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Cake day: 13 juillet 2023

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  • You keep posting this graph with no context, but the euro has also had very high inflation.

    This is bad faith and you know it, that’s why you aren’t actually discussing it, just posting a misleading graph.

    USD had 141% cumulative inflation since 1990

    Euro has 115%

    The pound has 143%

    Brazil ( a member of brics) has nearly 1000% since 1994 (25 million percent from 1990 like the other countries.

    China, arguably the biggest contender for stability in brics has 160% inflation.

    Why aren’t you including charts for all of these countries? And why are you using a chart showing inflation values from before USD was used as the international currency in 1944 with the bretton woods conference, without demonstrating why that is important and what it means? Given that this is in the context of global currencies.


  • Isn’t the first graph just general inflation? What does purchasing comparing purchasing power mean in this scenario? And how does it compare to other currencies like the pound or the euro?

    Also the conclusion of the second article you linked seems to indicate that no other large scale currencies are replacing the shares of the US dollar, instead things like gold and diversified currencies are taking up this space, those don’t take the place for international trade.

    Neither of these seem like a death knell for USD to me.






  • It’s 4kb it’s the demo scene.

    To expand, the rendered to video output is much more than 4k, but the file that produces the output can be small like that, this is usually done by doing a bunch of math to generate the output dynamically.

    You can kind of equate it to how a video game can generate 120 frames of 4k footage every second indefinitely, but the game itself is limited in size.

    Recording the output takes up space, but you don’t need to record it if you can generate it in demand.


  • I think text is going to be the most dense, information wise. With plain text you could fit about 2500 average length books in 1gb, that’s not considering any compression.

    Additionally, you could create a novel representation of words to reduce the total amount of text and include a key to expand it back out, replacing common groupings of letters like ‘ch’ with ‘k’ for example

    If you could get a 2:1 compression ratio from your modified alphabet and a 4:1 compression ratio from traditional compression algorithms you could get up to 20 thousand books! That’s a book a day for 55 years,

    I think music is gonna take up way too much space. Compressed all the way down to 32kbps which is going to be a pretty miserable listening experience (everything will sound underwater) you are only going to get ~75 ish hours of music.

    Cut that in half for a more tolerable 64kbps.

    It’s a decent amount of music, but not a lifetime’s worth of your only entertainment imo.

    Edit: for some context on audio, 320kbps mp3 will only net you 7 hours of music.


  • Ok, first off, installing custom firmware on a switch involves a lot more than entering rcm, that’s one step yes, but not the entire process. ‘soft-modding’ a release switch, uses a hardware exploit on tegra SOCs that allows the device to bypass (the encrypted) bootloader on the switch by way of injecting a custom payload in recovery (not debug) mode.

    This isn’t even an argument so I don’t know you are saying this, it’s settled in criminal and civil court, Doug Bowser went to jail for this exactly, specifically, conspiracy to circumvent, and trafficking circumvention tools.

    Otherwise you should actually read the DMCA, I can’t find any mention of format shifting broadly and exemptions provided are very specific.

    I should add, it doesn’t actually matter how good an attempt of DRM is for it to be illegal. The fact that Nintendo made a mistake in allowing the ability (through unintended use of the hardware) to enter rcm, does not magically make it legal. the DRM just needs to be a clear effort and intention.

    I’m not saying I agree with it, but it’s the reality of the world we live in.

    Edit: can you actually provide any info on where you are getting that it’s legal to crack blu ray encryption?


  • There is no way to access the dump without circumventing the switch itself’s encryption, as you need to do it on a modified switch and as far as I know the exemptions provided for DMCA are for scenarios where it’s effectively impossible or extremely difficult to use the software in a non infringing way, (other exemptions are generally quite specific) which could be argued for out of circulation consoles and games, but would not stand for an in production generally available console and it’s games.

    I’ve never heard of exemptions for format shifting exemption for circumventing copy protection. I’ve heard it argued in the case of things like ripping a CD that has no copy protection in place though.


  • I don’t understand why you are downvoted, we might not like it, but it’s true. Circumventing drm is not legal.

    The DMCA states: No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.

    And defines circumventing as: (A) to “circumvent a technological measure” means to descramble a scrambled work, to decrypt an encrypted work, or otherwise to avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair a technological measure, without the authority of the copyright owner; and

    (B) a technological measure “effectively controls access to a work” if the measure, in the ordinary course of its operation, requires the application of information, or a process or a treatment, with the authority of the copyright owner, to gain access to the work.

    Which means that it doesn’t even need to be good drm, a rot13 ‘encryption’ is good enough.

    Violations of the DMCA can be criminal and can result in prison time.

    Dumping a game cart or digital download on switch cannot be done without circumventing drm, and is therefore, unequivocally illegal, unfortunately.





  • A generator is one option, solar panels or just regular battery backups are another option.

    If the grid is up but overloaded you can also just charge slower, which for 99% of people will work.

    At least you can charge your car at all, if there is an actual power outage, the gas pumps won’t be working at all, and even if they are, it requires so much infrastructure to deliver gas to the pumps that they won’t be working for long.

    Edit: since when did an expensive car equal easy to operate? Historically, the more expensive the car gets the more caveats to the operation there are.




  • Declarative, functional code is by definition much closer to ai prompts than any imperative code. Businesses are just scared of functional programming because they think that by adopting oop then can make developers interchangeable, the reality is that encapsulation is almost never implemented in a proper way and we should be instead focusing on languages that enforce better systems over slamming oop into everything.

    Hell, almost every modern developer agrees that inheritance is just bad and many frown upon polymorphic code as well.

    So if we can’t properly encapsulate, we don’t want inheritance or polymorphism, we don’t want to modify state, what are we even doing with oop?