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rahmad,

Can definitely blame them… Several of the famines in their ‘empire’ were either engineered, caused through incompetence or arrogance, or ignored when preventable.

Ref: Any of bengal’s several famines under British rule, frankly even after once you take Churchill into account.

rahmad,

Not enough shoutouts for Shrinking here…

Ted Lasso is definitely holding up the platform, no disagreement, but there’s some other great content there as well. Prehistoric Planet, too.

rahmad,

Apple licenses the content from the creators – that’s true of almost every network and many film distributors as well.

Few distributors make their content in house. 'Netflix Original ’ doesn’t mean it was made by ‘Netflix Studios’ – they don’t exist. What happened was (for a series) that either a complete season or a pilot was shopped around, and Netflix bought the (exclusive) rights, which made that piece of content a Netflix Original. For films, they have usually already been made and are in a limited theatrical run (eg. Festivals) or are being shopped around privately. I imagine a limited few have distribution deals made prior to production, but that’s still not ‘Netflix’ (or Apple) making that content.

Apples launch content (eg. Ted Lasso) was produced to prop up the platform, but the method by which that content was discovered, funded and then licensed is not much different from how a traditional network (like NBC) might function.

rahmad,

I was gonna come in here like ‘Phone with a physical keyboard’ but then I realized I had greatly misread the room…

rahmad,

Not a remake, but there’s a sequel on the way… I’m not super hopeful but maybe I’ll be surprised? Flashback did get a remaster and release on (at least) Switch, but i found the controls unintuitive and dissatisfying. It was a bummer.

rahmad,

But this already isn’t true. Even if I could afford it, I can’t buy an F16, anthrax or a nuclear warhead. So, isn’t this just about where the line is being drawn? The line itself both already exists and doesn’t seem to be contested.

rahmad,

Technically true, but it needs to be non militarized, can’t purchase the missile mounts (or the missiles etc.). My point stands.

rahmad,

Err… im not sure everyone in this thread is getting the joke?

rahmad,

To be fair, I was like: that’s clever! They are asking for the missing piece to bridge the neural gap and make the signal flow… it totally works!

rahmad,

Pretty sure Elon was first to the key, and the rest have followed suit.

In seriousness, though, the primary driver is the VC tap slowing down significantly and forcing long term business strategy to lean much harder into its existing opportunities vs. planning for periodic cash infusion from investors. A lot of these businesses never had to set themselves up for success in the absence of that capital, and it’s led to bad practices and product strategies.

rahmad,

Blackbeard’s Ghost. Watchable on Disney+ right now. Family friendly, great performances and some epic physical comedy from Peter Ustinov (voice of Prince John in Disney’s Robin Hood).

rahmad,

Anything related to hamsters and/or the smell of elderberries.

rahmad,

I will also accept “I am rubber, you are glue” as a possible answer.

rahmad,

Part of me is like, poor statue, how terrible.

Part of me is like, screw Belgium. Until they even the karmic scales for what they did to the Congo, they deserve everything they get.

rahmad,

I agree with that, but a culture needs to own its heritage, both the good and the bad. From what I can tell, that hasn’t happened compared, for example, to how German society has handled the Holocaust (an extreme example, but illustrates a point).

rahmad,

Firstly, I said nothing of reparations. I talked about owning the responsibility. That can take the form of education, it can take the form of reparations, it has many forms. All those forms are imperfect, but they are each better than doing nothing because ‘hey, it was a long time ago, man.’

Second, to this point:

The rank and file who pay the taxes in the western countries were being subjugated also and certainly did not gain from the moneys raised in the colonies.

That’s just not true, friend. Just because economic injustice exists in colonizing counties today and existed then, doesn’t mean their rank and file aren’t still benefitting from the actions of their prodecessors. Their infrastructure, their economies, their sociopolitical systems – stuff that the enables the rank and file to worry about paying taxes instead of, for example, starving and dying in a civil war – that is the benefit that has been created. To take that for granted is to bury how that got built.

rahmad,

Sorry I don’t understand your comment.

rahmad,

Not sure where I suggested destroying the statue would even the karmic scales, I just said I didn’t feel bad for them (due to their current karmic bank balance). Those are two totally different things.

rahmad, (edited )

I disagree. The rich got richer, there’s no doubt about that, but (using England as an example), a massive amount of infrastructure was built and paid for through colonial income in part of not whole. Roads, trains, factories, ships, universities. Much of the money that went into long lasting projects like that depended on the continual income from the colonies.

That infrastructure benefits the entire country, even though the poor are still poor. They are poor with trains to take them places and roads to drive on. They are poor with universities to create new medicines to treat them. That benefit is meaningful, it is pervasive, and it didn’t just materialize spontaneously – another group of people somewhere do not have something today as a result of that transfer of resources.

I agree that Germany’s hand was forced because they lost the war, but as a counter-example, the Japanese also lost the war, and they have done very little to acknowledge any of the negative actions they committed during WWII – so losing the war wasn’t the only variable here. Turkey lost, but continue to deny their role in the Armenian genocide. Both those nations have made a choice where others have not.

I agree with you that this is not how things have been forever. It probably does go back to the Holocaust. That’s not a reason to not do things. We are constantly changing things about human societal structure. Why not include an understanding of how destructive colonialism was and how it impacts the economic and cultural variances between nations today?

Much of how Germany handles their role in WWII in terms of public consciousness was not placed upon them by the Allies. Initially Germany tried to distance itself from responsibility by blaming what happened only on the Nazi party and not on those who were not party members or high ranking party members.

It took time for them to start to instill in their culture the idea that they had to grapple with the Holocaust meaningfully, not because any of them were at fault, but because they still had a responsibility to know and prevent. It’s not perfect, and like I said before, nothing is, but it’s more than doing nothing.

That culture of ownership, in my mind, is far better than reparations. The resources are gone. You can’t (or perhaps, shouldn’t) unbuild a railway system. But to ignore the past and pretend nothing happened and that (mostly) European nations have no long lasting responsibility for the state of much of the developing world is, in my opinion, totally wrong.

To your point, do you think the average teenager in England understands how the policies of their leadership caused the Potato Famine? More importantly, do you think it’s a good thing that they should never have to learn that and recognize that England has something today because Ireland does not?

Returning to Belgium, statues of Leopold were still present and commemorated until they were attacked by fringe activists fairly recently. That’s a signal to me that they don’t know their history. I’m sure if they did, it wouldn’t be a group of radicals trying to bring attention to this subject, it would be a more widely and normally accepted conversation with their past selves.

rahmad,

If you think ‘a bit of my statue broke’ is even a rounding error compared to their legacy in the Congo, I suggest you go look into it and let me know once you’ve done the research if you think I’m wrong. I’m open to hearing your counter-argument, but from my view the two do not compare.

rahmad,

I’m not sure what kind of role you had in the industry, but I’m not sure what you’re saying is entirely accurate… although there are some bits in there I agree with:

Lots of programmers and artists don’t really care about the final game, they only care about their little part.

Accurate. And that’s ok. A programmer whose job it is to optimize the physics of bullet ricochet against thirteen different kind of materials can go really deep on that, and they don’t need to (or have time to) zoom out and care about the entire game. That’s fine. They have a job that is often highly specialized, has been given to them by production and they have to deliver on time and at quality. Why is that a problem? You use the corrolary of film, and nobody cares if the gaffer understands the subtext of the Act 3 arc… it’s not their job.

Game designers and UX designers are often clueless and lacking in gaming experience. Some of the mistakes they make could be avoided by asking literaly anyone who play games.

Which one? A game designer lacking in gaming experience likely wouldn’t get hired anywhere that has an ounce of standard. A UX designer without gaming experience might get hired, but UX is about communication, intuition and flow. A UX designer who worked on surgical software tooling could still be an effective member of a game dev team if their fundamentals are strong.

Investors and publishers often know very little to almost nothing about gameplay and technology and will rely purely on aesthetic and story.

Again, which one? Investors probably don’t know much about the specifics of gameplay or game design because they don’t need to, they need to understand ROI, a studio’s ability to deliver on time, at budget and quality, and the likely total obtainable market based on genre and fit.

Publishers – depending on whether you are talking about mobile or console/box model – will usually be intimately familiar with how to position a product for market, what KPIs (key performance indicators) to target and how to optimize within the available budget.

This is why you have some indie devs kicking big studio butts with sometime less than 1% the ressources.

This has happened. I’m not sure it’s an actual trend. There are lots of misses in the game industry. Making successful products is hard – it’s hard at the indie level, it’s hard at the AAA level. I would estimate there are a thousand failed Indies for every one you call out as ‘kicking a big studio’s butt.’ Lots of failed AAA titles too. It’s just how it goes.

The same, by the way, is true of film, TV, books and music. A lot of misses go into making a hit. Cultural products are hard to make, and nobody has the formula for success. Most teams try, fail, then try again. Sometimes, they succeed.

rahmad,

Current Agha Khan founded the Agha Khan Development Network which has done a fair amount of good in the developing world.

rahmad,

Irrelevant?

Prompt was: a billionaire who has done anything good, not, a billionaire who has never done anything not good.

What are some commonly known facts that are too bizarre for you to believe to be true?

For me it is the fact that our blood contains iron. I earlier used to believe the word stood for some ‘organic element’ since I couldn’t accept we had metal flowing through our supposed carbon-based bodies, till I realized that is where the taste and smell of blood comes from.

rahmad,

Can you elaborate on the math here? (I believe you, I just want to understand the simulation parameters better).

rahmad,

Also, in this simulation are the customers arriving in equally spaced intervals or is random arrival time within the bounds assumed?

rahmad,

Thanks! This article really clears up a lot of the details that help the simulation make sense.

rahmad,

The apple was never whole… it was simply tightly grouped and a subgroup has been severed from another

rahmad,

I love this sentiment, and it can be true, but it also creates this idea that ‘heart’ alone has a high bearing on whether or not a product of any kind (book, film, statue, game) will be successful in its market ambitions.

It doesn’t always correlate. I would argue if often doesn’t correlate. Any indie film or game fest is chock full of projects with a ton of heart. Few of them graduate to success in the market place.

I’m not saying heart is a bad thing. It’s a damn great thing. But strong business fundamentals are a good thing too. And sometimes, you also just need that extra bit of luck or uncontrollable virality too. To find success, you stack the deck with as many good plays as you can, and heart is one of them.

Success is not a recipe, and if it was, everybody would be doing it…

rahmad,

I’ve heard them referred to as Hypnic Jerks.

rahmad,

#1 Well that’s just, like, your opinion, man.

#2 No shootout?!? No shootout???

#3 The horror… The horror…

#4 Pop quiz, hotshot…

#5 Draw me like one of your French girls…

#6 Tetsuo??? Kaneda!!!

#7 on this, the day of your daughter’s wedding…

rahmad,

Smells like… Victory?

rahmad,

You may want to check out tildes.net – great community, totally text focused experience. I find that tildes complements lemmy well, and end up on both (in addition to a few other sites) to get a well rounded aggregation/discussion experience.

rahmad,

Papers, please. This was dystopian but it still felt like it captured the banality of some of communism’s negative side rather than just creating moustache twirling villains.

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