jqubed

joined 2 years ago
[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 2 points 12 hours ago

Old Fashioneds from the hotel bar

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 10 points 1 day ago

I’m guessing they will aim for Steamdeck support? That seems like an ideal platform

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

« Chu un Rocker » - Offenbach

Je n’ai pas écouté ce vidéo parce que je ne veut pas réveiller ma femme, mais j’aime bien cet chanson. Offenbach est la première groupe Québécois que j’ai entendu avec une style de rock «  classique » comme des groupes Américain comme Kansas ou Boston. J’ai besoin de lire les lyriques parce que je trouve l’accent difficile à comprendre mais j’aime bien le son.

C’est un jour fortuit pour commencer cet série parce que aujourd’hui je commence un route de 2 000 km/1200 miles avec la destination de Saguenay!

———

I haven’t listened to this video because I don’t want to wake my wife, but I love this song. Offenbach is the first group from Quebec that I heard with what I think of as a classic rock sound, like American bands like Kansas or Boston. I have to look up the lyrics because I find the accent difficult but I love the sound.

This is a serendipitous day to start this series because today I’m starting a 1200 mile/2,000 km road trip with Saguenay, Quebec as the destination!

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Love that SNES inspired theme on the box

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago (5 children)

Lima like the bean?

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 9 points 1 day ago

Canada was still part of the British empire at the time, but looking at Wikipedia the British regiments were all actually raised and based in the British isles, so I’m not sure where the idea that they were Canadians came from. I’ve heard several times that the troops that burned Washington were of Canadian origin, usually proudly related by Canadians, and just assumed that was correct since my history classes usually didn’t spend much time on that war. It does look like at least some of the attack was in retaliation for American burnings and lootings of York and Port Dover in what was then Upper Canada, so maybe that’s where the idea comes from.

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

30 didn’t really bother me; I was able to delude myself that that was “basically still in my 20s.” It was when I hit 31 that I had to admit, “no, definitely in my 30s now.” Beyond that mental block, though, it really wasn’t bad. Right as I turned 30 I got a better paying job and bought my first new car, fairly sporty, so I called it my ⅓-life crisis because I felt 30 was too young to be a midlife crisis.

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

It’s a cylinder

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 33 points 3 days ago

I guess in a sense it did prevent an attack from inside the building, in much the same way as the Maginot Line prevented Germany from invading France at the border between the two nations. It really just pushed the attack to come from a different direction, though.

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 11 points 3 days ago

I think it made so much money at the box office because it was so visually stunning (for the time) and no one had made a movie like that at that point. It was very much a movie everyone said to go watch on the big screen in 3D, ideally IMAX 3D. I never did and only watched it on a DVD borrowed from my wife’s friend 6 or 7 years ago, and came away less impressed. Like, it’s fine, but the movie itself isn’t exactly the greatest story ever told, and the visuals, while groundbreaking at the time, are now pretty standard.

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 35 points 3 days ago (5 children)

"Right now, if you talk to a therapist or a lawyer or a doctor about those problems, there's legal privilege for it. There's doctor-patient confidentiality, there's legal confidentiality, whatever. And we haven't figured that out yet for when you talk to ChatGPT," Altman said. "I think we should have, like, the same concept of privacy for your conversations with AI that we do with a therapist or whatever."

While AI companies figure that out, Altman said it's fair for users "to really want the privacy clarity before you use [ChatGPT] a lot — like the legal clarity."

Disclosure: Ziff Davis, PCMag’s parent company, filed a lawsuit against OpenAI in April 2025, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.

That final line has me wondering how much of this is Altman worrying about user privacy and how much is trying to find a way to shield evidence from lawsuits against OpenAI, since earlier in the article he specifically mentions having to retain all chats because of The New York Times’s lawsuit against OpenAI.

[–] jqubed@lemmy.world 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Stream seems frozen to me

EDIT: working again

 

Crossposted from https://lemmy.world/post/33409323

(not mine)

 

Crossposted from https://ohai.social/users/JimsPhotos/statuses/114842748529021861

One of the many Rabbits who scarpered minutes before the fox appeared

#nature #rabbits #Wildlife #photography #NaturePhotography #RabbitPhotography #RabbitsOfMastodon #UK

 

Lucy Roberts managed a jewelry store for a year and would bring jewelry home with her, falsifying inventory records. She left the job and later went on a cruise, sending selfies to her former coworkers and telling them how much fun she was having. Police arrested her at the airport when she returned to the UK.

 

Crossposted from https://mander.xyz/post/31996365

Have your fingers ready for scrolling! Or you can click the little icon in the bottom right to have it move automatically at the (scaled) speed of light, but at this scale it’s slow. Or you can click the symbols at the top to jump directly from planet to planet.

 

Crossposted from https://lemmy.world/post/30928435

In middle school I read The Three Musketeers and enjoyed it overall. Later in high school a movie adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo was released and I enjoyed it enough to read the book. I feel like I lucked out in picking up the Robin Buss translation. It was a recent translation based on the most complete original texts he could find. He explained how the first anonymous English translations would sometimes edit the story to fit English sensibilities of the era or simply not be very good at translation. The book is full of endnotes explaining things, like references that would’ve been obvious to contemporary readers but are largely lost to anglophones over a century later, or things that simply don’t translate well, like an important scene where a character uses the formal vous tense instead of the informal/familiar tu tense but this distinction doesn’t exist in modern English. It made me want to re-read The Three Musketeers in a translation by Buss, but the only other Dumas work he translated before his death at the age of 67 in 2006 was The Black Tulip.

Have you read Buss’s translation of The Count of Monte Cristo? Have you found a similar translation you liked for The Three Musketeers? Searching online the most helpful listings I’ve found are a couple old Reddit threads where it seems like the two recommendations are those by Richard Pevear or Lawrence Ellsworth.

 

In middle school I read The Three Musketeers and enjoyed it overall. Later in high school a movie adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo was released and I enjoyed it enough to read the book. I feel like I lucked out in picking up the Robin Buss translation. It was a recent translation based on the most complete original texts he could find. He explained how the first anonymous English translations would sometimes edit the story to fit English sensibilities of the era or simply not be very good at translation. The book is full of endnotes explaining things, like references that would’ve been obvious to contemporary readers but are largely lost to anglophones over a century later, or things that simply don’t translate well, like an important scene where a character uses the formal vous tense instead of the informal/familiar tu tense but this distinction doesn’t exist in modern English. It made me want to re-read The Three Musketeers in a translation by Buss, but the only other Dumas work he translated before his death at the age of 67 in 2006 was The Black Tulip.

Have you read Buss’s translation of The Count of Monte Cristo? Have you found a similar translation you liked for The Three Musketeers? Searching online the most helpful listings I’ve found are a couple old Reddit threads where it seems like the two recommendations are those by Richard Pevear or Lawrence Ellsworth.

 
 

@manxu@piefed.social previously worked on a dating app for a large Internet corporation and got some interesting insights as they examined the data from their service

 

Crossposted from https://lemmy.world/post/30443525

A fascinating history of a unique prototype for typing the Chinese language long thought lost

 

Crossposted from https://lemmy.world/post/30443525

An interesting history of a brilliant machine thought lost and the man who created it, and the mundane forces of history that kept it from the world.

447
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by jqubed@lemmy.world to c/comicstrips@lemmy.world
 

@admiralwonderboat@mastodon.social among other places

Alt text

Spoiler

Jen is loading DVD's into a donation box. Admiral: Stop!! You can't get rid of our DVD's! What if the streaming sites go down?! - Admiral: What'll we watch if there's an apocalypse? The NEWS?! Jen: You're right! DVD's are essential for survival! - Admiral: We still have a DVD player, right? Jen: I mean... probably

 

Posted by the cartoonist on Imgur

Artist website: https://www.jimbenton.com/

Alt text/description:

SpoilerFour panels, all panels show two spiders dangling from a web. The first panel has the spiders dangling side by side with no dialog. In the second panel, the spider on the right has swung out to the side, away from the spider on the left, but still without dialog. In the third panel, still without dialog, the spiders are back side-by-side as in the first panel. In the fourth panel, still side-by-side, the spider on the left asks, “Did you just fart?” The spider on the right replies, “No. OMG. No [sic]” The urgency of the denials suggest that the spider on the right did fart in the second panel but is embarrassed.

view more: next ›