oyenyaaow

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] oyenyaaow 4 points 1 year ago

Louis Rossman said in one of his video that at his views level it would cost him ~10k a year to host outside of youtube.

[–] oyenyaaow 1 points 1 year ago

honestly at this point i just do uBO purge-cache/update every time i went to youtube after a long enough gap ( haha hours. mere hours i'm addicted) from the last time.

[–] oyenyaaow 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

you can go onto your youtube history, search for that video and remove it from your history, and it will stop influencing your recommendations.

every now and then i watch a video about a topic i'm not really interested in except for that one video, and then had to remove it from history.

[–] oyenyaaow 1 points 1 year ago

It's not relevant to me, i'm in a different country, but in i've seen daily completely turn off your hidden phones, and only turn them on when it is safe because the alert will still blare when you turn on you phone the entire week before the test and also months before. Certain circles take warning each other about 'Loud Day' seriously.

[–] oyenyaaow 1 points 1 year ago

i'll see if i can find it, but my dashboard hits 99+ notification in about six hours...

[–] oyenyaaow 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm found the survey through tumblr, i expect there's quite a few from there.

[–] oyenyaaow 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There’s nothing stopping you from just deciding to build an idyllic cottage and not pursue a path to the Ender Dragon or anything else.

Spent so long pretending it's Stardew Valley 3D and now cries in wanting to change from peaceful mode but having so much villagers and building a large enough wall and lighting against zombie siege is taking so long.

[–] oyenyaaow 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There was an announcement, the Joja items are getting another way to get them, there will be another festival and winter clothing for villagers.

[–] oyenyaaow 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

There’s a mechanic advice community that’s not memey…

can i have link please

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/6231471

One movie from this list I absolutely adore is Psycho Goreman. More funny than scary.

[–] oyenyaaow 1 points 1 year ago

Intensity warning is a good thing. Though it does make tagging complicated, but in this case overlapping tags would do. blood-death and gore-death and simply death.

probably shouldn't borrow the exact terms from fandom, but they have tag modifiers like 'dead dove: do not eat' which basically means this is an absolute celebration of the previous tag, so gore tag coupled with that tag is gore intensified to the max, while they also use tags 'slight mentions of gore' for only a bit of gore. but if you filter out gore both would still be filtered out.

AO3 runs on open source software and has a very robust tagging system.

[–] oyenyaaow 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Going from Neil Gaiman's tumblr (easy guess which show i'm hoping will continue :D) he's being very cautious and also advocating staying on the picket line for SAG. And he's not updating twitter yet, hmmm.

[–] oyenyaaow 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Saying that the strike failed is playing into the studio's hands. WGA considers the strike a victory, and furthermore, the studio downplaying the strike's agreement is a disinformation campaign they had done before.

Twitter thread by David Slack @/slack2thefuture:

"As WGA leaders meet today to finalize our deal, we begin a new era for writers — and for labor in our industry. But we also begin to face the final and most insidious form of unionbusting propaganda: a years-long effort to sell the lie that our strike was not worth it.

Over the coming days, months, and years, the studios, streamers, and their surrogates will take every opportunity to undermine what we have won together. They will seize on the inevitable consessions and compromises made by our NegCom as proof that we “failed.”

They will urge us to overlook all that we won through hard work and unwavering solidarity. They will claim it wasn’t enough, that we should have gotten X instead of Y, that we lost more by striking than we gained in this new contract. And they will be wrong.

They will tell us that the strike was unnecessary, it was a waste of our time and our savings, that our agents or managers or lawyers could have gotten us everything we won through individual negotiations without anyone having to walk a picket line. Well… then why didn’t they?

As hard as it is to believe right now, these lies can work. They’ve worked before. During our 2017 strike authorization vote, it was shocking to discover how many members believed we lost the ‘07-08 strike, in which we went on strike for the internet — and won the internet.

This didn’t happen by accident. It was the result of years of whispering by studios and anti-union allies. And they don’t just do it because they’re bitter about losing. They push the lie that we used our power and lost because they hope to stop us from using our power to win.

Our strike was necessary because, in our individual negotiations, our employers consistently refused to acknowledge our right and reasonable demands. Because the profound changes we needed could only be won through the unique and overwhelming power of collective bargaining.

Our strike was necessary because our employers made it necessary by driving our income down 23% in 10 years. Because they refused to address free work in features, streaming coverage in comedy-variety, the abuses of mini-rooms and the threat of AI until we withheld our labor

Our strike was necessary. Our strike was effective. Our strike is a victory. If anyone tries to tell you otherwise, it’s ‘cause they never want to see us stand up for ourselves again. Don’t believe it. We won this fight. We’re the WGA, and when we fight, we win. #WGAStrong"

2
The Science of Melting Cheese (www.seriouseats.com)
submitted 1 year ago by oyenyaaow to c/cheese
 

Love gooey melted cheese? Us too. Here's why some cheeses melt better than others—and how to force tough melters to do what you want.

 

This speech was delivered as the keynote address for the May 17, 2012 commencement ceremony at The University of the Arts.

 

The dust line thinneth but never gone.

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