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@spottyfox - Ah, yes! You know, then! It's VERY VERY VERY good. :)

@spottyfox - I always try not to poison the waters when it comes to teaberry. It's a very good very fruity wintergreen flavor.

But it's also the flavor of...a very popular medicine....

atlasobscura.com/foods/teaberr

To Ice Cream, or Not To Ice Cream....

I haven't made Teaberry Ice Cream this season. So I'm leaning Ice Cream....

James Darren

1936-2024

Of all the loveable characters to come out of Star Trek, a 1960 Las Vegas lounge singer was not what I expected. And he was GREAT.

youtube.com/watch?v=5ZPA52j8ML

As a teenager in Neustrelitz (East Germany), I painted small stones purple and left them all over town. Did it for years. It drove the police and Stasi nuts. It meant nothing. It just felt good to do something they couldn't control or understand.

Ted Chiang as eloquent as ever:

"The selling point of generative A.I. is that these programs generate vastly more than you put into them, and that is precisely what prevents them from being effective tools for artists.

[...]

Many novelists have had the experience of being approached by someone convinced that they have a great idea for a novel, which they are willing to share in exchange for a fifty-fifty split of the proceeds. Such a person inadvertently reveals that they think formulating sentences is a nuisance rather than a fundamental part of storytelling in prose. Generative A.I. appeals to people who think they can express themselves in a medium without actually working in that medium. But the creators of traditional novels, paintings, and films are drawn to those art forms because they see the unique expressive potential that each medium affords. It is their eagerness to take full advantage of those potentialities that makes their work satisfying, whether as entertainment or as art.

[...]

The task that generative A.I. has been most successful at is lowering our expectations, both of the things we read and of ourselves when we write anything for others to read. It is a fundamentally dehumanizing technology because it treats us as less than what we are: creators and apprehenders of meaning. It reduces the amount of intention in the world."

Read the whole essay. It's brilliant. #ai

newyorker.com/culture/the-week

So my online banking no longer works on Firefox so I used (ugh) Edge and got instantly hit in the face with a backlog of “WE HAVE PUT AI INTO EVERYTHING; INTO YOUR TABS, INTO YOUR SEARCHES, UNDER YOUR SEAT AND IN YOUR TEETH, SEE WHAT YOU CAN DO WITH IT PLEASE THIS IS MINDBENDING TECH DON’T YOU WANT TO BE A PART OF THE FUTURE OF OUR SHAREHOLDERS” bullshit while I’m just trying to pay bills.

I find that weirdly the Scottish and Japanese mindsets are actually quite similar in a number of interesting ways (extensive Scottish-Japanese cultural exchange goes back to the 1700s)

Look at any number of historical Japanese figures, and the sheer number educated in Scottish universities is fascinating. The modern understanding we have of Geotechnical engineering was founded by a Scottish educated Japanese guy from the 1800s.

Also, modern Japanese whisky comes from a Scottish woman who married and moved into Japan and started her own distillery.

Just a huge amount of cultural overlap.

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@socketwench - I did this all from memory except for one puzzle, which is incredibly hard because you don't know what it is, or how to solve it and you can quickly put yourself in an unwinnable state.

I wouldn't say my runthrough is the best walkthrough (there's no text, all just me streaming the game from memory, but you will be able to beat all three games if you watch it.

I do have some maps I got back in the 80s, though. (this pic is probably not the best for playing, but I can scan them better if you want them).

@socketwench - "I just burned 14GB of data about a game that fit on a 160k floppy."

Didn't have NaNoWriMo on my 2024 lists of things enshittifying, but here we are...

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