AernaLingus

joined 3 years ago
[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 2 points 16 hours ago (2 children)

Sorry that you're not feeling well—feel better beeeeeeam! cat-trans And I'll second what's already been said—don't feel the need to push yourself, and make sure you let your body get the rest it needs.

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 18 points 1 day ago (1 children)

what the actual fuck was going on in the 1950s visible-disgust

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 4 points 1 day ago

Mega mega THREAD THREAD spongebob-party

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago

I haven't been to a cinema in years, but yeah, I'd always just wait till the movie had been out for a long time and try to catch it at an off-peak time; midweek matinées are ideal if you can swing 'em, but not required.

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 7 points 1 day ago (1 children)

All I could think about when reading this was flatworm mating

(bonus snail mating)

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 3 points 2 days ago

Happy cake day! doggirl-happy

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 2 points 3 days ago

Mega mega THREAD THREAD flag-pan-pride

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 7 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I was uninstalling some software when I encountered the most baffling thing: as soon as you hit "Uninstall" it prompts you to find the setup executable...as in the original multi-gig offline installer which no reasonable person would keep around. It refused to proceed until I re-downloaded said installer, and then it STILL didn't work. Impressively terrible. Thankfully, I'll be wiping this machine in the near future and replacing this Windows 10 install with Linux, so I'm just going to leave it be.

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 22 points 4 days ago (1 children)

One of the classics people will pull out when they're trying to gaslight you into ignoring COVID is, "More people die every year in car accidents! Are you going to stop driving?" Putting aside that (according to the excess death data I've seen for the US) that isn't even true, I'm like, "Yeah, and it's fucking wild that tens of thousands of people are dying every single year and instead of implementing tried-and-true methods to reduce fatalities we're actively making things worse! That's not normal, that's just been normalized!"

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 2 points 4 days ago

I absolutely loved this manga as a kid—come to think of it, it's the first manga I read by a long shot, well before I even knew what manga was (this was published flopped). I ought to go back and read the whole thing, since I think I only had the first two volumes or of four.

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 3 points 5 days ago

kelly Colonal Mass Ejection

 

If you want to dive right in, here's a link to the Cyan collection in the VGHF digital archive:

https://archive.gamehistory.org/folder/22cf9aa2-812b-4f39-b42e-e87a3c153b8c

27
submitted 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) by AernaLingus@hexbear.net to c/traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns@hexbear.net
 

Video description:

This video is for transgender, non-binary, and gender nonconforming people, and anyone else who has been pushed to the margins.

You face unspeakable adversity. So many voices shame you and want you to be diminished to a more palatable effigy of yourself, and many don't care if that means the material or metaphysical disillusionment of who you truly are. The voices come from your government, from strangers on the internet, from your coworkers, from your family.

One of the voices probably comes from inside you.

Every voice in this video is from someone rooting for you. I'm rooting for you.

When you're too broken to work, too broken to play, too broken to even get out of bed, know this:

Every breath you take is a radical refusal to acquiesce to the voices that want you to be diminished. Your cellular metabolism follows the same basic chemical equation as any other fire. Focus on taking your next breath. Feed the flame oxygen and Don't. Be. Extinguished.

 

The Video Game History Foundation does some great work, and it's really cool to see this project getting off the ground! Their project to vastly improve OCR for magazines seems pretty awesome--curious to learn about the technical details of that project.

Only poked around a little, but here's a random tidbit: while perusing the E3 2001 Directory I learned that CliffyB (of Unreal and Gears of War fame) used to maintain a website called cat-scans.com which was home to literal cat scans (scans of cats on flatbed scanners). Also Tommy Tallarico was at that year's E3 as part of the "How to Break into Gaming" panel...lmao.

Also, if you're into video game history I definitely recommend their podcast (RSS link)! I thought their most recent episode with a couple who worked at GamePro was a lot of fun.

edit: also perhaps of interest to Hexbears: this collection of zines from Game Workers Unite, which helped spark the movement to unionize workers in the game industry back in 2018

 

Link to the site (it's a series of 12 strips, so just keep hitting "next" until there's no more Mario)

https://www.noncanon.com/comics/2017-12-12%20Lovely%20Notions.html

 

This cover is my happy place

 

The long-awaited sequel to one of my favorite videos of all time, Can you beat Pokemon FireRed while blind and deaf?, wherein MartSnack devises a single sequence of inputs that will beat Pokémon FireRed with >99% probability using clever strategies and a lot of number crunching--definitely check that one out first if you haven't seen it already.

In this video, MartSnack kicks it up a notch and comes up with a winning sequence of inputs for EVERY SINGLE RNG SEED in Pokémon Platinum (he gives the figure as ~4.2 billion--I would have guessed it's 2^32 which is more like 4.3 billion, but perhaps the RNG function is such that there are some sequences which are identical even for different seeds). He gives himself additional constraints like keeping Pokémon levels to a minimum and using Nuzlocke rules to keep things interesting, so he's not just grinding a Pokémon up to Level 100 and facerolling through the game.

There are some incredibly ingenious techniques employed, and it's a wonderfully produced video with all kinds of great visual aids. He gives just as much detail as you need to appreciate the strategies, introducing them as they come up without getting bogged down in detailing every single battle. So while it's a bit over an hour long, it's packed with content--this is the result of two years of hard work, not padded-out YouTube slop.

 

Was wondering about how Pikmin 2's procedural music works and came across this beautifully crafted video explaining the whole intricate system.

This channel seems like a treasure trove--if you just wanna jam, check out this sick Driftveil City arrangement for starters

 

Really cool work from Aaron Collins (a.k.a. The Mask Nerd) and his team. They're also working on an open source condensation particle counter which can be used for quantitative fit testing (among other things).

If anyone wants to learn more about the nitty-gritty of the respirator prototyping process, there's a longer video in the description, and the projects are all available on OpenAeros' GitLab, where the hardware is licensed under CERN OHL-S v2, software under GPLv3+, and documentation under CC BY-SA 4.0.

They mention that in particular they're looking for artists/designers/industrial engineers to help with the aesthetics of the mask, so if that interests anyone you can reach out to them using the email in the description (or if you know someone who might fit the bill, share this video with them).

 

There were a few posts showing interest already

https://hexbear.net/post/2909543
https://hexbear.net/post/2955745

so I figured I'd let people know! Idk if there are any scanlations in the works (let alone an official English localization), but if you're decent at Japanese I'd say the first chapter is pretty accessible. My kanji knowledge is pretty terrible but I was able to muscle through with only looking up a few key words and just relying on context for the rest. This is just a setup chapter, so there's not much to go on:

brief summaryIt introduces you to the setting and the main character, teaches you a bit about how ordinary Russians benefitted from communism, tells you about the MCs hopes and dreams, and then has everything come crashing down after Nazis roll into the village accusing them of harboring partisans and start summarily executing people.

 

The art is great, IMO--to be expected of the mangaka of Our Dreams at Dusk (highly recommended if you haven't read it already, and a short read at only four volumes!). Also there was a neat touch which I haven't personally seen before: when German is being spoken, it's still written in Japanese but typeset in the typical Western horizontal style which makes it clearly stand out without requiring any annotations. Look forward to seeing where it goes, and I hope it'll get an official localization to maximize its exposure to Western audiences! Also from a raw reading perspective, it's nice to get in on the ground floor since it can feel really daunting to have 100 chapters ahead of you when reading is somewhat slow and effortful.

 

Love how the rhythmic hitch caused by the "missing beat" makes the bass groove so hard

Oh yeah, post your favorite 7/4 tunes! I went for the low-hanging fruit, but I'd love to hear some others, especially ones with different beat groupings (e.g. 2 + 3 + 2 instead of the 2 + 2 + 3 used in "Money")

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