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Topic$1500 tax return
adjl
04/04/24 3:10:27 PM
#3
I need to do mine. I ended up owing ~$200 last year, which was lame.

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TopicMeme Topic 34: Memes aren't real
adjl
04/04/24 2:47:47 PM
#493
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQAYuB10ims

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TopicHow much should you spend on an engagement ring?
adjl
04/04/24 1:58:55 PM
#35
Dikitain posted...
Kind of, it was more about the combining/transferring of wealth from one generation to the next. Problem was the best bargaining chip that a lot of people had was "Here, impregnate my daughter and force her into indentured servitude!" Combine that with the fact that being gay 5000 years ago was a foreign concept and you have marriage as we know it today.

So yea, it still surprises me that an outdated, sexist, homophobic practice not only still exists today, but that the LGBT community has actively fought to participate in it rather than abolish it altogether.

Really, it's only been since about the 50's-60's that treating wives as servants/baby machines stopped being the norm, and that's after centuries of marriage transitioning from being a political arrangement to carry on aristocratic bloodlines to being something that common folk did out of love. The institution evolved with that transition to be more about romance and to have more relevant financial considerations for non-nobility, so by the time it stopped being primarily about dudes having a housekeeper they could sleep with, there was enough value beyond that for it still to be desirable for people. There is still practical value in having a defined set of rules for how resources are shared within a couple (which a prenup supersedes, but having a default is still helpful both for people that aren't savvy enough to figure out a reasonable prenup and to establish social norms for what spouses should do for each other if a marriage falls apart) and offering tax breaks to disincentivize bachelor life (which strains infrastructure significantly more than living in pairs does), plus there's the emotional value of making a formal commitment to each other and celebrating that with loved ones. It's also necessary to do at least something to legally identify your partner as family in the event of an accident or critical illness, and while there are options other than marriage to do that, lumping it in with marriage is one less thing to think about when you decide to commit to a partner long-term.

The history isn't particularly pretty and the concept of common-law partnerships makes a lot of the practical benefits kind of redundant, but marriage has evolved over time to still have value to people, and people enjoy that value (and don't want to be excluded from it, in the case of LGBTQ marriage). That appeal does generally seem to be waning, especially with the growing number of couples that have no interest in having kids, but even just as a formality it's still something plenty of people like and will continue to like.

Mostly, people can decide for themselves what marriage means to them. Those who like the idea will like getting married and will therefore do so, those who don't, won't (unless somehow forced into it, but that's another problem).

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TopicShould I go back to school for a stem degree
adjl
04/04/24 1:30:08 PM
#3
There are three reasons to go back to school:

  • You want to change careers and need to get new credentials to start that process
  • You need additional credentials in your current field to advance your career further
  • You have the spare time and money and want to learn about something that interests you
In the former two cases, you already know what new career you want and can work from there to determine what kind of additional education you'll need to get. In the latter case, you already know what you want to learn about and it doesn't matter what kind of value you'll get out of it. Neither supports "Maybe I should do something STEM instead of what I want to do," which tells me you haven't actually figured out what your reason for going back to school is. Given the cost, that's something you should be figuring out before you make any decisions.

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TopicDue to Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire... Israel bombs Iranian consulate in Syria
adjl
04/04/24 12:26:49 PM
#32
Devil_May_Cry posted...
There you go again Godwin's law.

That's not Godwin's law. The Holocaust is not the only historical genocide.

Devil_May_Cry posted...
What is happening in Palestine is not a genocide or an attempted genocide.

How else would you describe the wholesale massacre of civilians, destruction of critical infrastructure, and clear, deliberate efforts to engineer a humanitarian crisis that is leading to the starvation of hundreds of thousands of people?

Devil_May_Cry posted...
They are trying to eradicate terrorists.

With zero regard for the number of innocent civilians killed as a result, shortly following rhetoric such as "there are no innocent Palestinians" that means you'd have to be quite hopelessly naive to believe that those civilians deaths are accidental.

Devil_May_Cry posted...
I guarantee Israelis reading gamefaqs are crying about how hateful you all can be.
adjl posted...
People that aren't antisemitic wastes of carbon aren't bashing Israel as a whole, they're bashing the genocidal actions of Israel's government. That should be clear from both contextual clues and the many times Mr. Cry has been explicitly told this.

Oh look I already said that. Again. And again. And again. And again... What is the difficulty you have understanding this?

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TopicHow much do you weigh?
adjl
04/04/24 10:54:52 AM
#13
I pretty consistently hover around 185ish. I dropped down to 165 back in 2020 for the first time in ten years, but that was pretty much entirely due to being a little stingy with food thanks to supporting two of us on one CERB and having to limit how many groceries we were buying to be able to fit two weeks' worth in the fridge to cut down on the number of grocery trips we made. Being gainfully employed again and not being as locked down corrected that pretty quickly.

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TopicDue to Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire... Israel bombs Iranian consulate in Syria
adjl
04/04/24 10:51:55 AM
#28
Lokarin posted...
Look, Israel is great - Palestine is great

What's bad is killing civilians; can we agree that killing civilians is bad?

Precisely. People that aren't antisemitic wastes of carbon aren't bashing Israel as a whole, they're bashing the genocidal actions of Israel's government. That should be clear from both contextual clues and the many times Mr. Cry has been explicitly told this.

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TopicDue to Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire... Israel bombs Iranian consulate in Syria
adjl
04/04/24 8:52:37 AM
#26
Devil_May_Cry posted...
Every topic devolves into bashing Israel.

With good reason. Netenyahu is a genocidal maniac.

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TopicIm surprised people still believe stuff from Facebook
adjl
04/03/24 4:40:50 PM
#4
I believe that people on Facebook have cats whose pictures they share. Does that count?

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TopicFavorite video game magazine
adjl
04/03/24 10:47:09 AM
#12
acesxhigh posted...
only magazine subscription I ever had was Nintendo Power


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TopicDue to Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire... Israel bombs Iranian consulate in Syria
adjl
04/02/24 10:34:51 PM
#19
agesboy posted...
in the same way I condemn the US's currently unconditional support for Israel to be at fault for Israel's actions, I consider specifically Netenyahu's government to be significantly at fault for Hamas's existence tbh.

I might argue even more so. The US enables Israel despite having the power to single-handedly dictate how aggressive they can be, certainly, and in that regard Netenyahu's support of Hamas to ensure he has a consistent enemy to exploit is comparable, but beyond that Israel's apartheid policies, aggressively antagonistic colonialism, and large-scale killing of Palestinian civilians are all very obviously things that breed discontent and radicalize people to terrorism. I'm not about to go so far as to call Hamas "freedom fighters" like some do, since that's glorifying them in a way they don't particularly deserve, but the fact remains that there is freedom for which Palestinians feel the need to fight, and that feeling is solely because Israel has denied it to them. Those who have freedom don't need to fight for it.

Would the Hamas problem go away if Israel started supporting Palestinian infrastructure restoration and development, stopped arbitrarily stealing land and inviting settlers to come from abroad to live on it, and stopped forcing Palestinians to spend hours waiting in line to cross checkpoints on the way to work every morning? Probably not. Hatred is a bitch to get rid of once it sinks its teeth in, and change and forgiveness don't happen overnight. But there'd be a whole lot less new anti-Israel sentiment among Palestinians moving forward, which means a whole lot fewer young people being radicalized and recruited by Hamas, which in turn means less violence.

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TopicHow much should you spend on an engagement ring?
adjl
04/02/24 9:37:26 PM
#28
josh posted...
OK, I'll chalk it down to cultural differences. You don't get that here in Australia, at least in my circles.

That's a relatively recent development, probably actually mostly catalyzed by social media. For many, many years, the diamond industry has worked to disparage synthetic diamonds to artificially inflate demand for natural ones, despite the fact that synthetics have been on par with natural ones for much, much longer than many people realize. That's one of the things that's been openly challenged by millennials on social media, though, a movement that's been able to spread faster than corporate propaganda can keep up with and basically result in a generation with significantly less interest in natural diamonds than any previous one (jadedness that has been passed on to subsequent generations). Granted, a huge part of that is also just millennials being largely screwed by the state of the economy they've inherited and having to be a lot choosier about their luxuries as a result, such that "shiny rock that's expensive for no reason" was obviously going to be one of the first on the chopping block.

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TopicDue to Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire... Israel bombs Iranian consulate in Syria
adjl
04/02/24 9:26:41 PM
#16
streamofthesky posted...
Israel has lost ~ 600 IDF soldiers thus far in <6 months of fighting.
America lost 2459 military deaths in two decades in Afghanistan.
Israel has racked up 25% of the combat death toll that the US managed in 20 years in Afghanistan, in less than 6 months.

Weird how you only like to compare figures when you think it'll help your case and ignore the rest.

Oh, if we only look at Afghanistan, Israel's already killed more civilians than the US did there. No contest. I can't be bothered to dredge the stats up again, but I'm pretty sure the total civilian deaths in Afghanistan were in the realm of 20-25k (to ~40k combatants). When I say "20 years post-9/11," I'm talking about Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and every other middle-eastern country caught up in the fallout of the War on Terror, combined.

streamofthesky posted...
And implying Israel "hasn't even broken triple digits yet" for enemy combatants is either staggeringly ignorant or a deliberate pro-Hamas statement. Take your pick.

If they have, I'll welcome the correction. Last I heard, they'd managed 13 Hamas kills for 8000 civilian deaths, but that was obviously a while ago because they're pushing 40,000 civilians now. If they follow the same ratio (which is to be expected given that they've continued to bomb indiscriminately and deliberately engineer humanitarian crises, none of which suggests that they've been taking enough accountability for that piss-poor ratio to pretend it's not just deliberate genocide), that'd put them at about 55-60ish, which is sub-triple digits.

One small correction for you, though: It's a deliberate anti-Israel statement (specifically anti-current Israeli government, since I recognize that most Israeli citizens are not complicit in this genocide), not a pro-Hamas one. Hamas is also bad. Israel is just measurably the worse of two evils at this moment, plus the one that people seem to need to be convinced is doing bad things and therefore shouldn't be given weaponry that they're shooting at humanitarian aid caravans. I don't really need to convince anyone that blowing up 1200 civilians was a bad thing, so I'm not putting any effort into that.

streamofthesky posted...
It's almost like urban combat in one of the most densely populated regions on Earth w/ enemies that hide amongst the civilian population is really f***ing difficult.

And the solution to that challenge is not to just blow everything up with no regard for the number of innocent civilians killed in doing so. Collateral damage happens, yes, and this is a scenario where it's particularly difficult to avoid, but that does not even remotely justify completely giving up on avoiding it the way Israel has. Of course, with a government that has spent years spouting rhetoric along the lines of "there are no innocent Palestinians," "these people are animals, why shouldn't we kill them?", and "nuking Gaza is not off the table," why would anyone believe that they even tried to avoid it in the first place?

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TopicDue to Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire... Israel bombs Iranian consulate in Syria
adjl
04/02/24 7:55:06 PM
#13
ParanoidObsessive posted...
After all, it's not like the US would ever do anything like that.

In less than 6 months, Israel has racked up about 30-40% of the civilian death toll that the US managed in 20 years post-9/11, and in that time the US managed to kill more enemy combatants than civilians, while I'm not sure Israel's even broken triple digits yet. To equivocate what were largely accidents (albeit careless accidents for which the US deserves ample criticism) to what Israel is doing now is either staggeringly ignorant or a deliberate pro-genocide statement. Take your pick.

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TopicNow Powerball is Back Over A Billion...
adjl
04/02/24 2:37:50 PM
#6
Kyuubi4269 posted...
Have they considered, perhaps, that the amount of potential numbers is too high for the amount of participants?

I'm sure they will if it becomes a problem, but I don't believe it has. The lottery still generates the revenue it needs to generate to be worth running, and people still buy tickets, so what would they need to change? From their perspective, it doesn't matter if they give out 100 jackpots of $10 million or one jackpot of $1 billion, so long as they sell roughly the same number of tickets before paying out. It'll only become a problem if people start getting too disheartened by the low odds for the large jackpots to be enough to motivate ticket sales (which may happen in the not-too-distant future, as billion-dollar jackpots become more common and people need even larger, less-attainable numbers to pique their interests).

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TopicHow much should you spend on an engagement ring?
adjl
04/02/24 8:46:45 AM
#15
faramir77 posted...
I don't think it really ever made sense to drop three months of salary on a ring unless you were still living with parents or something.

I'm reasonably well off but three months of salary would definitely take me over a year to put away. It would be a devastating expense to spend that on something like a ring when it inevitably should be used to pay for the expensive infrequent things in life, like a new furnace, a new roof, or a new vehicle.

Bear in mind that that tradition dates from a time when an entire house only cost 1-2 years' household income, so it was considerably more attainable. Still, though, I think the principle applies: If you have to choose between buying a new furnace that you need or buying an engagement ring, you might not be financially stable enough to commit to spending the rest of your life with someone and you should consider holding off accordingly. I still wouldn't actually spend that much, because I just don't like spending money like that on luxuries (nor would my girlfriend want me to), but the important metric is that you're able to do so without undermining your financial stability.

blu posted...
I guess its easier to just bring her so she could select what she wants. So is the way it works for most people is to bring your girlfriend shopping, pick something out, then propose and she isnt necessarily surprised?

Depends what she'd like best. You can propose with a placeholder and then take her shopping for the real one later, you can pay enough attention to her tastes to be able to buy something she'll like without getting her direct input, or you can just involve her in the whole process and have the proposal itself be more of a formality. You'll have to figure out for yourself what the best option is, since it varies from person to person and relationship to relationship.

Honestly, if you aren't sure what she'll like best, you probably actually shouldn't be marrying her. You'll want to pay more attention than that if you're serious about making a lifelong commitment.

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Topiccurrent day bluetooth is what bluetooth 20 years ago wanted us to think it was
adjl
04/01/24 9:07:41 PM
#5
Oh, I'm not saying the Wii's Bluetooth was inadequate or anything (at least, I never had any issues with it). "Bluetooth 20 years ago" just prompted me to think about what sort of Bluetooth devices were around 20 years ago, and I realized the Wii comes very close to fitting that bill (and I guess was actually using a version that is now 20 years old). And then I felt old.

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TopicHow much should you spend on an engagement ring?
adjl
04/01/24 9:04:25 PM
#10
rjsilverthorn posted...
I'm not really sure how well that holds up today. In the past it probably made sense since you would be taking on supporting your wife and would generally end up having kids shortly after, but now most couples are both working and already living together before they get married so it doesn't really make any major change in finances.

Marriage itself may not comprise a major change in finances, but it still marks a commitment to supporting each other (whatever form that takes) on a long-term basis, and a certain degree of financial stability is good to have before making that commitment. At least, that's my philosophy. Your mileage may vary, depending on what you prioritize/are concerned about in your own relationships, and I'm not about to pretend that I'm any sort of authority on the matter.

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TopicMy car's shadow looks like Shrek
adjl
04/01/24 8:51:33 PM
#4
Mine does the same, but I lack a picture.

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TopicHow much should you spend on an engagement ring?
adjl
04/01/24 5:20:43 PM
#6
The traditional "three months' salary" thing has some merit in that your ability to spend that much money on something frivolous is a barometer for your financial stability, and you should aim to be financially stable before committing to spending your life with somebody (whether you'll be the primary breadwinner or not). At the same time, though, actually spending three months' salary on a piece of jewellery is pretty dumb and mostly comes across as trying to demonstrate your financial stability to convince somebody to be your mate. Buy something she'll like, and only consider cost insofar as you need to for your own financial comfort. If you've been living together and sharing finances for years, you've got nothing to prove, financially speaking, so there's no point spending more money than is needed to make her happy.

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TopicI find vehicle vanity plates to be cringe
adjl
04/01/24 12:31:36 PM
#8
KJ_StErOiDs posted...
Some are clever, some not; I'm indifferent toward them, mostly.

The ones that are more vague I actually enjoy trying to figure out what they might mean.

Pretty much this. I'm either going to be entertained or indifferent. It's pretty rare that I'm actually bothered by one.

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TopicYou have to choose one of these things to do for $1,000,000,000...
adjl
03/31/24 4:11:04 PM
#38
JixHedgehog posted...
*raises hand and puts glasses on*

The last option about the "social interactions"... *removes glasses*

Does that include people you work with?

Would you actually be working with people if you were a billionaire?

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TopicHow come you can't poop and pee at the same time?
adjl
03/31/24 1:19:47 PM
#18
Playsaver posted...
Try vomit and diarrhea at the same time. It's a case of you don't want both coming out at the same time.

My cat did that once. While I was walking home with him in a backpack. That was not a fun cleanup.

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TopicTriple citrus pound cake, strawberry and lemon curd trifle
adjl
03/31/24 1:00:33 PM
#6
Perhaps he is himself jelly.

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TopicYou have to choose one of these things to do for $1,000,000,000...
adjl
03/31/24 12:38:30 PM
#26
Yeah, the paintball one's pretty variable, based on parameters not specified. That one could end up amounting to annoying superficial pain, or it could amount to such catastrophic internal bleeding that you'd be lucky to make it onto an OR table, or it could be somewhere in between.

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TopicYou have to choose one of these things to do for $1,000,000,000...
adjl
03/31/24 9:49:40 AM
#15
I keep forgetting to answer. I'm bad at PMs.

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TopicYou have to choose one of these things to do for $1,000,000,000...
adjl
03/31/24 9:46:29 AM
#13
Probably porta-potty, with paintball being the second choice. Unpleasant, but short-lived enough that I'll have moved past it before the novelty of the extra money wears off.

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Topiccurrent day bluetooth is what bluetooth 20 years ago wanted us to think it was
adjl
03/31/24 12:47:28 AM
#2
Fun realization: "Bluetooth 20 years ago" is how Wiimotes worked.

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Topicdamn, my hair's starting to thin out
adjl
03/30/24 8:42:51 PM
#13
Dikitain posted...
It is the men on your mother's side (your uncles) who you take after as far as hair.

Not entirely true. Some baldness is X-linked, but it comes from quite a few different genes. Having bald maternal uncles/grandparents doesn't guarantee you'll be bald, nor does having maternal uncles/grandparents who aren't bald guarantee you won't be.

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TopicAmerican family
adjl
03/30/24 6:10:30 PM
#8
Lokarin posted...
actually, the image of the American family only lasted between 1940 and 1970, people only think it was a century long thing but people were still living in familial colonies and homesteads right up until the second world war

And much of the "American dream" of families living in their own suburban houses with white picket fences and manicured lawns was overwhelmingly a post-war thing, as car industry propaganda pushed that as being the ideal way to design cities. It is, of course, terribly silly to think of reliance on massive government subsidies to prop up unsustainable infrastructure as being symbolic of personal wealth and prosperity, but that's precisely what many people worldwide bought into, with devastating results. Some cities and countries saw where suburban sprawl was taking them and managed to turn things around, others have been more stubborn about it.

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TopicAMD or Intel?
adjl
03/30/24 10:58:56 AM
#9
KJ_StErOiDs posted...
Whoever has the better deal when it's time for a new computer.

This. It also depends which performance bracket you're targeting and who's winning in that bracket at a given moment. Right now, I believe it breaks down that AMD's best for cheaper machines, Intel's better for mid-range, and then it's back to AMD for upper-end stuff (mostly for their X3D chips, which are particularly good at single-thread performance), but that flips around every generation.

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TopicMeme Topic 34: Memes aren't real
adjl
03/29/24 7:37:24 PM
#463
keyblader1985 posted...
Yeah, that's what I was thinking of. These companies know a thing or two because they've seen a thing or two.

Of course, there's also the fact that it's much easier to have multiple burger heights on a menu than multiple burger widths. To make a taller burger, you just stack more stuff on it. To make a wider one, you not only need a different-sized patty press, you need a different-sized bun, different-sized slices of cheese, and possibly a few other supplies in different sizes. Generally speaking, restaurants try to limit the number of ingredients they have that are unique to only a small number of dishes, since space is limited and it's easier to avoid spoilage when you have a smaller number of ingredients to consider.

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TopicMeme Topic 34: Memes aren't real
adjl
03/29/24 3:06:54 PM
#459
See also: A&W's attempt to introduce a 1/3 pound burger failing because people thought McD's 1/4 pounder was bigger.

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TopicLook at my hole
adjl
03/29/24 2:42:06 PM
#55
Every single time I see this topic in the list, "Look at my Horse" gets stuck in my head. Thanks for that.

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TopicIf Bruce Wayne and Tony Stark where real people, they wouldn't even be that rich
adjl
03/29/24 2:26:51 PM
#2
I've seen estimates of the volume of gold in Smaug's hoard, and I don't think he even breaks the top 10. It says a lot that people writing billionaires in fiction can't even make them as wealthy as many real people because of how ludicrously implausible that real wealth is.

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TopicHey, are you voting for trump??
adjl
03/29/24 2:24:09 PM
#60
[LFAQs-redacted-quote]


When everybody else does something wrong, it's because the whole system is corrupt. When Trump does something wrong, it's because he's the country's saviour and has to stoop to such levels to fight against the corruption that would otherwise doom us all.

Never mind that "He's actually just doing this for his own benefit" is a significantly more plausible interpretation. They wanted a saviour, and he presented himself as one convincingly enough for them to latch on.

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TopicDoes consciousness, awareness = life? An A.I. question
adjl
03/29/24 12:13:38 AM
#42
Revelation34 posted...
They don't consume energy because energy in that context is food.

What sets glucose apart from gasoline, that one can be called food and the other can't? What is "food" in the colloquial sense if not just repackaged sunlight?

Energy is energy. We get the vast majority of our energy in chemical form, but energy can be converted between different forms. There's no actual reason to think so narrowly about the concept of "energy" except to artificially narrow the definition of life to make sure machines can't qualify, and that just doesn't make logical sense.

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TopicWhy don't unemployed people get jobs?
adjl
03/29/24 12:02:23 AM
#12
Sufferedphoenix posted...
In my most recent job hunting experience a lot of places seem to like to contact you via email or text message too.

Which is why the attitude that homeless people shouldn't have phones is far too stupid to be as widespread as it is. Yes, phones are relatively expensive, but even with that in mind they're one of the single most cost-effective ways for somebody to get out of being homeless, and in fact are all but a mandatory prerequisite for it. Ready access to internet and phone service is crucial to secure employment, access important services, and network, in addition to being a considerable quality of life improvement thanks to all the free entertainment and social interaction it offers. For that matter, phones aren't really that expensive. Even a high-end one is going to cost less than a single month's rent in most places, so it's not like having enough money for a good phone would be enough to secure housing (not that I'd necessarily suggest buying a high-end phone as a homeless person, but it's still not going to make or break you).

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TopicDoes consciousness, awareness = life? An A.I. question
adjl
03/28/24 11:37:27 PM
#40
Buddyblade posted...
I mean, it wouldn't need the same things as us (like oxygen, eating, a heartbeat, etc.) I'm not entirely sure one would fully understand what it means to be "alive" unless it had the exact same requirements as us.

Something doesn't have to have the same requirements as humans to be alive. The most commonly accepted criteria for life are the following:

  • Characterized by order and structure (e.g. cells-->tissues-->organs)
  • Ability to respond to the environment
  • Ability to grow and change
  • Ability to reproduce
  • Ability to maintain a constant state (homeostasis)
  • Requirement to consume energy
  • Produces waste
Right now, the only thing really separating machines from life under those criteria are the growth and reproduction lines. Machines are ordered, they can respond to the environment, they can self-regulate to maintain suitable operating conditions (your computer turning up its fan under load to reduce its temperature being a clear example), they consume energy, and they can produce waste products (any exhaust system, for example). With the ability to modify themselves over time and self-replicate (both of which are theoretically possible), there isn't actually much room to say that such a machine isn't alive.

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TopicTake-Two buys Borderlands Devs Gearbox...
adjl
03/28/24 8:23:33 PM
#17
Metalsonic66 posted...
2 is much better than 1

I agree, but I also understand why some like 1 better. The writing is generally more subtle than 2 (still not a serious game, by any means, but not leaning into it quite as hard as 2 and especially later games did), slag as a mechanic isn't the most interesting (it basically amounts to "hit things with slag first, then with everything else," which is more involved than "just hit things with the element they're weak to," but not by enough to be really interesting), and the focus on target farming legendaries is a bit of a double-edged sword. I like being able to target farm so I can complete builds, but it does mean that just playing through the campaign, you very rarely see really exciting drops because they're so often outclassed by the occasional boss drop legendary you get that tides you over for the next 10-15 levels. It kind of takes the fun out of the "looter" part of the looter-shooter, and I get why people who like that "do the best you can with what you get" aspect don't like it as much as 1.

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TopicMeme Topic 34: Memes aren't real
adjl
03/28/24 8:03:48 PM
#447
https://imgur.com/7wkXuvC


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TopicLook at my hole
adjl
03/28/24 5:44:05 PM
#33
I guess it makes sense that that trend wouldn't apply in Arizona. I'm more used to thinking in terms of Canadian cities, where pools aren't unheard of, but also definitely aren't a top priority for many buyers because they're mostly useless for 2/3 of the year.

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Topicfelt like playing starcraft
adjl
03/28/24 5:41:40 PM
#35
That's about where I've stood on everything after WoL since they came out. I kind of wanted to play them, but never enough to actually buy the games. And now I just categorically refuse to buy anything ABK produces, so it's a moot point.

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TopicLook at my hole
adjl
03/28/24 5:28:05 PM
#31
GanonsSpirit posted...
It'll probably add a lot to the houses value, so it's probably worth it even beside her own use.

Below-ground pools typically lower property values, since they come with added insurance considerations and not everybody wants them enough to deal with that (and if they don't want them, getting rid of them is a pain). If you're building a pool, it's pretty much always going to be because you want a pool, not an investment or anything like that.

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Topicif duckbear was still here we would know about the bridge collapsing and p diddy
adjl
03/28/24 4:40:43 PM
#16
Lokarin posted...
Utah doubles down

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/utah-lawmaker-blames-diversity-baltimore-bridge-collapse-rcna145261

"It was our social media staff, we'd never say such things!"
*Doesn't indicate that social media staff have been fired*
*Doesn't delete posts*

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TopicWhat's the dodgy supermarket in your town called?
adjl
03/28/24 3:01:20 PM
#17
That sign looks like it belongs on a Toys R Us.

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TopicTake-Two buys Borderlands Devs Gearbox...
adjl
03/28/24 2:59:26 PM
#7
Well then ignore me, I guess.

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TopicLook at my cat
adjl
03/28/24 2:14:36 PM
#8
I believe Bombays have orange eyes, but I'm guessing there are more identifying criteria than just that.

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TopicImportant research question: who would you rather regularly hang out with
adjl
03/28/24 2:09:46 PM
#14
ParanoidObsessive posted...
As opposed to most of the anti-Trump people online who seem to find it utterly impossible to ever shut the f*** up about Trump.

How often are you able to identify anti-Trump people online by any means other than them talking about that opinion? I know you know enough about the scientific method to recognize the obvious sampling bias you just described.

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TopicI wish she would stop doing this
adjl
03/28/24 2:07:22 PM
#4
When my family cats were younger, they liked to sit on top of doors. It was quite the feat.

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