baltakatei

joined 1 year ago
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[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Masayuki seems like the most relatable Otherworlder so far. All the others, including MC, seen to have been suffering from big red flags or depression. Masayuki seems like he's genuinely a decent caring person who is just pleased to be here. Like a confused golden retriever.

Future eventsI had forgotten that we're introduced to Masayuki before we see Emperor Ludora or even the money girl arc play out. Can't wait to see how far season 3 will take us.

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Here is some background reading from Chokepoint Capitalism (2022) by Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow. Specifically, it is from “Chapter 3: How News Got Broken”. I recreated the citations in the markdown as links and tool-tips.

spoiler

COOKIE MONSTERS

Ultimately, both Google and Facebook are ad companies, deriving about 80 percent and 98 percent (respectively) of their revenues from advertising. Between them, they control 70 percent of the US ad market, and more than 65 percent in the UK.^4^ They have sewn up the search and social ad markets in ways that let them extract ever more value---to the cost of the journalists, video makers, musicians, and other creative workers who provide the culture and information to which those ads get attached.

Google's strategy for locking in suppliers like news publishers has been to vertically integrate throughout the ad chain. It now serves up the ads, buys ad space from publishers and sells it to others, provides the analytics that sites use to persuade advertisers to place content on them, and operates the search engine ad-supported sites rely on for traffic. An investigation by the UK's Competition and Markets Authority found that Google controlled the whole online ad market, controlling at least 50 percent and up to 100 percent at different points of the chain.^5^

Google provides at least a basic version of each of these services to businesses for free, which initially seemed like a boon but was actually a trap. Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo despairs of ever extracting his site. "Running TPM absent Google's various services is almost unthinkable... . Some of them are critical and I wouldn't know where to start for replacing them. In many cases, alternatives don't exist because no business can get a footing with a product Google lets people use for free."^6^

Google makes the online market even more hostile to new entrants by putting some of its monopoly profits toward maintaining its dominance. It has bought its way to search default on every platform: device manufacturers (including Apple, LG, Motorola, and Samsung), wireless carriers (like AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon), and browser developers (such as Mozilla and Opera) all take money to deliver their users into Google's maw. It pays billions each year to Apple alone. That enables Google to capture almost 90 percent of all general search engine queries and almost 95 percent on mobile devices. With Google providing the answers to almost every question we ask, it's no wonder publishers despair of breaking free.

Dina Srinivasan researches the opaque online ad industry, after ten years working within it. She points out that Google dominates ad markets via conduct that would be illegal in other trading markets: "Google's exchange shares superior trading information and speed with the Google-owned intermediaries, Google steers buy and sell orders to its exchange and websites (Search and YouTube), and Google abuses its access to inside information."^7^ This iron-fisted control gives Google a stalker's view into publishers' businesses. But it's not the only one who gets to peek inside. The way Google has historically sold its ads gives that information away to huge numbers of others---and that's been hugely damaging to news publishers too.

You probably already know that today's internet is based on mass surveillance of you and everyone you know. Dossiers about your activity and preferences are constantly being compiled and updated, facilitated by cookies, the tiny data packets that identify and track you online. When you navigate to a web page, the ad server uses cookies to identify you, summons your dossier, correlates it with your identity across multiple databases, and offers brokers (sometimes dozens of them!) the opportunity to show you an ad. That's how you end up with those creepy ads that follow you around the web after you carry out a search on, say, erectile dysfunction: you get a tag called "person interested in boners" and that attracts bids from boner-pill vendors.

All of that is reasonably well known. But what's less well known, and just as important, is what happens to the losers of the real-time auctions when you visit a site. Say you visit the Washington Post. Dozens of brokers bid on the chance to advertise to you. All but one loses the auction. But every one of those losers gets to add a tag to its dossier about you: "Washington Post reader." Advertising on the Washington Post is expensive. "Washington Post reader" is a valuable category: a lot of blue-chip firms will draw up marketing plans that say, "Make sure we tell Washington Post readers about this product!"

Here's the thing: the companies want to advertise to Washington Post readers, but they don't always care about advertising in the Washington Post. And now there are dozens of auction "losers" who can sell the right to advertise to you, as a Post reader, when you visit cheaper sites.

When you click through one of those dreadful "Here's twenty-two reasons to put a rubber band on your hotel room's door handle" websites, every one of those twenty-two pages can be sold to advertisers who want to reach Post readers, at a fraction of what the Post charges.

In other words, the ad auction system enables advertisers to buy the publication's audience without contributing to the publication itself. Some brands, especially luxury brands, still value appearing in the prestige source---Chanel and Mercedes Benz want to be associated with the New York Times, not a tacky "twenty-two reasons" site. But not all advertisers care how they reach you. And so, to a large extent, this system disintermediated news publishers from the value of their creations.

That was a huge problem. News had long relied on an ad revenue model that itself relied on more profitable content to subsidize other important public interest work. As Clay Shirky says, in the print world "Walmart was willing to subsidize the Baghdad bureau. That wasn't because of any deep link between advertising and reporting, nor was it about any real desire on the part of Walmart to have their marketing budget go to international correspondents. It was just an accident. Advertisers had little choice other than to have their money used that way, since they didn't really have any other vehicle for display ads."^8^ Newspapers didn't have to do much to capture ad revenue, since advertisers had little other choice.

The online world gave advertisers a range of new options, and brands (naturally!) took advantage of them. However, the consequence was that news publishers lost the premium that enabled them to invest in costly and vital content.

Although these changes cost news publishers extraordinary amounts, they generated rich rivers of gold for others. There's almost no transparency in online ad markets, so nobody really knows how much money goes where, but huge sums are being gobbled up by ad-tech platforms like Google's.

One known technique for maximizing profits is for Google to buy up ad space from publishers at a discounted rate and sell it on to advertisers for a huge and undisclosed premium. When the Guardian purchased some of its own ad inventory and followed the money, it discovered that up to 70 percent of revenues were siphoned off before ever reaching the publisher.^9^ Middlemen were snatching most of the value, leaving news providers with as little as 30 cents of each dollar spent on ads attached to their content. Back in 2003, by contrast, almost the full dollar went to the publishers.^10^

Online advertising is a seriously lucrative business. A 2020 report of the UK's Competition and Markets Authority found that Google's cost of capital was about 9 percent, on which it was earning supracompetitive returns of over 40 percent. Facebook, which has a similar playbook but focused on social media rather than search, had even higher returns---a ludicrous 50 percent.^11^ In a competitive market, publishers would sell their ads elsewhere. But the Google-Facebook duopoly gives them no such choice.

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 4 points 2 months ago

Imagine if a lost Spanish armada finally arrived at Florida, centuries late, musket-wielding conquistadors raiding a coastal naval academy while a prominent political VIP was giving a speech, taking them hostage like Hernán Cortés did with Moctezuma II (Aztec Empire) or Francisco Pizarro with Atahualpa (Inca Empire).

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I think it involved a planet called …

spoiler… Sky's Edge, if I recall correctly. Except the “new tech” was not FTL (not a thing in Revelation Space canon) but the practice of ejecting a significant fraction of hibernating colonists and their supplies to buff their deceleration ability in order to hold higher interstellar velocity for longer so as to get a few years “edge” in lead time over other generation ships. All to enable the traitorous ship of the generation ship fleet to raid planetary resources sooner to build up military forces to raid the slower latecomers.

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 7 points 2 months ago

Oops! Thanks for letting me know. It should be fixed now. >.<

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 months ago

I used to think “chaos” had the same “ch” as “church” when I was a kid.

The chao of Sonic Adventure (1998)?

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 6 points 2 months ago

The one that wakes me up in the middle of the night is albeït. I thought it was fancy foreign speak pronounced “all bait”, but it is just a short form of “all be it”, is pronounced exactly like that, and is a synonym for “all though it be”.

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

In fact, electric vehicles have been common once before. In the early years of the twentieth century, there were three fundamentally different automobile technologies battling for supremacy, and electric cars held their own against competition from steam-and gasoline-powered alternatives, as they are mechanically much simpler and more reliable, as well as quiet and smokeless. In Chicago they even dominated the automobile market. At the peak of production of electric vehicles in 1912, 30,000 glided silently along the streets of the USA, and another 4,000 throughout Europe; in 1918 a fifth of Berlin’s motor taxis were electric.

The drawback of electric cars with their own onboard batteries (rather than trains or trolleys taking a continuous feed from a power line over the track) is that even a large, heavy set cannot store a great deal of energy, and once depleted the battery takes a long time to recharge. The maximum range of these early electric vehicles was around a hundred miles, (Ironically, about 100 miles is still the maximum range for modern electric cars: technological improvements in battery storage and electric motors have been perfectly offset by an increase in car size and weight, and drivers of electric vehicles suffer from “charge anxiety.”) but this is farther than a horse and in an urban setting is more than adequate. The solution is, rather than waiting for the battery to be recharged, you can simply pull into a station for a quick battery pack exchange: Manhattan successfully operated a fleet of electric cabs in 1900, with a central station that rapidly swapped depleted batteries for a fresh tray.

From The Knowledge (2014) by Lewis Dartnell, chapter 9 “Transport”. Cited works for the history of electric cars are:

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Note: this appears to be a follow-up to a previous article also by Dave Philipps dated 2024-06-30 titled “Pattern of Brain Damage Is Pervasive in Navy SEALs Who Died by Suicide”: https://sopuli.xyz/post/14343349 which focused “Jennifer Collins, whose husband was a SEAL for 20 years and died just over a year after leaving the Navy”. Collins helped families of recently deceased military personnel to submit their nervous tissue for examination.

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 3 points 3 months ago

So, you're telling me my plan to measure atmospheric oxygen isotope trends over geologic time by grinding up sharks is bust?

[–] baltakatei@sopuli.xyz 13 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I wouldn't be surprised if selection bias is at work and they had visited various switch locations and decided to film in places where and when they suspected there was likely to be a failure. See yovo68ʼs 11foot8 bridge videos for an example.

 

Dated: 2024-05-30. Added: 2024-05-30.

 

That scream. XD

 

Summary

The Hera spacecraft has recently been assembled in Bremen, Germany by OHB. Its mission is to observe the result of NASAʼs DART mission which impacted Dimorphos in 2022-09. The Hera spacecraft will now be sent to the Netherlands for testing by the European Space Agency (ESA). The craft is scheduled to be launched by SpaceX from Cape Canaveral on 2024-10.

Stats

  • Author: Andrew Jones
  • Date: 2023-09-05
  • Work: space.com
  • Accessed: 2023-09-05

Further Reading

1
Chandrayaan-3 landing (www.nytimes.com)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by baltakatei@sopuli.xyz to c/space@sopuli.xyz
 
  • YouTube
  • News coverage
  • Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)
  • Time:
    • 2023-08-23T12:34+00 (UTC)
    • 2023-08-23T05:34-07 (Los Angeles)
    • 2023-08-23T08:34-04 (New York)
    • 2023-08-23T15:34+03 (Helsinki)
    • 2023-08-23T15:34+03 (Kyiv)
    • 2023-08-23T18:04+05:30 (Delhi)
    • 2023-08-23T19:34+07 (Jakarta)
    • 2023-08-23T20:34+08 (Beijing)
    • 2023-08-23T22:34+10 (Sydney)

What is Chandrayaan-3?

Chandrayaan means “moon craft” in Hindi. In addition to the propulsion module that pushed the spacecraft into orbit around the moon, the landing module consists of the Vikram lander and the Pragyan rover that will attempt to set down on the lunar surface in the moon’s south polar region. The mission is robotic and there are no astronauts aboard.

The Aug. 23 landing was selected because it is the day when the sun will rise at the landing site. The mission is to conclude two weeks later when the sun sets. While on the surface, the solar-powered lander and rover will use a range of instruments to make thermal, seismic and mineralogical measurements.

 

See:

 

The objective of this Lemmy community is maximize the number of New York Times articles non-subscribers can read via the gift article feature provided to subscribers. If two people create gift links for the same article, one is basically wasted, so check here in case the article you want to share already has a gift link.

New York Times gift articles automatically expire after 30 days.


El propósito de esta comunidad de Lemmy, es acrecentar a lo sumo la cantidad de escritos del New York Times que los no suscriptores pueden leer, por medio de la función de artículo obsequiado que se ha dado a quienes son suscriptores. Si dos personas crean enlaces de regalo para un mismo escrito, uno es, en esencia, desaprovechado, así que verifica aquí por si acaso el artículo que deseas compartir ya ha sido obsequiado con un enlace.

Los artículos de regalo del New York Times fenecen automáticamente al cabo de 30 días.


本Lemmy社区的目标是最大化非纽约时报订阅者通过订阅者提供的赠送文章功能阅读文章的数量。如果两个人为同一篇文章创建赠送链接,那么其中一个链接基本上就被浪费了,所以在分享文章之前,请先在这里检查你想分享的文章是否已经有了赠送链接。

纽约时报的赠送文章在30天后会自动过期。


Tämän Lemmy-yhteisön tavoitteena on maksimoida se määrä New York Timesin artikkeleita, joita ei-tilaajat voivat lukea hyödyntämällä tilaajille tarjottua lahja-artikkelitoimintoa. Jos kaksi henkilöä luo lahjalinkkejä samasta artikkelista, toinen on käytännössä hukkaan heitetty, joten tarkista täältä, jos haluat jakaa artikkelin, jolla on jo lahjalinkki.

New York Timesin lahja-artikkelit vanhenevat automaattisesti 30 päivän kuluttua.


Edit: Note that links will not be removed.

 

Lyrics transcribed by @bhadgagerisov5378 2 years ago:

You know what, if I could solve all

The mysteries and wonders of this planet,

I would keep my mouth shut, and not ever tell a soul.

Maybe you just wish that I would

Be more energetic, and more peppy like you.

But honestly girl, I'm just not that kind of guy.

And then time goes crazy and goes "Boon".

From all the crazy, weird, and strange things happening,

I get swept in and then your delusions all start to take control!

And consume this whole world!

One sunny day, as clear as can be,

She that searches endlessly

For some magic life, causes me such strife

Since I just get dragged around!

Tomorrow, I wonder if I'll survive.

I amazed that I'm still alive!

So if you're happy now, just leave me alone!

If we are done here, can I please go home?

Go and chase your dream now.

Go and try to catch it.

Because I do not have a dream, just let me be.

There is one thing, that I know, it's that

You cannot predict what is in the future,

Even though the paths we could take are endless.

Oh crap! I see your eyes are twinkling.

Don't look at me now! I know what you are thinking!

Looking at the stars, I wish someone would rescue me.

She's wasting all of my time, "Byon".

Even if it's kinda cool, the things you want to play,

You just force the Brigade to your will regardless of what I say!

Please don't show up today!

Would you release that grasp on my hand?

What will it take for you to undestand?

Your huge freakish eyes are beaming with ideas

To change the world where we all stand!

Don't make your plans all based on a whim.

Think them all out before you begin!

I wish that you would change, or you're going to kill me

With at all that pressure inside your heart! Everywhere you go to

You drag me right behind you.

Everyday, my chest, my chest, my ... pounds way too much...

From all the strange and crazy things going on...

I get swept in and her delusions, they...

They gain control and they... get powerful and...

They consume this whole world!

One sunny day, as clear as can be,

She that searches endlessly

For some magic life, causes me such strife

Since I just get dragged around!

Tomorrow, I wonder if I'll survive.

I amazed that I'm still alive!

So if you're happy now, just leave me alone!

If we are done here, can I please go home?

Go and chase your dream now.

Go and try to catch it.

Because your dream is just, it's just, it's just a dream.

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by baltakatei@sopuli.xyz to c/haruhi@lemmy.world
 

Judging from the video description, only Minori Chihara (Yuki Nagato) Yuko Goto (Mikuru Asahina) will participate in the live stream.

Air date: 2023-07-27T20:00+09

ChatGPT translation of video description below:

Title: Haruhi Collaboration Confirmed! "KonoSuba Fan Live!" #38

Description: The popular TV anime "KonoSuba" introduces its first smartphone game, "KonoSuba: God's Blessing on this Wonderful World! Fantastic Days (KonoFan)". This is the official live broadcast "KonoFan LIVE!". We will deliver plenty of new information about "KonoFan" with our gorgeous cast, so please look forward to it!

【Cast】 Jun Fukushima (Kazuma) Minori Chihara (Yuki Nagato) Yuko Goto (Mikuru Asahina) MC: Hyakka Ryoran

【Program Contents】 ●Haruhi collaboration confirmed! KonoFan Information Bureau ●Upcoming Campaigns & Update Information ●Loud voices are prohibited! ASMR Game! ※Please note that the program content is subject to change without notice.

Official Website: https://konosubafd.jp/ Official Twitter: https://twitter.com/konosubafd Official LINE: https://line.me/R/ti/p/@185uhvnl Official YouTube CH: / @konosubafd

Download "KonoFan" from here! https://app.adjust.com/f6y5uno

©2006 Nagaru Tanigawa, Noizi Ito / SOS Brigade ©2019 Natsume Akatsuki, Kurone Mishima / KADOKAWA / KonoSuba Movie Production Committee ©Sumzap, Inc.

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