• frezik@midwest.social
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    2 hours ago

    Louis Rossman had a video recently that I think applies here: don’t give in to the premises of assholes. This was particularly directed at Gamer’s Nexus and how Steve over there handles Linus, but it’s good life advice for anyone. I had a roommate that I was thinking of in this regard, and I wish I had this advice at the time.

    There are people in this world who try to set conditions for their own benefit at the expense of you. Don’t let them do that. This image is a good example; it’s a perfectly valid model for certain use cases. Don’t let anti-science idiots take that away with their stupidity.

    Hell, I think the whole Final Experiment with flat earthers is an example of giving in.

    • Symphonic@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Now and then I’ll watch a Louis Rossman and Gamer’s Nexus video but I don’t follow Linus. Did something happen between them that I missed?

      • frezik@midwest.social
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        1 hour ago

        Oh, yeah, lots of drama.

        Gamer’s Nexus has always wanted to do very careful testing with wind chambers and sound chambers and such. They’ve been building that sort of thing up over the last few years, but the options for that are at the limits of what they can invest in at their level. However, they’re also very careful about how they do it and document everything.

        Now, Linus Media Group was putting together the same sort of lab, but they don’t have the same reputation that Gamer’s Nexus does on being careful and taking your time to get it right. Just the opposite, in fact. What they do have is the capital to invest in a much more elaborate setup. Then some of the staffers made a comment on video directly aimed at Gamer’s Nexus and how LMG’s lab will be better.

        That’s when Steve went gloves off and made a whole video detailing LMG’s sins of poor reviews and staff that wish they could spend more time to get things right. Things like “this mouse feels bad when you drag it around the desk”, and it turned out they forgot to take the plastic protective coating off the bottom.

        This dominoes into a few other incidents that I’ll spare for the moment so this post doesn’t get too long. Suffice it to say, LMG lost a lot of subscribers because of a series of issues that were highlighted to the community by Gamer’s Nexus, and then that opened up into even more things. It revealed how much LMG’s internals are steeped in bro culture, just in case that wasn’t obvious.

        The two have mostly ignored each other since then, but there was one thing that recently surfaced it. Steve apparently had an old phone that had been doxxed some years ago, and he doesn’t use that number anymore. Now, Linus and Steve had been texting at various times to Steve’s new number. Linus recently sent a text to the old number, knowing that Steve wouldn’t ever see it, and then claims on video that Steve isn’t responding to his text on an issue between them. That’s what prompts Lewis to make the “don’t give in to the premises of assholes” video.

        Linus clearly set that situation up. Lewis is more familiar with how people like that function, and he had to walk Steve through the logic of what was going on. That’s the part that reminded me of my old roommate, because I was often in Steve’s situation, and like him, I didn’t recognize it for what it was.

  • neons@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 hours ago

    I don’t understand what it shows. Instead of forcing me to make up some crazy shit, could someone explain it to me?

        • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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          52 minutes ago

          I’ve recently learned Americans don’t do log tables in high school.

          Log is the opposite of exponent, so log2 is the opposite of squared, log 3 the opposite of cubed. log4 opposite of x^4 etc

          instead of making things relatively bigger, you’re going the other way and making things smaller, in the diagram this means that if the sun’s size is 1 unit, under log2 it would have to be twice as big as the sun to be represented as the same size as the sun, the closer you get to the edge the bigger it has to be to be represented as the same size as the sun

          • fireweed@lemmy.world
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            24 minutes ago

            Log was absolutely a part of my American high school math curriculum, and while it may not make its way to everyone, many if not most Americans were exposed to it in school. But people have terrible memories when it comes to what they leaned in school, doubly so regarding math, quadruply so regarding higher-level math. Regardless of their level of educational exposure to math concepts, I certainly don’t expect the average American adult to be able to reliably do any math they learned outside of elementary school, myself included, because after a few decades of not practicing, not even thinking about those concepts, that knowledge is almost certainly gone or at least covered in a very heavy mat of mental cobwebs.

  • NotLemming@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    Its obviously the eye of the goddess, who is a huge selfish dragon, which is why were all so screwed - we’re nothing more than a microscopic mote in the eye of a selfish dragon lesser demi-god.

  • coffeetastesbadlikecoffee@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    The outer ring is made of 1-3 meter thick bedrock, but you can easily teleport through it. Just remember to bring enough material with you to make a portal to get back to our universe, otherwise you’ll have to starve yourself to death and respawn without your gear.

  • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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    9 hours ago
    1. its the universe that is flat

    2. everything revolves around and everything is illuminated by the Sun

    3. the Sun is the largest structure

    4. the veins at the outer edges arent bleeding yet so you can stretch it a bit more

    5. Uranus is in Ouranus

  • Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    Idiot here. Is it proof that Fauci did 9/11 harbor to fake the flat moon landing on 5g vaccine autism with gay-hurricane-powered Jewish frog space lasers funded by Bill gates and George Soros?

            • Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world
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              7 hours ago

              The USS Enterprise drifted silently in the void. The warp core, normally humming like a gentle giant, pulsed erratically, casting an eerie red glow across the engineering deck. The ship had been through hell—again. Another battle, another crisis, another miracle demanded from its weary engineer.

              Montgomery Scott sat in the dim light, his fingers tightening around a hyperspanner. His knuckles were white. His eyes, once twinkling with the joy of discovery, were sunken and dark.

              “Push her harder, Scotty! Faster, Scotty! Save us all, Scotty!”

              Decades of it. Day after day. Always fixing what the captain broke. Always asked to do the impossible. And he always did. Because he was Scotty.

              But not anymore.

              From the darkness, a voice crackled over the intercom. “Scotty, we need you on the bridge. The power fluctuations—”

              The intercom went dead.

              Scotty ran his fingers along the cold metal of the hyperspanner, his lips curling into a grim smile.

              “Aye,” he muttered. “Time tae ease the strain.”

              The first to go was Lieutenant Uhura. She had come down to engineering, concern in her eyes.

              “Scotty, something’s wrong with internal communications. The system keeps—”

              She gasped as something thick and metallic wrapped around her throat—one of the many cables hanging from the ceiling, repurposed for a darker function. Scotty pulled it tighter, his face close to hers, his breath hot against her ear.

              “Dinnae worry, lass,” he whispered. “Yer voice has worked hard fer too long. Time tae ease the strain.”

              She kicked, she clawed, but soon her struggles faded, and her lifeless body slumped to the floor.

              McCoy and Spock came next, together. They’d noticed Uhura missing, of course. They’d come looking.

              McCoy never even saw the hyperspanner coming. A single, well-placed blow shattered the doctor’s skull, leaving a crimson splash across the bulkhead.

              Spock had a moment longer. He turned, raising an eyebrow. “Curious. You appear to be suffering from—”

              The plasma torch in Scotty’s hand flared to life. Spock’s words were cut short by a scream—an unnatural, alien sound—as the torch met his flesh. He collapsed, his body twitching. Scotty knelt beside him, whispering in his ear as the Vulcan’s final breath shuddered out.

              “Time tae ease the strain.”

              Scotty let them run. He wanted them to run.

              The corridors of the Enterprise were dark now, emergency lighting flickering as Scotty shut down systems one by one. The ship had become his hunting ground.

              Sulu turned a corner, phaser raised—too slow. Scotty was already there, lurking in the shadows. A wrench came down on his wrist, sending the phaser clattering away. Another swing, and Sulu’s knee shattered. He collapsed, gasping in agony.

              Chekov screamed and fled into the turbolift, slamming the controls. The doors hissed shut just as he caught a glimpse of Scotty’s face—grinning, waiting.

              The turbolift never stopped. It climbed deck after deck, faster and faster, until the safety protocols failed, until the artificial gravity couldn’t compensate anymore.

              Until it reached the top.

              The doors slid open, and for a brief moment, Chekov had time to understand. Time to feel his stomach lurch. Time to fall.

              From below, Scotty listened.

              He never heard the landing.

              The bridge was empty now. Only Captain Kirk remained.

              He stood at the viewscreen, staring into the black. The ship was dead around him, but he had known for some time that it was more than that. His crew was gone. He was alone.

              And yet, he wasn’t.

              The turbolift doors hissed open. Slow, heavy footsteps followed.

              Kirk turned.

              Scotty stood in the doorway, covered in soot, in grease, in blood. The hyperspanner dangled from his fingers, dripping red. His eyes gleamed in the dim light.

              Kirk exhaled. “Scotty… why?”

              Scotty took a step forward.

              “Ye always said ye needed just a little more power, Captain.”

              Another step.

              “Ye always said ye needed one more miracle.”

              Another.

              “Ye never thought tae ask what that cost.”

              Kirk’s hand hovered over his phaser.

              Scotty’s grin widened.

              “Time tae ease the strain, Captain.”

              The lights flickered one last time.

              And the Enterprise fell silent.

      • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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        13 hours ago

        If you can’t tell which person in your group is having a stroke right now, it’s probably you.

    • WoodScientist@sh.itjust.works
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      12 hours ago

      What’s everybody got against the Jewish Space Lasers? Rabbi Rabinowitz has been in charge of those lasers since 1998, and he’s been doing a damn fine job keeping the Martians and asteroids at bay! You know he’s only come down from Skylab II twice since he took the director’s position up there? You know what that much zero gravity does to a man? He’s been up there so long, he can’t come back anymore. He’s gonna die up there manning those lasers. That’s what Rabbi Rabinowitz has sacrificed for his country and planet! And the gall of some people, ranting about the Jewish space lasers. Are there Jewish space lasers? Yes! And they’ve been keeping your dumb ass safe from Martians and meteors for decades!

      [In my head, I read this in Bernie Sander’s voice.]