[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 week ago

I honestly don't know where else to post this. The first an only live performance of this track. Knocks my fucking socks off.

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submitted 1 week ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/music@lemmy.world

Official performance of “Berghain” by ROSALÍA feat. Björk Live at The BRIT Awards 2026'LUX' Out Now https://rosalia.lnk.to/luxShop 'LUX' https://rosalia.lnk/....

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You may have noticed that activity on the public Log4cxx, Log4j, and Log4net repositories has slowed since December 2025. I want to reassure you that the projects are still being actively monitored...

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Frosty barbs (lemmy.ca)
submitted 1 month ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/pics@lemmy.world
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submitted 1 month ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/politics@beehaw.org

With economic stagnation and extremes of inequality comes corrosion of trust in democratic institutions. So Trump may be a symptom, not a cause, of what Carney called a "rupture" with the post-WW2 order.

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"There's plenty of room to do Gunforged better than I did," says its creator.

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When Olympian Tess Howard put on her new uniform for Great Britain’s women’s field hockey team in 2021, she felt something she hadn’t expected at the height of her athletic career: embarrassment.

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submitted 2 months ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/canada@lemmy.ca

Bring it on

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submitted 3 months ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/canada@lemmy.ca

True Canadian class

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submitted 3 months ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/canada@lemmy.ca

An Ontario woman says she was detained for 24 hours and refused entry to Costa Rica because her passport was damaged.

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submitted 3 months ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/canada@lemmy.ca
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Originally posted on David Goyer's blog -- the scenes from S3 that would've tidied up the story, but they ran out of budget.

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 97 points 1 year ago

Okay, just back of the envelope math. Assuming the car is truly 550nm, so the blue car is 400nm, and the red car is 700nm... How fast is the car going?

Napkin math says 0.27c.

Δλ=λ(V/c)

Now someone else can figure out the kinetic energy of the car and why the whole continent just exploded...

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 113 points 1 year ago

Hot take. But put it in the context of the year it was aired, not today. Star Trek (and sci fi in general) was suffering from being perceived as "blue babes and laser guns".

This episode was thoughtful if taken as standalone. And TNG really was about taking the episodes more or less independently. The season long story arcs and such didn't exist. People weren't binge watching. So the world building was less important than the specific hypothetical moral quandary of the week. Like, they are almost like Asimov short stories with a shared cast.

It wasn't until a few years later that serialized TV even really became a thing -- Twin Peaks probably was the first here, but Babylon 5 would have a good claim (and DS9, Buffy, and others were coming together then too). So the style of storytelling on TNG S2 is different.

Divorce the story from Star Trek and the setting and evaluate it as a sci fi ethical quandary. And in that framework, it is a remarkable episode.

Also, Brent Spiner played it well :)

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 185 points 1 year ago

LKML and patch: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=0fc810ae3ae110f9e2fcccce80fc8c8d62f97907

He cites his work as being a variant of a patch submitted by another developer, Josh Poimboeuf. It's a team effort folks :)

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 173 points 2 years ago

This sounds like the sort of infrastructure project the Linux Foundation should be supporting.

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 145 points 2 years ago

My third year thermodynamics course opened with a similar quip by the lecturer. Entropy is actually depressing. You can't fight it. You can't not fight it. It just wins.

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 189 points 2 years ago

I bet this is a falling out with Hasbro execs on royalties. BG3 royalties were a cash cow this year for Hasbro, pushing Wizards (as a division) to be quite profitable, while almost all other divisions in their company lost money.

So now the agreement is over, and Larian is like: we will own the IP on our next project instead of paying $90M to Hasbro... And fair enough -- they've shown they can kick ass. Hasbro is probably gambling that it's the IP that made the money, and not Larian being magic in a bottle as a developer. So they'll kick tires on selling BG4 to another studio.

BG3 will go down in history as the legendary game before enshittification. Larian will make a few great games that don't sell as well -- before selling out to a whale that dumps money on the owner's front lawn (see also BioWare). The devs who made BG3 will found indie studios and make cool shit for a decade or two. So the wheel turns.

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 114 points 2 years ago

Excellent question. From first principles: mars is about 1.5 AU from the sun. Using the intensity equation (inverse square law), Mars should receive about 1/(1.5x1.5) the amount of solar radiation, or about 44% on average.

Earth gets about 1400 W/m² hitting the top of the atmosphere, but most places on earth only see about 1000 W/m² after the column of air absorbs a bunch of it. Martian air absorbs almost nothing (being very thin), so you'd expect to see about 44% of 1400W/m² -- or about 600W/m².

A quick Google search for "mars solar intensity" shows a result of 590 W/m², so that is pretty close to accurate, from first principles.

So 60% as bright, if talking pure intensity. As you say, the human eye has a pretty responsive dynamic range, and this is quite an acceptable number.

For point of comparison, this is the difference between the sun at high noon versus the sun at 4pm for most of the world. On Mars, high noon would have a solar intensity more like 4pm on earth. No where close to your darkness experience with the eclipse.

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 88 points 2 years ago

Complete tangent, but alumina, aka aluminum oxide, is usually considered the second hardest naturally occurring material. When it is found in nature, it is given the mineral name corundum and is clear. But if there are some impurities in it, you can get colours. Red corundum is called Ruby, and blue is called Sapphire. In the beauty industry, the same material (mixed with magnetite) is called emery, and lends its name to emery board, and is used in nail files. In the tech industry, it's used to make the extremely scratch resistant coating on most modern phone screens (basically nothing but diamond will scratch it).

You have subscribed to alumina facts. I'm sorry, the cat facts guy was busy.

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 91 points 2 years ago

When fascists say they're going to do something, it's probably a good idea to believe them. When they say they won't do something, they'll probably do that too.

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 90 points 2 years ago

When I was part of the KDE marketing working group, we always talked about 5% being the magic number. If we hit that, then the avalanche of ported and supported third party software starts. It's a weird chicken and egg thing. Looks like we're close!

[-] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 125 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Utility corridor. Sometimes a "Right of Way".

Depending on where you live, "hydro lines" or "transmission lines" or similar.

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