oce

joined 1 year ago
[–] oce@jlai.lu 6 points 1 day ago (3 children)

What does he gain from Senate voting against him?

[–] oce@jlai.lu 2 points 1 day ago

From top of my head, you can add superman, side plank, bridge, fire hydrant, donkey kick. Maybe you can attach weights to your forearms too for the arm muscles.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 18 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Except Ukrainians, Taiwanese and others may pay a hefty price for this one.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

I feel like the thought that Twitter was ever a mass social platform for everyone is very journalist bias view. Facebook, Instagram and Reddit were already massive players before the Xtermination.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 3 points 1 day ago

People who love or tolerate left populism.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 22 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Isn't it supposed to be love rather than just friendship?

[–] oce@jlai.lu 2 points 3 days ago

Imagine he tries and fails, like the last who tried.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 1 points 3 days ago

There are a lot of people and organizations that are just slow to move and don't really know where to go.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 274 points 3 days ago (3 children)

slowly divert my work to different people in the company

So you've been promoted to a management position.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 44 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (13 children)

If we ignore the actual stress of a manager suddenly finding out and asking you to report what you have been doing. Probably still possible to bullshit long enough in a big company to recover a normal situation or find another job.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 10 points 3 days ago

Don't get them, even if she goes down, the number 2 of this party is much younger so he wasn't involved in this and he could take her place easily. In my opinion he's more dangerous, he doesn't have the stain of the Le Pen name, he's 29 and he has avoided stupid political mistakes/crimes so far as far as I know. He's part of the party's new "impeccable" generation created by Marine Le Pen learning from her father's mistakes (such as being openly racist in the media).

 

The Paris prosecutor on Wednesday requested a five-year prison sentence and a five-year ban from public office against far-right leader Marine Le Pen, at a trial where she and 24 others are accused of embezzling European Union funds.

[–] oce@jlai.lu 8 points 3 days ago

You have to pick the right petting options to unlock the boon.

 

Résumé par MLL:

L'article de Guillaume Delacroix, publié sur lemonde.fr, aborde la découverte d'ADN de squelettes anciens à Rakhigarhi, en Inde, qui remet en question la notion d'une "race" aryenne pure, défendue par les nationalistes hindous au pouvoir. Les fouilles archéologiques dans cette région ont révélé des squelettes datant de l'ère Harappéenne, dont l'analyse génétique a montré un mélange de populations, incluant des ancêtres de groupes nomades d'Iran et de chasseurs-cueilleurs d'Asie du Sud-Est.

Cette découverte est particulièrement significative dans le contexte politique indien, où la théorie aryenne a été utilisée pour promouvoir une vision nationaliste de l'identité hindoue. Les résultats scientifiques, qui indiquent une diversité génétique et des migrations plutôt qu'une ascendance unique, provoquent des tensions avec les idéologies nationalistes. Le RSS, un groupe influent de l'extrême droite, commence à réévaluer ses positions face à ces nouvelles données, ce qui entraîne des modifications dans les programmes scolaires.

L'article souligne également les risques encourus par les chercheurs qui s'opposent aux narrations nationalistes, ainsi que la complexité de l'histoire génétique de l'Inde, qui ne peut être réduite à un groupe racial monolithique. En somme, la recherche archéologique et génétique à Rakhigarhi ouvre un débat sur les origines des Indiens et remet en question des croyances profondément ancrées dans la société.

 

Source is in French, pay-walled and talking about the in-coming issues with fat-bikes: https://www.lemonde.fr/m-perso/article/2024/11/09/gros-pneus-et-coups-de-sonnettes-vers-la-suvisation-du-velo_6385307_4497916.html

 
 
 

This may come as a shock for people who are stuck with the past century image of Japan being a technical leader with high-tech hardware, video games, robots and high speed trains.

They didn't really succeed with the internet industry, their tech giants never managed to scale to the world internet and compete with the USA. A lot of their tech industry is still from Japan, in Japan, for Japanese only. For example, countless fintech products only running in Japan, hyper specialized to the Japanese habits and regulations.

It seems there's also no craze in the youth to become IT engineers, like in most of the rest of the world. Apparently most engineering students prefer heavy industries like buildings and transportation. Eventually, it's not enough to cover the IT development needs in Japan, in addition to the low birthrate. So I'm part of these foreign engineers who got visas to fill this need.

My team is 50% Chinese, 30% Indian (mostly in India), 10% Japanese and 10% European.

My manager is Chinese, and I have noticed a similar tendency as what I have seen described with some Indian managers in the USA tech companies: he more easily hires short-term contractors of the same origin. Maybe because he is more confident in his ability to control them. It's a bit problematic for the atmosphere of the team, as they tend to stick together and speak in their native language, even during meetings. I was expecting to not understand meetings because they were going to be in Japanese, I was definitely not expecting that they would be in Chinese.

Nonetheless, I sometimes consumed some social mana to try to get to know my Chinese colleagues better, with more or less success as some speak very little English.

I was especially curious to learn about their work conditions, life conditions, and their political opinions, if any. Here is the list of random anecdotal pieces of information I received during those talks with different colleagues.

Work conditions are pretty bad in China, even for IT engineers:

  1. Most of the companies ask their employees to do the infamous 996 (9 am to 9 pm, 6 days a week), some even 997 for specific periods of the year.
  2. There's an expiry age for IT engineers in China, which is 35. If you haven't become a manager by this age, companies will consider that you are failing your career, let you go or not hire you. At least two colleagues are in Japan to escape this.
  3. Chinese IT giants like Baidu, Tencent and Byte Dance have this kind of policies, but they may also offer salaries higher than EU and getting closer to the USA. Considering the lower cost of life, people are motivated to work there 100% of their awake time, with no social life, during 10/15 years in order to be able to retire at 40.

Life:

  1. Cities develop at such a crazy pace that when they go back home after just 1 or 2 years, they sometimes have issues to recognize their home cities.
  2. The technical ecosystem evolves really fast, with zero concerns allowed for privacy. I was complaining to my colleague that I hated how we were asked to connect to a company chat app with our private phones because of privacy concerns. She laughed at it and said last time she went home, people had started to pay with their faces.

Politics:

  1. At least one of my Chinese colleague is completely aware of the crimes of his government, Tiananmen, Tibet, Uyghurs etc. I think most educated people are aware thanks to VPNs and traveling. I find it reassuring that the censorship and propaganda are still unable to fully control opinions.
  2. There is a lot of resentment against the Chinese government for how they managed the COVID crisis with extremely strict and long confinements compared to other countries. "The officials were scared to get sick, so they made our lives a nightmare to protect themselves from any risk."
  3. They mostly avoid to publically talk/write about their political opinions to avoid troubles.
  4. I heard a potential conspiracy theory that sometimes children disappear after school-wide blood tests, that it may be related to organs harvesting for the use of members of the oligarchy/state/party, and that parents are later asked to get the ashes of their kids with no explanation. Something related to these: https://theconversation.com/killing-prisoners-for-transplants-forced-organ-harvesting-in-china-161999, https://thediplomat.com/2024/08/first-known-survivor-of-chinas-forced-organ-harvesting-speaks-out/.
 

Using Gnome, my Bluetooth mouse wasn't connecting anymore. Found some comments on Reddit saying downgrading the kernel solved the issue, it also worked for me.

 
 

L'un des récits les plus bouleversants que j'ai pu lire ces derniers temps, ça met les choses en perspectives.

 

Boustrophedon is a style of writing in which alternate lines of writing are reversed, with letters also written in reverse, mirror-style.

The original term comes from Ancient Greek: "like the ox turns [while plowing]". It is mostly seen in ancient manuscripts and other inscriptions. It was a common way of writing on stone in Ancient Greece.

A fun variation is the reverse boustrophedon: the text in alternate lines is rotated 180 degrees rather than mirrored.

The reader begins at the bottom left-hand corner of a tablet, reads a line from left to right, then rotates the tablet 180 degrees to continue on the next line from left to right again. When reading one line, the lines above and below it appear upside down.

I heard about it on a podcast about the Rapa Nui people of Easter Island. They use used the reverse boustrophedon style for their system of glyphs called Rongorongo, which remains undeciphered.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rongorongo

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