Me to my partner, after complaining about doing something that I mildly regretted:
"Oh well, I guess I have to have *some* flaws, or I wouldn't be relatable"
Incidentally, is tagging a thing here?
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I've done this but it looks ugly:
Apparently this can be controlled with some shenanigans, see StackOverflow. I don't know if that's within the power of @Ben Weinstein-Raun to control?
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Do y'all remember that princeton election guy who forecast a win for Clinton with 99% in 2016? I just found a post-mortem interview with him where he says:
Probabilities are not a good way to convey uncertainty. The first reason being that it’s hard to estimate the true amount of uncertainty, and I discovered that.
I... have never before felt such a strong urge to say "skill issue". But people weren't saying "skill issue" yet in 2016, so nobody got the chance. Time is cruel.
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Sam Wang and Nate Silver had an interesting back-and-forth, if I remember correctly. A friend of mine was convinced that Sam was right and that Nate was “putting his thumb on the scale to cover himself.”
In hindsight, it seems to me that Sam’s approach was more of a straightforward averaging of polls, while Nate’s method is more like a gambler’s—integrating his own beliefs into the model.
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Camino Day 2
Today was more coastal boardwalks, then through a mid-size city, then more coastal boardwalks, then some back roads in farm country. The albergue that I planned to stay at filled up by 3pm and I ended waling an additional 8km, making this a 28km day in total from Labruge to Apulia.
I'm second guessing some of my decisions. I stuck with the coastal route today (meaning I'm committed for the next couple of days) but I had the opportunity to take a more inland route and now I wonder if that would have been more "nature-y". I could have stopped in the city and saved my legs. I could have gotten more stamps if I had planned differently, etc.
Tomorrow will be a shorter day so I can recover. My host says it's easier to find albergues between here and the Spanish border
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How do tools differ from trading partners?
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Camino Day 1
Started from the Sé do Porto and walked as far as Labruge on the Sendo Litoral route for a total of ~24km. The route goes along the coast and is a mix of sidewalk and boardwalk. It was foggy throughout the morning and then cleared up in the afternoon but stayed cool all day. The coast was beautiful.
My feet hurt. I'm going to try to do a similar mileage tomorrow and hope I acclimate to walking
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Test post (message?)
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I just figured out OAuth and wrote my findings up on their wiki at wiki.friendi.ca/docs/api-authe…
I probably will integrate it with flexiprocity, but I'll probably take my time about it. I anticipate it being quite fiddly.
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I'm guessing it's only because I have only 1 friend so far, but I have an empty feed, so I am discovering posts using the circular button in the navbar. It's a confusing interface!
> "The top left icon, with the rectangular grid, is the thing to click in order to see the "Facebook timeline" analogue
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AI noise removal is still not that good
I end up with a lot of super-noisy photos because I do social dance photography. The light in the room is dim, and I need a fast shutter speed because people are moving quickly, so I'm letting in even less light. This is terrible for noise.
Unfortunately, it seems that the best AI noise removal tools are still not that good! I am surprised.
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I hear good things about Lightroom's denoise - do you have a way you could try that? The random online tools are often pretty far behind state of the art, if that's what you've tried so far.
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Oh cool! I can try Lightroom and this DxO thing (haven't heard of it). I think I may have already tried Photoshop's denoise feature -- maybe that's the same as whatever Lightroom is doing.
Topaz was what I tried in the screenshot. It seemed like it was supposed to be one of the best options, but I'm glad that top comment says it's actually far behind others
Further attempts:
According to someone on the thread that Kevin linked, Topaz works better if you're using raw files instead of JPGs. Indeed, it does!
Not sure it's good enough that I'd actually want to use it. I'll think about it.
Looks like I did try de-noising in Lightroom already -- I cancelled my Adobe subscription so I can't redo it, but it's still on there when I open Lightroom. It's kind of impressive, but also still looks pretty unnatural in a lot of ways. (Some things too blurry, some things too crisp.) Looks like some poorly-stylized digital painting rather than a photo. (At least for the photo I tried. I can't share it because it's not a very flattering shot of the person pictured.)
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Post for collecting bugs reported on this friendica instance
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network page? on your global community page?
Reminds me of of the "you are bugs" scene in the three body problem.
> And as we go about changing the world to suit our preferences, the rats will remain unconsulted. It seems clear to me that rats will only get what they want, when what they want happens to be nearly-costless to humans.
This seems like it's making progress towards a formalization, though I think it still struggles.
If you imagine that covid virons were agents, then it seems to me that although there's a sense in which we're much more powerful than them, and you know, humanity could, if "it" wanted, defeat them, they can kinda get what they want without enormous costs to humans. And yet humans are still much more powerful than covid virons.
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Hosting providers
Right now superstimul.us is hosted on a Vultr VPS instance. I use Vultr because it's a decently reliable VPS host that offers OpenBSD (though this instance is running in Docker on a Debian system). Much cheaper than AWS; comparable pricing and features with many other VPS providers.
But I just went looking at the prices of competitors, and Hetzner is cheap. How is it so cheap? For roughly the same price I'm paying for this host, I could get ~8x the vCPUs and RAM, and 4x the storage.
It would be a hassle to migrate at this point, but I'm definitely tempted.
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1. It's *even more* cost-competitive if you participate in their dutch-style server-capacity auction (a neat idea):
- hetzner.com/sb/
- docs.hetzner.com/robot/general…
- There is also open-source tooling to automate interaction with the auction.
2. Have no illusions that such infrastructure is physically secure against interference (fun example at: notes.valdikss.org.ru/jabber.r…), and account for such in your threat model if/as appropriate.
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Notes on the outcome of groups experiment
I think groups are a pretty half-baked feature, and I don't expect people to use them much. A "group" (previously called a "forum", and most of the documentation hasn't been updated to reflect this change) is basically an account that auto-reshares things it's tagged in. You can give it a few different settings for how it responds to follow requests, and another setting for the visibility of its reshares. To administer a group, you have to create a second account for it (which friendica does make relatively easy but not trivial), and then switch to being logged-in "as" the group.
So, yeah I guess it might be useful for coordinating things somehow, and the setting with private reshares is maybe promising (though also marked "experimental"). But it seems much less natural to me than the corresponding concept on Facebook.
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Some praise for the behind-the-scenes tech I'm using to run this site
- Tailscale: Lightweight personal VPNs. Tailscale is so good. I don't even need to have an open ssh port on the VPS running this instance, because I can connect over tailscale SSH with zero hassle.
- Caddy: Caddy is like nginx if nginx cared about usability. e.g. it makes it trivial to put an HTTP service behind a TLS proxy. Like, it even manages the LetsEncrypt certificate for you. Totally wild.
- Docker, and the official Friendica images especially: I hate developing for containers, and avoid it when possible. But when someone else has put in the effort to make a high-quality container image, deployment is genuinely much easier, even for hosting the thing on a VPS.
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The plan for the beta
Thanks to everyone who's joined to help beta test! I'm very grateful y'all are here! ❤️
My basic plan is to use superstimul.us for the next week, posting here instead of Facebook, getting a sense of the platform so that I can help other people later, and trying to iron out basic issues if they crop up.
After that, I'm going to do a push to invite clusters of people who I'm especially excited about being here. I'll probably reach out to y'all for names of people who are cruxy for your active enjoyment/participation here (feel free to preemptively message me about this!).
Anybody can invite their friends, btw, though I would slightly prefer you held off for now, because I want to be strategic about the launch.
I might do some kind of incentive / costly-signaling scheme where I give $20 or so to the first 30 people who share a substantive post here, and not on other social media? Or something; Not sure about that yet.
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I'm considering going to the southern hemisphere for December and January, to miss the shortest days in California.
New Zealand and Chile both seem like good options: Tons of sun that time of year, good climate, safe cities, relatively cheap. Chile is a lot cheaper, and after having a lot of fun visiting Mexico, I kind of want to try living in a country where I don't know the language.
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I just played Duck Detective and I have a complaint
I am confused that it is SO well-rated. Like, it's 10/10 on Steam? The motivation behind the central crime doesn't really make sense and is barely explained. It's cute in a bunch of ways, but writing reasonable character motivations feels like a "bare minimum" thing for me. (At least in this kind of game, where you're supposed to deduce who did what and why.)
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Ben Weinstein-Raun
in reply to Amber Dawn • •Here's a thing I posted to Facebook about a year ago:
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Ben Weinstein-Raun
in reply to Amber Dawn • •And if you want a longer list, I also wrote this:
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Nikki Bee
in reply to Amber Dawn • •Hello I exist here now! What I've been reading recently other than the (I agree very good) The Body Keeps the Score is a couple of fairly "canonical in their field" books about how stuff should be designed so it's easy to use correctly, but often isn't.
The first book I read on this is The Design of Everyday Things (Don Norman), an accessible and imo pretty charming book talking about familiar things from a product design perspective that cares about psychology and how people work.
The second is less a recommendation because it's fairly dry & academic, Normal Accidents by Charles Perrow, a sociologist writing after the Three Mile Island nuclear meltdown about what causes industrial accidents, and how the way companies think about safety processes often ends up screwing workers over. Not leftist by principle but a lot of the conclusions it comes to are. Interesting to me as someone who's done a bunch of work in lower-stakes computer-y ways about "how do we know when stuff breaks without constantly spamming ourselves with warnings", but there's definitely a lot of mo
... show moreHello I exist here now! What I've been reading recently other than the (I agree very good) The Body Keeps the Score is a couple of fairly "canonical in their field" books about how stuff should be designed so it's easy to use correctly, but often isn't.
The first book I read on this is The Design of Everyday Things (Don Norman), an accessible and imo pretty charming book talking about familiar things from a product design perspective that cares about psychology and how people work.
The second is less a recommendation because it's fairly dry & academic, Normal Accidents by Charles Perrow, a sociologist writing after the Three Mile Island nuclear meltdown about what causes industrial accidents, and how the way companies think about safety processes often ends up screwing workers over. Not leftist by principle but a lot of the conclusions it comes to are. Interesting to me as someone who's done a bunch of work in lower-stakes computer-y ways about "how do we know when stuff breaks without constantly spamming ourselves with warnings", but there's definitely a lot of more accessible writing about this.
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Amber Dawn
in reply to Nikki Bee • •Nikki Bee
in reply to Amber Dawn • •Ha, yes, I think "unusually philosophical about the mundane" is a tone of that book strikes neatly! A bunch of more academic stuff about the history of human-centred design and so on, but also him being a little poetic about keeping memories in the head or keeping them in the world around you.
It's a pretty well known book in the field I think, so likely libraries would have it.
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Megan Gorges
in reply to Amber Dawn • •For history, I loved Silk Roads by Peter Frankopan. It helped me think about history from a less Western-centric lens and it's very epic in scope and fun to read (imo).
Combining sociology of work, capitalism, and emotions (emotional labor), I recommend The Managed Heart by Arlie Hochschild.
Commitment and Community: Communes and Utopias in Sociological Perspective by Rosabeth Moss Kanter is an oldie but goodie. It explores the waves of cults and communes in the US in the 1800s and 1960s, so it also talks about progressive social movements and non-monogamy.
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Amber Dawn
in reply to Megan Gorges • •Megan Gorges likes this.
kip
in reply to Amber Dawn • •I'd recommend two memoirs -- not sure if they would be your thing or not. They don't clearly fit into what you've described.
1. In The Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado. Her writing is kind of surreal and very enjoyable to read IMO. It's about her experience in an abusive lesbian relationship. I think it's my favorite book.
2. Troubled by Rob Henderson. He's very smart but had a very rough childhood in foster care. He highlights how foster care is associated with very bad outcomes (even if you control for socioeconomic status). Near the end of the book he finds himself in a prestigious university and gets culture shock. He talks about his dislike of modern-day leftist views on privilege (they say he's privileged because he's a straight cis man, and he's un-privileged because he's a POC, but they don't acknowledge the massive impact of his childhood). Satisfying for me to read since I don't hear this perspective much and it matches my feelings in many ways.
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Daniel Filan
in reply to Amber Dawn • •Amber Dawn likes this.
Amber Dawn
in reply to Daniel Filan • •Daniel Filan likes this.
Amber Dawn
in reply to Amber Dawn • •Btw since posting this I read Troubled (it was really good!) and read the start of/samples for the Ray Dalio book and the Design of Everyday Things (and intend to continue), so thank you ❤!
I'm going to add more types of book I want to read:
Semi-nerdy and evidence-based book (or website or other resource) about power-lifting? I don't need to know how to do the lifts (I go to classes for that) but e.g.: what should you eat before/after the gym for more muscle/more energy/other stuff? What are the principles behind what the gym trainers say? How much does muscle weigh vs fat?
Desiderata: aimed at/inclusive of women, not overly fatphobic or aesthetics-focussed, some vegan protein suggestions
Nerdy book about (vegan) baking: kind of like I imagine Salt Fat Acid Heat is, but for vegan baking. Teaches principles about how baking works chemically, allowing you to successfully and principled-ly experiment: like what does sugar do, what does fat do, what do different raising agents do, what is the difference between baking soda/bicarb and baking powder?
... show more(I w
Btw since posting this I read Troubled (it was really good!) and read the start of/samples for the Ray Dalio book and the Design of Everyday Things (and intend to continue), so thank you ❤!
I'm going to add more types of book I want to read:
Semi-nerdy and evidence-based book (or website or other resource) about power-lifting? I don't need to know how to do the lifts (I go to classes for that) but e.g.: what should you eat before/after the gym for more muscle/more energy/other stuff? What are the principles behind what the gym trainers say? How much does muscle weigh vs fat?
Desiderata: aimed at/inclusive of women, not overly fatphobic or aesthetics-focussed, some vegan protein suggestions
Nerdy book about (vegan) baking: kind of like I imagine Salt Fat Acid Heat is, but for vegan baking. Teaches principles about how baking works chemically, allowing you to successfully and principled-ly experiment: like what does sugar do, what does fat do, what do different raising agents do, what is the difference between baking soda/bicarb and baking powder?
(I would also consider a non-vegan-focussed book on this)
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