDA expires, and you won’t need to worry about what they did cover or not.