@bleedingphoenix It used to be that my favorite movie was Lord of the Rings. But I haven't watched it in a very long time, and these days I simply don't even feel like watching movies anymore. Last thing I saw was Spiderman No Way Home, and that was mostly to see how Peter dealt with Tony's death. The rest of the movie was... average.
@a1ba Not great apparently. Most people report it not running. For those who got it to run, 30fps max it seems. Not something you'd want to run a shooter at, especially Doom.
@Shlomo @coolboymew
There's only 1 yandere that will ever capture my heart, Yuno Gasai. Everyone else is a pale imitation as far as I'm concerned. That girl restarted the universe and killed herself just to be with the one she loved. That's some epic yandere dedication.
@mischievoustomato
Good luck! .... with the killing yourself, not with KDE. I hope you have a miserable time with KDE.
P.S. This was a joke. Don't know why others are having problems with KDE, it has been working for me well in recent years.
@professionalbigot69 Ching chong, ding dong, that's an offensive thing to say, you damn cracker.
@professionalbigot69 No, I mean goth chickens, you weirdo.
@icedquinn How long do you think he'll last?
This was hilarious. A leftie breadtuber used A LOT of Gamergate research to bash on Brianna Wu, and talk about how she's a bad person and whatnot, just because Wu turned her rhetoric ever so slightly away from full blown woke insanity.
They validate EVERYTHING Gamergate found on her, while still claiming GG was a harassment campaign. Gamergate discovered she was a fraud a full decade before you got your panties in a knot, but somehow when they did it, it was wrong...
It's a 2 hour long shit show, I didn't watch it till the end either, but it's hilarious to see the mental dissonance. "Gamergate was bad, but this thing they found on her, and this Breitbart article, I've realized that they were true".
@BasedLunatic
> I don’t know what causes this distortion of face in the camera on phones
Post-processing. Processing, processing and more processing. You can't do most of it with video, because the CPU can't do it fast enough for 30-60 frames per second. But for a single photo? It's gonna have a second of spare time until it needs to write in on disk. More than enough to make you look thinner, your skin look smoother, etc., so it can enable your vanity, make you post on Instagram, and because you get likes for your nice looking ultraprocessed photos, it triggers your lizard brain to associate photos taken with Samsung, Apple, Huawei, etc. to attention, happiness, pleasure. So next time you change your phone, you'll buy Samsung, Apple, Huawei again, because you remember just how good your pictures with that phone were, because you did got so many Instagram likes.
@SuperDicq
>AMD A6
>That will in fact be able to decode mp3 files
I mean... technically yeah, but just barely.
@BasedLunatic
Just to be clear, I hate both of these. I hate that we've normalized faking photos. I already hated the over-processed approach Apple always took with their cameras, as a means to compensate for lower megapixel count, but the more recent filtering and AI stuff... it is Satanic in my eyes. I'd rather take photos with the most potato budget phone on the market than with either of these.
@BasedLunatic
If this were about any other country, I wouldn't believe it.
@nimrod I honestly didn't think it was possible to make AOC more unappealing to me. Good job.
@djsumdog
>Tepe is a full on site with carvings/drawings and structures that point at a specific star
I might have been thinking of something else then. I'm just familiar with the name in passing, but history was never my thing. Probably associated the name with something else by mistake.
>that it was multiple comet impacts
If you have something comet sized that hits in an ocean, you'd get a flood, and maybe you can escape rock material being ejected and all that. If it were to hit on land, ice or no ice, not only would it form a massive crater (and even in the ocean it's likely gonna form a crater, the Chicxulub crater is underwater), but it would be a fireball mass extinction event, with little chance for something over the size of rodents to survive. Chicxulub was just an asteroid, and it was enough to put the final nail in the coffin for dinosaurs (the current understanding these days is that dinosaur population was actually already in decline by that time, the asteroid just speed things up). A comet would be far worse. Multiple comets... My point is, I don't think humanity would have survived something like that. A comet wouldn't just destroy a civilization, it would reset life completely.
This is why I mention floods in general, because flooding does occur all the time, and it can occur for all sorts of reasons. You don't need exotic events like comets. I remember watching a video on some ancient flood triggered from a land slide or something like that. A "simple" flood, while less fancy, could still locally eradicate a civilization, so it's something that remains plausible. A comet impacting Earth in the last few hundred thousands years, is not really plausible.
(I was looking for something else, and found this, relating to the Younger Dryas period https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uEvL9cbze4 )
>You might be confusing Tepe with Richat
No, I think I'm confusing it with Gunung Padang. (relevant info:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zU-wQVAqQnk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZGp6N3AHTA
)
>We look at our layers of pavement and concrete and massive steel super structures and it seems like evidence of the remains should be here 50,000 or 100,000 years from now.
Some of it might erode even faster, but I don't think that would be the most categorical thing that would date our civilization.
>At least some of it should be a sediment layer a million years from now too, but it would all likely be gone at 1 billion years
Yup, what you'd want to look for are the sediment layers. And once material gets deposited in a sediment layer, it will stay there. Even for a billion years. But asphalt and concrete might not be as noticeable in between all the other rocks. And steel will eventually rust away, so you'll just have the sediment more rich in iron oxide. But that wouldn't necessarily be indicative of a civilization.
Some of the things you'd want to look for in the sediment layers to discover humanity is microplastics and artificially created nuclear isotopes. Actually, I remember hearing somewhere that they looked in the sediment of some lake or reservoir or something, that hadn't been disturbed by humans for a long time, and they discovered that we, as in humanity, had already left a clear mark of our existence in the sediment. And I think it was mostly about nuclear isotopes that don't exist naturally. Lead is gonna be another strong sign, cause asteroid don't deposit lead when they strike. So an uniform distribution of lead in the geological record could only have been caused by us.
>We still have no idea how the Egyptian pyramids were built in that time
No, we pretty much know. The thing is, everyone who insists "we don't know" think about the problem in short time spans, they think the pyramids should have been done in 3-5 years, like a modern skyscraper gets built. But Egyptians spent decades for even small pyramids. Cutting the blocks was done with sand abrasion, moving them was probably done with the help of rollers beneath the blocks (or maybe this https://www.livescience.com/45285-how-egyptians-moved-pyramid-stones.html), and for lifting them into place they would have used sloped ramps. Sure, it might take multiple days to cut, move and place a single block in the pyramid. But Egyptians had plenty of time, and slavery ensured they had man power too.
>The more I look at history, the more it's such a limited black box we pull out ideas from
Oh, I'm sure there's plenty we don't know. Even for something like the Roman Empire, that was likely one of the better documented old civilizations, I bet we don't have a clue about the majority of their politicians and local leaders. But we do know that the Roman Empire existed. By this point, it's really hard for something of a big scale to have eluded us noticing. We're at the point of refining details.
Coming back to the dinosaurs as an example, we know they existed, we know they died, we know they died after an asteroid strike, now we're refining how much the asteroid is responsible, and how much is it other changes in climate that had been taking place for other geological reasons.
@ceekay You just reacted to tech tone's reaction to a reaction of a reaction of a reaction of a reaction.
@LordMordred half way through I started hearing Lumpy Space Princess.
@BasedLunatic
I thought it would be a Viagra ad. This was brilliant!
なんで君はこれを読んでいるかよ
Just another random person passing by.
Oh hi.
The Alyx Vance must go this way anyway.
Gordon Freeman dies in All Dogs Go To Heaven 2.
I wasn't designed to be carried.
En Taro Igel!
Lift me up, let me go...