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Paul Binnie Scottish, b. 1967
Moon at Shinobazu
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1854938647117640135/photo/1


Maybe this is paranoid, but should I try to buy a new laptop now rather than waiting until next year to save on potentially increased tariffs? I imagine those will probably take some time to pass?
in reply to Daniel Filan

Does anyone know the framework release cycle? Not sure if waiting trades off against much.


I think that, a little over four years after leaving the country, I finally have no bank accounts or any other ties in Hong Kong.

(They just abruptly cut off my ability to log in, but it was following a conversation about closing my account, so I assume that's what they've done. A more explicit confirmation would have been preferred, but oh well.)

I take this as a vindication of "no matter how late, still better than never" :)

in reply to Ben Millwood

I still have a phone number there actually, which is a little more difficult to let go of because I don't know who still has it and obviously if I cancel it I can't get that specific number back, but I guess once the dust has settled on this I'll be ready to let go


Misophonia has become a serious problem in my life. There's a person, who is totally great, and who is friends with all my friends and gets invited to everything I'm invited to, that I cannot be around for long periods because when they laugh my brain instantly jumps to an emotion not too far from blind rage.

I don't know what to do about this; it's very intense and basically preventing me from doing most social activities, even things in my own house.

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Sorry to hear it, this sounds very inconvenient and also socially very difficult to approach

My misophonia feelings have varied over the years FWIW. Certain mouth sounds bothered me a few years ago, then they didn't stand out again til a few weeks ago. But my thing has always been much milder than the thing you're describing.

Have you tried loop earplugs? I think they say they can help with misophonia, and my friend with more widespread misophonia said they help a bit. Idk if they'd help with someone's laugh though.



Does anyone have a phone client they recommend? I'm using Tusky which is fine but could be improved on (looks more twitter-like than FB-like)
in reply to Daniel Filan

I just use Chrome; seems to work well enough, though I can imagine why you might prefer a client app.


This last week of obsessively focusing on antenna design has been really fun, but it turns out that there's a whole world that's been continuing to exist, depositing things into my email inbox and slack channels.


If "tweeting" is the act of posting to Twitter, is the act of posting here "superstimulating"? 🤔
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

it would be fun if we can configure this instance of Friendica to use those terms in notifications etc!
in reply to David Mears

This is technically possible since Friendica is open source, but I don't think the current version supports it :/


in reply to Satvik

This seems cool; my current favorite workflow involves storing a snapshot with an LLM-generated commit message every time I save a file, and when I'm ready to submit, doing a git reset and manually doing a few rounds of "git add -p" on a new branch.
in reply to Satvik

Ideally: Keep working in the "wip" branch, and then go back and modify the PR branch commits. In practice: haven't been doing enough team coding recently to have much actual experience with that aspect
in reply to Satvik



Latin practice day 5: Questions about ch 9 of LLPSI

I. Cūr lupī edunt ovēs, sed non edunt pāstōrēs?
II. Quantum est vestīgium lupī?
III. Est sōl in caelō, aut sunt mōntēs et collēs et campi etc in caelō?
IV. Homō est pāstor ovium. Quis est pāstor hominum? Quōrum pāstor est ovis?
V. Pāstor quaerit ovis quae errat. Ovis quaerit herba, quae ēstur. Quid quaerit herba?
VI. In campō sunt ūna ovis nigra et ūndēcentum ovēs albae. Pāstor habet unum canem nigrum. Cūr nōn habet ūndecentum canēs albōs?
VII. Campus dat silvae ovem. Quid dat silva campō?
VIII. Habet arbor umbram, aut habet umbra arbōrem?

#latinpractice



Tanaka Ryōhei
Persimmons . Mountains

From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1853326310933770502/photo/1



I spent the whole weekend building this... Err... "Portable" directional 2m #hamradio antenna with @Jen Blight, and it was pretty great.

(It's portable in the sense that it only weighs about 2lbs, and can be taken apart to fit in a backpack. I hope to make substantially more portable ones in the future).

The elements are made from 0.5" PEX irrigation tubing (think hula hoop material), wrapped in copper-coated fabric and copper tape, with a layer of clear "repair" tape to prevent tarnishing, while preserving the mad wizard staff vibes.

Each tube is connected to itself using Anderson powerpole connectors, so they can be easily unplugged, and twisted into a smaller footprint for travel.

The boom is a fiberglass driveway marker, and the mast is a telescoping fiberglass pole.

I don't yet know how well the antenna performs, and as you might be able to see from the VNA, it needs a little tuning. But my radio didn't emit any smoke when I transmitted using it! And the signal made it clearly to its intended target (who was about 30ft away).

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Update: I definitely see a fair chunk of gain! Not enough to communicate with Jen all the way in SF from my back yard, but my field strength meter shows ~40 units when my standard whip antenna only gets ~10. I'm not sure how to interpret this, but if it's roughly proportional to power, I think this implies roughly 6dBd / 8dBi? Also as far as I can tell the front/back ratio is excellent; saw barely any movement in the meter when placed behind the antenna.

I'm pleased with this as a first attempt!



Shiro Shirahata- Moon over Fuji, 1972.

From: https://x.com/MenschOhneMusil/status/1853201333983023451/photo/1



Toni Demuro, Solo per Gatti, 2023.

From: https://x.com/MenschOhneMusil/status/1853183759639839203/photo/1



Last Train/Look

Night Train. 2020 Ink on paper

Christoph Niemann.
American, born in 1970.

From: https://x.com/fraveris/status/1853184339753992541/photo/1




Latin practice day 4

Emō līberōs Latīnōs: "Latin via Ovid" and "Cambridge Latin Course, books 1 and 2".
Ōrnāmenta mē nōn ōrnant.
Cubīle in quō dormiō calet (?).

#latinpractice



I wonder if we're in the twilight of Monty Python being a common comedic reference. Humour does change over time, and I feel like I see way fewer Python references than I did when I was a teenager.
in reply to Daniel Filan

They will live forever, since AI is made using Python (disclaimer - I don't know if that is true), and Python is named after Monty Python.


A Beautiful Moment, Dee Nickerson.
From: https://x.com/MenschOhneMusil/status/1852592656905335109


A failure of an argument against sola scriptura


in reply to Daniel Filan

Another way of maintaining Sola Scriptura and Perspicuity in the face of Protestant disagreement about essential doctrines is the possibility that all of this is cleared up in the deuterocanonical books that Catholics believe are scripture but Protestants do not. That said, this will still rule out Protestantism, and it's not clear that the deuterocanon in fact clears everything up.


I'm currently using my 64-core Linux desktop to run a genetic algorithm to optimize my design for an emergency #hamradio antenna. About an hour ago I submitted a patch to the (Haskell) codebase of the optimizer to allow it to support curved wires, which I needed because my design is made of four circular hoops. Despite being a fairly low activity project, the PR was merged within about 10 minutes, which felt awesome.

Am I cool yet? How many more layers of nerd do I have to add before I'm cool?

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

From here, it looks like you have re-invented the loop yagi. Build it and confirm that it performs as well as your model...then we can talk about coolness.
in reply to ve3hls

While researching, I've seen a few similar designs with several different names; "circular quad beam", "cylindrical quad", "E-Z-O" etc.

I'm very new at this so I don't have as much equipment as I'd like for testing this stuff. Just ordered a cheap field strength meter, so hopefully will be able to do better than the "can you hear me now?" test.

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Seriously interesting project. I've used the optimiser in 4NEC2 but it only has preset things you can choose to optimise. Being able to use a Python script as an objective function would be so much nicer 🙂

Anyway looking forward to hearing about what you end up with ...



The word "antenna" has only been used for radio equipment since 1902. Brits call them "aerials". Imo this is a huge missed opportunity and they should obviously be called caducei.


Notes on Claude 3.5 Sonnet (new)'s ability to find errors in Latin text


I took an excerpt from a short story written for beginners, and asked Claude to evaluate it, noting that such short stories often contain errors. In a separate chat, I asked the same question, but replaced "Rōmae" with "Rōmā", which I believe is an error (and Claude in the first chat also thinks is an error). In that chat, Claude also thought the text was correct (but had some unrelated complaints). In a third example, I changed the case of a direct object to the ablative/dative instead of the accusative, and it noticed that. So it looks like Claude is not currently consistent at finding errors in Latin grammar.
in reply to Daniel Filan

in reply to Daniel Filan

in reply to Daniel Filan

As for why I care about this capability, see this post


Apparently there is a de facto conspiracy among Latin teachers to not criticize the quality of Latin learning resources they create? Seems not great. foundinantiquity.com/2024/04/1…



I wonder if the highest EV election betting move is to wait until the election is over, hoping that (a) Harris wins but (b) die hard Trump fans don't believe this and keep prices down to 85c or so like last time.


pix11.com/news/local-news/jayw…

I for some reason feel quite emotionally attached to whether I'm allowed to walk into roads or not, and am glad to see that freedom (which the UK has always had) spread a bit more in the US

in reply to Ben Millwood

Jay walkage is unnatural, but it is also the thin end of the wedge. What's next, dogs being allowed to walk in the road?


Trying a couple different materials for my "emergency kit highly directional #hamradio antenna":

  1. Stainless steel spring-crafting wire (idea credit: @flammifer@superstimul.us) isn't the best choice of antenna material or diameter, but it is extremely portable: I'd add connectors so I could unplug the ends and twist the wire up, to have it fit in about one square foot.
  2. PEX tubing is much lighter than it looks, is much sturdier and harder to accidentally deform, and covering it in copper foil tape should produce an excellent antenna. But it would be much harder to fold a PEX antenna down into an emergency kit sized package.

I think I'm just going to make both and compare them.



From: https://x.com/365posterblog1/status/1851223700822987054


Today's mild curiosity: My used antenna textbook came with a UK train pass from 2003. I'm always really curious about the story behind objects like this. It was evidently being used as a bookmark, nearly halfway through the textbook, so I'd guess it was a student? I'm not sure if the endpoints on this pass mean that they have a connection to one or the other, or if these are just some standard endpoints for this type of pass.
in reply to Ben Millwood

Maybe you can start in Zone 1/2 and stop in Zone 5/6 or vice versa, but you cannot get off in Zones 3/4?

This made more sense when I thought that Zones 3/4 would be the central ones but obviously no, 1 is central and 6 is furthest out, so ???

Do you get some tax or some premium for living very-far-out from the centre as opposed to kinda far out?

in reply to Amber Dawn

R1256 indeed means all zones per this random newsgroup archive I found cam.transport.narkive.com/qYl8…


Kalshi and PredictIt differ by 10 points! Wild!

Also apparently I can't sell all my "no" shares in Kamala on PI? Quite annoying.

in reply to Daniel Filan

oh also note the spread between Yes Kamala and No Trump on Kalshi - the Yes Trump prices are close.




in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Oh my, that dwarf mood is the same thing that exists in the webfic Worth The Candle. A blind focus descends on someone randomly ('forge frenzy') and they create a unique magical item, to the exclusion of food and sleep. In WtC, such magical items are called entads, referring to magical artefacts that are created in this way.

So either Alexander Wales (author) played Dwarf Fortress, or it's a wider trope that both are drawing from.

OK I did a google and I found the author saying in an AMA that he wasn't inspired by Dwarf Fortress:

I have never played Dwarf Fortress, so no. The closest inspiration I can think of is one of the Drizzt books, where Wulfgar gets the mythical warhammer Aegis-fang made for him by his adoptive dwarf father Bruenor Battlehammer. It's been probably twenty years since I read the book, but the chapter where it got forged really stuck with me. Forge frenzy is kind of that, amped up, with worse materials.
in reply to David Mears

Parts of the trope go back to Norse folklore, where dwarves are described as master craftsmen who focus so intensely when creating great works that nothing can disturb them. E.g. during the forging of Gullinbursti Loki transformed into a biting fly and repeatedly bit the hand of the crafting dwarf Brokkr, but he ignored it and the work came out perfectly.
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

I tend to have "strange moods" that last about 6-8 weeks at work, roughly every 1.5 years.

Over the last 7 years at my current job, only two of these have produced anything useful, but they've probably been about as valuable as everything else I've done combined. One weird pattern is that the valuable ones made the least sense up front – like "rewrite key data pipelines in a language none of us have heard of" or "move a bunch of stuff from one piece of infrastructure to a seemingly identical piece of infrastructure." The ones that seemed to make sense up front, on the other hand, never amounted to anything. It's gotten to the point where my cofounders actively encourage me to work on things that don't make sense!



Latin practice day 3

Inter Sydneium et Berkeleiam nōn est via.
Verba mea audiuntur ā multīs persōnīs.
Saccus quem ego portō (= quī portātur ā mē) pulcher est.

#latinpractice

in reply to Daniel Filan

Persōna quae ab Berkeleiā ad Quercupolem vehitur nōn tam valēns est quam is quī Berkeleiā Quercupolem ambulat.


request for poetry




Okitsu-chō, Suruga, by Kawas Hasui, 1934
From: https://x.com/JapanTraCul/status/1851022883394408642


Types of breaks


Sometimes when I'm stuck at a work task, I take a break by standing up and walking away (to go get food or go on a walk or something). Often, this produces a sudden helpful insight after I have taken a few steps.

Some other times, I take a break by staying where I am, changing tabs, and opening social media. This approximately never produces a sudden helpful insight.

I suppose this is a reason to take more breaks physically separated from my work space.

in reply to Daniel Filan

One theory for this (mentioned in Your Brain at Work) is that when you've been working on a task for a long time, you tend to have a lot of blood flow in one part of your brain, and walking/doing something else gets you to reset, spreading it across. Then you're more likely to use a mental process that you didn't before.

I find the specific mechanic sketchy, but as a metaphor it works reasonably well: I definitely have different types of thoughts when on a walk or taking a shower than I do while at the computer, and these thoughts are usually at a higher level of abstraction and less specific/detailed.



something that raises my hackles probably more than strictly necessary: when people say "omg, thing X happened? that's so outrageous! if aspect Y had been different, this would never have happened, proving that people are biased along that axis" (e.g. "he never would have gotten away with this if he were a woman").

this is in some sense just one particular kind of appeal to fictional / imaginary evidence, but this one in particular bothers me because, a moment ago you probably would have predicted that thing X wouldn't happen either? so the fact that you still think a slightly modified X wouldn't happen doesn't feel that compelling to me, like maybe you're just not updating enough

(not all appeals to imaginary evidence are invalid, when they're good they're called "thought experiments", but often they're not good)



Just realized that my Australian English has phonemic vowel length! Specifically, the only thing that distinguishes "ferry" from "fairy" when I say them is that the first vowel is longer in "fairy" than in "ferry".


looking for video game recommendations


I enjoyed Disco Elysium: what other similar games might I enjoy?

Specific things I enjoyed about it:

-narrative-focussed
-I guess 'turn-based'/slow, as in, no stressful fighting off enemies in real time
-psychology focus
-a good blend of serious and funny/shitposty/playful
-puzzle-y
-non-addictive: self-limiting because of all the reading/density (in my experience)

Stuff that's less important:

-overall vibe: I liked DE's vibe but would also enjoy other vibes (e.g. more comedic, more fantasy, more sci-fi, more cosy, more whimsical, set in our universe, etc)
-art style: ditto

in reply to Amber Dawn

Replay Baba Is You! Reliving good things is under-rated over novelty.
in reply to David Mears

That is valid but I have replayed it before (though still never finished all the levels)
in reply to Amber Dawn

Happened across this game by seeing a post about how a bug in it was fixed. The Wikipedia page makes it sound up your alley! It seems there is an option to use combat and an option not to. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ou…


From: https://x.com/madrugada_m/status/1850579024872923510/photo/1


There's a level of rudeness that I find unacceptable. I basically never see it among my friends. I see it very rarely in the Berkeley rationalist community. However, I can't spend much time scrolling Twitter without running into it (even if I try to stay within TPOT). And it's also pretty common for me to see unacceptable levels of rudeness when pursuing healthcare.

It seems so easy to avoid rude behavior when navigating my friend-network, but so difficult to avoid it when navigating other parts of society. This seems pretty striking to me!

I don't know what to do with this insight -- perhaps I'm stuck on it because it seems like it shouldn't be true.



Hot sauce can be too hot


I consumed this hot sauce, called "Hellfire re-booted double doomed" as part of a "hot ones" themed party. Specifically, I consumed it at the same time as a bunch of other people. Here is my review:
- when we ate it, a bunch of people were visibly in physical pain
- I threw up after eating a small amount of it
- I am now hearing my friend Ronny groan in pain, because of this hot sauce. It is now 7:38 pm. He ate it at like 2:30 pm.
- one of the people who ate it with us is now in hospital seeking help with the pain they feel

I genuinely do not recommend it - I consider it more of a poison than a food.

As contrast, I also consumed the Hot Ones season 22 line-up of sauces before this. I found the last ones unpleasantly spicy, but would recommend them as a food experience if you like spicy things.

in reply to Daniel Filan

I've tried one of the Hot Ones lineups due to my brother; I didn't mind the hottest one in that list and actively liked the second-hottest, but it definitely seems like whatever this was, it was very intense.