rmidthun | 4 years ago | on: Richard “Lowtax” Kyanka, creator of Somethingawful, has died
rmidthun's comments
rmidthun | 4 years ago | on: 50 years ago, The Electric Company used comedy to boost kids' reading skills
One recurring joke was based on 2001. A giant monolith would crumble to reveal the sound of the day while Also Sprach Zarathustra played. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zY0GhNBMkM8
rmidthun | 4 years ago | on: Please stop closing forums and moving people to Discord
I really don't want to get a new phone just for this...
rmidthun | 5 years ago | on: They're Made Out of Meat (1991)
rmidthun | 6 years ago | on: Terence Tao Proves Result on the Collatz Conjecture
rmidthun | 6 years ago | on: Scott’s Supreme Quantum Supremacy FAQ
rmidthun | 6 years ago | on: The subversive messages hidden in The Wizard of Oz
And if that isn't enough, it is established that nothing in Oz ever dies. Including all his chopped off parts...
rmidthun | 6 years ago | on: Alan Kay's answer to ‘what are some forgotten books programmers should read?’
I Am a Strange Loop spends an entire chapter of Hofstadter informing us how he is better than everyone else because he hears Bach better than everyone else. And this attitude fills the book, I found it very obnoxious and am not sure why no else mentions it.
There are at least two places in the book where he talks about an interesting point, then realizes it is a rehash of something from a previous book. And aside from the self-congratulations (did you know being a vegetarian makes you more of a person?), anything interesting in this book was done better in a previous book.
I would recommend The Mind's I instead. It's a collection of stories and essays from most of his influences, see what Turing, Lucas, et al. actually said.
rmidthun | 6 years ago | on: User Inyerface – A worst-practice UI experiment
rmidthun | 6 years ago | on: A Legal Loophole May Leave Some Rock Riffs Up for Grabs
rmidthun | 7 years ago | on: The unlikely resurgence of Dungeons and Dragons
The system is designed so that the players can influence the events of the game at the cost of increasing difficultly. For instance, every character has a High Concept, such as "Best swordsman in the kingdom". This can be used by the player in many ways, such as celebrity notice, justifying related skills, background, etc. but the game master can also invoke it for things like bitter rivalry, getting conscripted or not being able to go incognito.
As such, the system can work at many different levels. One popular setting has characters as magical cats, another as post-human cyborgs. And it all works.
For a list of various settings: https://www.evilhat.com/home/fate-worlds-and-adventures/
rmidthun | 7 years ago | on: The Golden Age of Rich People Not Paying Their Taxes
"You can go to jail for not filing your taxes. You can go to jail for lying on your return. But you can’t go to jail for not having enough money to pay your taxes. "
That is, if you intentionally avoid paying taxes by either not filing or filing a fraudulent report, then you certain can go to jail. See Al Capone for the most famous example.
rmidthun | 7 years ago | on: How to Make a Roguelike
So many tricks and traps in this game. Did you ever see that you can throw traps? If you throw a trap, pause, teleport it to you, then use it normally, it comes out with the same velocity as when it was teleported. So you can throw an armed trap, causing it to teleport/crash/acid whoever it hits.
rmidthun | 7 years ago | on: Quantum Mechanics Toys that Didn’t Catch On
http://www.gregegan.net/BORDER/Soccer/Soccer.html
I wouldn't call it accessible, though.
rmidthun | 8 years ago | on: Report of Active Shooter at YouTube HQ
rmidthun | 8 years ago | on: How to Study Mathematics (2017)
rmidthun | 8 years ago | on: CryptoKitties craze slows down transactions on Ethereum
rmidthun | 8 years ago | on: Voyager's 'Cosmic Map' of Earth's Location Is Hopelessly Wrong
The Strugatsky brothers book "Roadside Picnic" (inspiration for game and movie "Stalker") is based on the idea that aliens came and visited Earth and ignored us completely.
However, they left behind a lot of weird and often deadly trash that people are scavenging.
rmidthun | 8 years ago | on: Binary Puzzle
https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/puzzles/devel/ https://git.tartarus.org/?p=simon/puzzles.git;a=summary
rmidthun | 8 years ago | on: Maps reveal the structures of ‘Choose Your Own Adventure’ books
Japanese Visual Novels are basically CYOA with pictures. The number of decision points varies depending on the book in question, but the basic structure is still there.
Twine [1] is a system that allows you to create stories, essentially CYOA but with the option of adding variables. For instance, you could have an option that is only selectable if you found a key earlier. This bridges the gap between CYOA and classic text adventure. Since Twine outputs HTML it is also easy to port wherever you want.
Finally, there are a number of online community CYOA. This being the Internet, the quality is varied and many of them are pornographic. Probably the biggest is Addventure[2]
Among the many "innovations", there was a feature where he would link to a website that he thought was worthy of ridicule. Often mentioning directly that it had a guest book to sign in.
So a horde of bullies would descend on that website, fill the book and any forums with goatse porn and email the same. Some of the victims shut down their websites, their complaints posted to SA so people could laugh at them.
Brigading and "cancelling"... Yes, some of the humor was funny, but the site was a cesspool that festered into the chans. Let's Play is good, but the worst of the Internet was fostered here as well.
The best part was when he was tricked into a boxing match with Uwe Boll, which didn't work out well for him.