I don’t. I use the timer on my microwave.
e0qdk
I write code and play games and stuff. My old username from reddit and HN was already taken and I couldn’t think of anything else I wanted to be called so I just picked some random characters like this:
>>> import random
>>> ''.join([random.choice("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789") for x in range(5)])
'e0qdk'
My avatar is a quick doodle made in KolourPaint. I might replace it later. Maybe.
日本語が少し分かるけど、下手です。
Alt: e0qdk@reddthat.com
- 9 Posts
- 138 Comments
I boil water in a sauce pot on the stove. Slosh it into my mug. Plunk in a tea bag and set the timer on my microwave for 3:30 so that I don’t forget and over-steep it. No milk. No sugar.
That’s an issue in older versions of Lemmy that was fixed in the 0.19.x releases, I think. lemmy.world still seems to be on 0.18.5
Discussion on Github from last year: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/pull/3965
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Anime@ani.social•What are some of your favorite EDs? Why do you like them?
2·2 years agoAnimethemes has it: Odoru Akachan Ningen
I think back when I first watched Welcome to the NHK that song may be what made me realize that the Japanese had also adopted a planet/weekday naming convention e.g. 火星/火曜日 == Mars / Tuesday (Tiw/Tyr’s day == Mars’s day; more obvious in e.g. French “Mardi”, etc.); 土星/土曜日 = Saturn / Saturday; etc.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Anime@ani.social•What are some of your favorite EDs? Why do you like them?
4·2 years ago- Sora wa Takaku Kaze wa Utau from Fate/Zero (2nd cour) – it’s a powerful song, and I think I listened to this one all the way through in every episode. Definitely one of my all time favorites.
- Taiyou - Denpa-Teki na Kanojo. (This OVA is pretty obscure, I think.) Another powerful song. No visuals for most of the ending (just text credits scrolling) – although 神戸守 (Mamoru Kanbe) listed as the director (監督) jumped out at me! No Klimt this time, but funny that I’m talking about something he worked on again already. Maybe I should go track down his other works more systematically…
- Kesenai Tsumi - FMA 2003 – I have a lot of nostalgia for this song and listened to it way too much as a teenager after my friends started introducing me to anime. The version on animethemes is a bit different from what I remember visually but the song is the same.
- Wareta Ringo - Shin Sekai Yori – I was actually thinking about posting an animepic clipped from this the other day since it popped back into my mind…
- Hibari - Lord El-Melloi II Sei no Jikenbo: Rail Zeppelin Grace Note (the Fate/Zero spin-off series) – I like both the song and the visuals (with the seasons changing)
- My Pace – Bleach ED6; I didn’t much care for the filler seasons of Bleach, but the synth from this ED and the dancing characters got stuck in my head for a while.
- X Jigen e Youkoso - Space Dandy. This one is memorable to me both for the “Hey, Everett…”/「ねぇ、エヴェレット」bit specifically and the general subject of the song.
- Zzz - Nichijou – both the art and song are great. There’s a couple versions, but I like this first one the best.
Edit: corrected the link to the Space Dandy ED
Have you tried Resonance? It’s a mystery adventure game set in modern times where you play as four different characters whose stories interconnect. It’s been a while since I played it (a decade or so?) but I remember that it had an interesting game mechanic that let you use memories like items in various interactions, as well as a number of puzzles that I rather liked the design of.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
[Outdated, please look at pinned post] Casual Conversation@lemmy.world•Wooohooo downvotes!
4·2 years agoHmm, so federated downvotes from Lemmy are public now on mbin, not just local downvotes and federated upvotes. Interesting. Does mbin-mbin downvote federation work? kbin doesn’t federate downvotes to you. (I checked – for science! – but switched back to an upvote afterwards.)
artificial gestation
The word “matrix” literally means “womb” in its older sense.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Anime@ani.social•[News] McDonald's Announces New Anime Made in Collaboration with Studio Pierrot
5·2 years agoSorry if addressed in the link (I’m not willing to visit Twitter) – but, like, actually McDonald’s themed? Or are they just sponsoring a show (like P&G, etc. have done for ages)?
If the former, I guess there’s some precedence with the KFC visual novel and Isekai Izakaya and such, but that still sounds pretty weird…
Edit: I went back and checked and it looks like McDonald’s was also a sponsor on the show I remember P&G from (i.e. season 1 of Bleach), so there’s precedence for them sponsoring Studio Pierrot’s shows too – I just don’t usually pay that much attention to it, I guess.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Anime@ani.social•What are some of your favorite OPs and why do you like them?
4·2 years agoHuh. So… it finally occurred to me to check this. Elfen Lied and Sora no Woto share the same director – Mamoru Kanbe / 神戸守. I probably should’ve figured that out sooner given that Sora no Woto’s OP also references Klimt’s paintings heavily, but I had no idea.
It’s not a GUI library, but Jupyter was pretty much made for the kind of mathematical/scientific exploratory programming you’re interested in doing. It’s not the right tool for making finished products, but is intended for creating lab notebooks that contain executable code snippets, formatted text, and visual output together. Given your background experience and the libraries you like, it seems like it’d be right up your alley.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Anime@ani.social•Anime Questions, Recommendations, and Discussion Thread [Week 7]
5·2 years agoI mentioned in a past comment a while back that I made a catalog of my anime. One of the observations I found while making it is that everything except for one movie had an entry on the English language Wikipedia already. That movie is Gundress from 1999. According to my personal journal, I watched this once back in 2014, apparently, but I remembered nothing about it, so I loaded it up recently and rewatched it.
The movie has that “sort of hard to follow if you don’t already know the source material” kind of feel – although I think this is the original work? I checked the Japanese Wikipedia entry about it after watching it. Sticking the article through a translator, there’s a description of a seriously screwed up initial showing and mismanagement of production with the film being finished after it aired in theaters initially. The version I have is finished, of course; if half the movie wasn’t colored in I’d definitely have remembered that!
The DVD menu prominently credits it as “Masamune Shirow’s Gundress”, but I’m not sure what his role in the production actually was. He’s listed in the opening credits for 設定協力 which got translated to English as “Characters Designed by” – but different people are credited with character and mech design in the end credits. A literal translation is something like “setting cooperation”.
There’s definitely a number of familiar elements with some buildings reminiscent of Dominion Tank Police, mech suits that reminded me of designs in GitS:SAC, as well as thermoptic camouflage, cable-based cyborg communication (jacked into the neck), cyberdiving, etc. coming up during the story.
Unusually, this anime features a Little Arabia enclave within the Japanese “Bayside City” the story is set in and one of the main characters is Muslim. I think this may be the only time I’ve seen Arabic script in anime – although I don’t know what it says.
I clipped some screenshots and stacked them up so you can see what it looks like, if you’re curious: https://files.catbox.moe/qtsa0d.png (~8MB)
Yep. It’s Garden of Words. I just skimmed through my copy and this image is from about 18 minutes in.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.ml•Start Steam on PC when pinged by Steamlink on AppleTV.
6·2 years agoIt might be easier to just fire up Wireshark and look for relevant traffic when you trigger the action.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Moving to: m/AskMbin!@kbin.social•Easy workflows for intentionally upscaled art?
2·2 years agoThe Wikipedia article for hqx points out that an implementation exists as a filter in ffmepg.
You can run a command line conversion of e.g. a PNG -> PNG using hqx upscaling like:
ffmpeg -i input.png -filter_complex hqx=4 output.pngThe
=4is for 4x upscaling. The implementation in my version of ffmpeg supports 2x, 3x, and 4x upscaling.As a quick and dirty way to get semi-live preview, you can do the conversion with
makeand usewatch maketo try to rebuild the conversion periodically. (You can use the-nflag to increase the retry rate if the default is too long to wait.)makewill exit quickly if the file hasn’t changed. Save the image in your editor and keep an image viewer that supports auto-reload on change open to see “live” preview of the output. (e.g.eogcan do it, although it won’t preserve size of the image – at least not in the copy I have, anyway; mine’s a bit old though.)Sample Makefile:
output.png : input.png Makefile ffmpeg -y -i input.png -filter_complex hqx=4 output.pngNote the
-yoption to tell ffmpeg to overwrite the file; otherwise it will stop to ask you if you want to overwrite the file every time you save, and in case you’re not familiar with Makefiles, you need a real tab (not spaces) on the line with the command to run.ffmpeg also appears to support xbr (with =n option as well) and super2xsai if you want to experiment with those too.
I’m not sure if this will actually do what you want artistically, but the existing implementations in ffmpeg makes it easy to experiment with.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is a tip, fact, or piece of information that you want to share?
4·2 years agoWhat upside down thing with a banana??
There was a viral video/meme maybe a decade ago about how monkeys peel bananas (might have actually been an orangutan or gorilla in the one I saw; been too long since I’ve seen it) where they peel it from the end opposite of how people are usually shown doing it. I’m guessing they mean that? Basically, instead of bending the stem bit (from where the bananas bunch up), you can pinch the tip at the other end and the peel splits open very easily – it’s easier to do, especially if the banana is still a bit on the greener side of ripeness and the stem part is flexible. (I tried it after seeing it and switched to peeling them from the “bottom” myself.)
What back bit?
There is a little black fibrous part of most Cavendish bananas near the tip I was describing; many people do not like eating it and avoid it.
Also…veins?
I’m not sure what they mean either.
e0qdk@kbin.socialto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•A more relaxing way to play text-based games?
6·2 years agoI don’t know if there are any existing implementations that work well enough yet for it to actually be relaxing, but it might be possible to set up a hands-free IF experience by hooking up speech-to-text and text-to-speech tools to the game.
Can Z3 account for lost bits? Did it come up with just one solution?
It gave me just one solution the way I asked for it. With additional constraints added to exclude the original solution, it also gives me a second solution – but the solution it produces is peculiar to my implementation and does not match your implementation. If you implemented exactly how the bits are supposed to end up in the result, you could probably find any other solutions that exist correctly, but I just did it in a quick and dirty way.
This is (with a little clean up) what my code looked like:
solver code
#!/usr/bin/env python3 import z3 rand1 = 0.38203435111790895 rand2 = 0.5012949781958014 rand3 = 0.5278898433316499 rand4 = 0.5114834443666041 def xoshiro128ss(a,b,c,d): t = 0xFFFFFFFF & (b << 9) r = 0xFFFFFFFF & (b * 5) r = 0xFFFFFFFF & ((r << 7 | r >> 25) * 9) c = 0xFFFFFFFF & (c ^ a) d = 0xFFFFFFFF & (d ^ b) b = 0xFFFFFFFF & (b ^ c) a = 0xFFFFFFFF & (a ^ d) c = 0xFFFFFFFF & (c ^ t) d = 0xFFFFFFFF & (d << 11 | d >> 21) return r, (a, b, c, d) a,b,c,d = z3.BitVecs("a b c d", 64) nodiv_rand1, state = xoshiro128ss(a,b,c,d) nodiv_rand2, state = xoshiro128ss(*state) nodiv_rand3, state = xoshiro128ss(*state) nodiv_rand4, state = xoshiro128ss(*state) z3.solve(a >= 0, b >= 0, c >= 0, d >= 0, nodiv_rand1 == int(rand1*4294967296), nodiv_rand2 == int(rand2*4294967296), nodiv_rand3 == int(rand3*4294967296), nodiv_rand4 == int(rand4*4294967296) )I never heard about Z3
If you’re not familiar with SMT solvers, they are a useful tool to have in your toolbox. Here are some links that may be of interest:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satisfiability_modulo_theories
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z3_Theorem_Prover
Edit: Trying to fix formatting differences between kbin and lemmy
Edit 2: Spoiler tags and code blocks don’t seem to play well together. I’ve got it mostly working on Lemmy (where I’m guessing most people will see the comment), but I don’t think I can fix it on kbin.














Unless I’m missing something it looks like it doesn’t use Denuvo? (Steam lists a custom EULA but I don’t see Denuvo listed.)