OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: Why Pencils Are Yellow (2017)
OmIsMyShield's comments
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: Linus Torvalds apologizes for his behavior, takes time off
And the resultant debate might well be polarising or destructive by itself.
Without knowing what the parent experienced to cause their take on this type of politeness I'm just guessing, though.
It is interesting because I think I see a cultural thing here too: in some cultures "I feel" and "I see" and "currently" are as firm as "unacceptable until it changes" - just worded in a way that conveys respect for the author. But in other cultures it is read as vacillating. Dunno. Guesswork, as I said.
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: Thank you HN
Something that has been somewhat helpful to me is a meditation method called mental noting. Please note no method will work for everyone but in case it's useful to you, here goes.
Basically, my version, please do search for more qualified people's version of mental noting on the internet:
1) Rest attention on my breathing
2) Notice (I don't always notice, I don't often notice, but sometimes I do) that I'm distracted
3) Note and label the distraction (mentally say "I'm thinking" or "I'm itching" or "I'm worrying" or "I'm replaying conversation" etc)
4) Thank the distraction for allowing me to flex the mental "noticing muscle"
4.5) Remind myself not to beat myself up about how long I was distracted, haha
5) GOTO 1
This practice has helped me in slowly building up a mental observer that can pause from time to time. But, as I said, I still struggle with the pause.
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: From Father to Son, Last Words to Live by (2007)
a) She actually had a list of the desired / required traits of romantic partners on hand.
b) Desired traits include morning prayer.
c) Said traits also seemingly included the romantic partner having a daily to-do list.
Taken together you do get an interesting cultural phenomenon being displayed here.
So in my reading of the original post I found it more interesting than just "hating on religion".
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: The World's Newest, Most Gloriously Designed Maps
Maybe it's precisely because it's so horrific that it loomed larger than life in my head, who knows.
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: American toddlers are eating more sugar than the amount recommended for adults
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: OpenDUNE – An open-source recreation of the game Dune II
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: OpenDUNE – An open-source recreation of the game Dune II
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: An Interesting Pattern in the Prime Numbers: Parallax Compression
This shows the pattern again:https://imgur.com/qR4iGJb
Further fiddling ~shows~ highlights more patterns: https://imgur.com/a/Yjln2RX
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: 'The Expanse' Canceled at Syfy
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: 'The Expanse' Canceled at Syfy
Did you watch Lewis? I enjoyed that.
Babylon Berlin is also one of those things that are particularly relevant at the moment as there are lots of parallels between the collapse of the Weimar Republic and the current state of the west.
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: 'The Expanse' Canceled at Syfy
Space Sci-fi TV:
I think the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica was great.
Non sci-fi:
I think Babylon Berlin is good.
I only watched the first series of The Expanse.
It's very subjective - if you enjoyed it then I'm glad. I'm certainly not in the majority among my friends in disliking The Expanse, but also not alone.
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: 'The Expanse' Canceled at Syfy
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: 'The Expanse' Canceled at Syfy
Disclaimer: I only watched the first series, and I know most people actually like the show. Subjective dislike abounds here: you can prefix "In my eyes only" to every sentence below. I speak about the show, not the books here.
So first thing that struck me is that I'm not emotionally invested in any character. I'm not rooting for anyone. I don't care about them, and they don't have any drives or characteristics that immerses me. They are wooden, shallow, unrealistic caricatures of banal archetypes.
Amos is probably the most obvious example: he is a grab bag of overly obvious machismo and pulp tough-guy slapped together in such a way that he is concurrently completely unremarkable, unrelatable, and unbelievable. Every time he got on screen I would lose immersion and start wondering how the writers could settle for such cheap tactics and obvious low effort characterization - they basically bludgeon us with a few standard examples of machismo and violence. I end up completely uncaring about the character and I don't identify with any of his supposed drives. It just screams artifice.
Another example: the same obviousness and wooden characterization goes for Avasarala, but it's compounded by properly bad acting. I don't know what happened here - Aghdashloo was heart-achingly convincing in _House of Sand and Fog_, and her voice is so beautiful that one would think she'd be able to carry any role. But no - Avasarala is a character so badly scripted that I go from watching the story to irritation in 2 seconds flat.
In a variety of ways this goes for all characters. One cannot get a grip on their internal worlds and start caring about them - what should've been the complexity and contradiction inherent in human behaviour comes across as accidentally acting in a way counter to their shopworn character traits. Why does Miller care about Julie? Instead of adding meat (his exception to his internal rule) to Miller's character it just feels inconsistent with the rest of his actions. They flap about in thinly disguised cliché suits - thereby often acting unexpectedly in completely uncharacteristic ways (think Naomi for example), so they just come across as unbelievable.
The world building is also so-so. For instance, I found the Belter patois to be more irritating than supportive, mainly because it comes and goes in various amounts without enough consistency. The whole backstory is also a bit... bland? Made up of cheap tropes? Two untrustworthy governments with tension between them, a possible but oh so avoidable war, oh wow that one is a double agent all along, a group of disadvantaged blue-collar outsiders being manipulated by everyone, meh. The politics is so cartoonish and predictable as to break immersion, again. Oh, and how many hackneyed sci-fi inanities do they want to repeat? Hypoxia much?
The acting: least said, soonest mended.
The random violence. I don't care about the characters, and I don't worry if they live or die, and the violence is still so unexpected and over the top that I still roll my eyes. Also, Amos again. How do characters go from trying actively to kill each other to backing each other up in a fight in 5 minutes?
The CG is good, though.
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: 'The Expanse' Canceled at Syfy
The quality (from a narrative and acting viewpoint primarily) is so low that I think it drives people away from the topic. I desperately love space-y sci-fi but the space exploration really needs higher quality productions than this.
It is of course, super subjective, and I do understand that people like the show. I'm one of the (probable) minority of techies who dislike this specific show.
OmIsMyShield | 7 years ago | on: A 1970s Teenager's Bedroom (1998)
Any specific beginner-friendly resources that you would recommend?
I thought of starting with something small and defined, like upgrading my TV's sound but even that comes with a variety of bewildering options.
OmIsMyShield | 8 years ago | on: Why I Quit Google to Work for Myself
I just want to point out that that is a lot of assumption based on the limited (probably paraphrased) context we have here.
OmIsMyShield | 8 years ago | on: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Job Hunt
OmIsMyShield | 8 years ago | on: Uncle Bob and Silver Bullets
He liked to say "Gutes Werkzeug ist die halbe Arbeit" (or sometimes: "Gutes Werkzeug, bessere Arbeit"). A good tool is half the work, or: Good tools, better work.
This idea has informed my coding decisions too. Evaluating the worth of a tool is more complex in software than in silversmithing, though.
OmIsMyShield | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Which developing nations have interesting tech stories at the moment?
Although there have been setbacks from recent government shenanigans the wheels of law are turning (albeit slowly) and the ruling Zuma faction is daily facing more and more resistance. In the meantime the weak rand makes SA cheap, and their interesting ideas enter the world market.
Amazon has a strong presence in SA - and (this is generally a little known fact) EC2 was developed in South Africa[1]
Locally, the Silicon Cape[2] initiative is aiming to create an environment where tech startups thrive, and has grown to 10k members in 500 organisations.
Ventureburn[3] has a lot on the startup scene in emerging markets, and a lot on South Africa in particular.
The limitations and challenges of South Africa actually drives innovation.
South Africa's (actually, Africa as a continent too) large informal and unbanked sector has led to a lot of fintech and mobile-banking related startups.
Limited Internet infrastructure penetration leads to interesting ways to solve, say, the last-mile problem. For instance Flickswitch[4] has focused on greasing the wheels for those within the IoT and M2M market who use the GSM networks to address the last mile problem (disclaimer: I am one of the four original co-founders of and exited last year after being there for 9 years).
Etc. It's a super market to explore, bigger than, say, Ireland, and more innovative than most.
[1] http://www.zdnet.com/article/how-amazon-exposed-its-guts-the...