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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 25th, 2023

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  • Not sure why they chose that name for it. It’s really just a game plus x-pack bundle if I remember right. Just a better deal than buying the two separately. I might’ve even plucked it from a bargain bin (would’ve likely been the local Babbage’s, before GameStop took over) but it was so long ago for me to say with any certainty.

    Quick edit: FuncoLand was another possibility, for anyone that remembers those. GameStop also gobbled up Electronics Boutique / EB Games but our mall never had one that I can recall.


  • KEEP LONDON TIDY

    Photo taken from eBay but somewhere packed up is my own copy of GTA Director’s Cut for the PSX. Rockstar hammed up the cockney slang/accent in the London 1969 cutscenes, and I remember enjoying the radio stations way more than the base game. Pretty sure there were some themes paralleling old spy films but it has been a minute since I’ve played. This might be the sign for me to finally revisit the classics.


  • Because this reminded of it: For a similar reason, and if you own an older vehicle, you don’t want to replace the warning lights (battery, oil, engine/MIL) with LED bulbs. Or you’ll need “error free” bulbs with built-in parallel resistors. LED gauge lights are usually fine but, on a lot of vehicles, an incandescent bulb is expected on the warning light circuits. If you replace, for example, the battery bulb with an LED - the alternator might not engage as it should, because there won’t be sufficient current for it to do so, and your battery could drain despite a running engine.

    (I’m far from an electrician, nevermind an automotive one, but I did a lot of research before upgrading/replacing my burnt out dash lights and that’s a mistake I would’ve otherwise made)



  • Fail secure sounds good but now you also need to consider how quickly the brakes engage. Don’t want some random electrical hiccup locking up your brakes mid curve while you’re three-wide doing 70 on an interstate. Slowly draining capacitors or whatever to gradually engage them might be an option. Then you also, preferably, need some means of physically disengaging them. Otherwise you’re gonna get disabled vehicles in the middle of roadways that have to be dragged up onto flatbeds or the side of the road because the wheels won’t roll without restoring brake power first.


  • The actual article title is only slightly more decipherable. Meta hired a company, which employs a number of people in Kenya, to review videos recorded by Meta’s AI/Smart glasses. The employees were to provide manual annotations to the videos in order to train Meta’s AI. Meta terminated the arrangement stating expectations weren’t met. The employees of the firm claim they had to review obscene or intimate content. Examples mentioned include a man leaving his glasses on, on a nightstand, where his wife later came in an undressed, instances of glasses wearers engaged in intercourse, etc.

    So 1100 people are out of work. Meta says they axed them for poor performance/redundancy. The company says “that’s bull” and it’s because employees raised awareness about what was being recorded.

    Sucks for the folks out of work. With regard to the users, I personally can’t feel bad for anyone who willingly brings a Meta device into their home or who uses their apps. As for third parties, who don’t want to find themselves part of a porno they didn’t agree to star in, I guess people need to add “glasses go in the drawer” to their pre-coitus checklist. Maybe just file all Facebook and Insta users under “unfuckable” and call it a day.


  • Facial recognition is just one way to begin or build upon a profile, but there are others. Cameras would also be looking for things like specific brands of clothing being worn. Raggedy, no-name work shirt? You get a pass. $80 Carhartt jacket? Maybe we add a buck fifty onto that tub of Folgers you rely on to get through the day. Wearing the latest $300 T-shirt drop from the Foofoo X MTBLZ brokemaxxing collab? Hell, I’d personally wanna charge you extra on principle.

    Even without cameras and their “AI” trying to gauge your wealth, past purchases can just as easily be associated with the credit/debit cards used to pay for them in order to build a profile. If they know what you regularly buy they can start nickel and dime’ing those things to test the limits of what you’re willing to spend. I feel like I also heard about some stores using Bluetooth or NFC triangulation. So your phone, smart watch, fitness tracker, etc could essentially serve as their means to watch you movements. They know the moment you entered, how long you lingered in a specific spot in any given aisle, and what register you checked out at. Now there’s a profile for those devices. Paid with debit/credit again? Then those devices and the purchasing method are connected and the overall profile has grown.

    I’m kind of curious how much longer places are going to accept cash. It’s anecdotal but, from grocers to department stores, there never seems to be more than a single staffed checkout lane around here anymore. Then, of course, the self checkouts don’t accept cash (or the few that do seem to always be out of service). Probably equal parts “we don’t want to pay more employees” and “we want your data” motivating that shift.

    We’re decades into dystopian already.