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Posted on 19-03-13, 12:43 in Blackouts
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Posted by CaptainJistuce

If the US was trying to take out Venezuela, we would've DONE IT by now. The country's problems are genuinely self-inflicted, and fairly well-documented as such.
Also, the CIA probably wanted the aluminum equipment intact and usable.

Their dictator-in-chief is an inept, ham-fisted, and violent buffoon and his clumsy attempts to manipulate the mood of the people are doing more damage to his position than the CIA ever could.

According to the Venezuelan government, the blackout was an act of sabotage masterminded by the opposition leader, which is standard practice for Maduro. Every time anything goes wrong, it is the opposition's fiendish plan to destroy the country and sell it to the capitalist pigdogs. And every time something goes right for the opposition, Maduro makes sure something goes wrong in the country.


That's definitely possible. On the other hand, if you want to get really conspiratorial, "America did it" is the go-to excuse for any third world dictator. So even if America really did it, whoever says that would not be taken seriously.

Take this, for instance. Anyone who claims that the Israeli intelligence stole their shoe sounds legitimately insane. Thus, if they did want to discredit someone, it's a waterproof plan.

As for toppling the government, it's not only a matter of might. They would have to get the necessary preconditions to be able to get enough popular support for their candidate, which they don't really have right now. Maduro has an approval rating of 21%, which is low, but not terribly low. Around the end of their terms, Nixon and Bush Jr. had approval ratings hovering around 25%. The president of France, Emmanuel Macron, currently has a similar approval rating. But just because of that, it doesn't mean that most of their subjects would support a military removal of them from power.

Venezuelans want President Maduro out, but most would oppose foreign military intervention to remove him

Would Venezuelans support foreign military intervention?

My research in Venezuela suggests otherwise.

All credible polling in Venezuela says that most Venezuelans desperately want Maduro out. But that does not necessarily mean they are open to desperate measures.

In November 2018, I worked with Datanálisis, one of Venezuela’s most respected polling companies, to add several questions about about military intervention and potential negotiations to its nationwide tracking poll.

When asked whether they would support “a foreign military intervention to remove President Maduro from his position,” only 35 percent said yes — hardly the warm welcome predicted by advocates. More than half — 54 percent — would reject such an operation.


Regarding the aluminum plant, it's not worth that much compared to the oil and the risk of having Cuba 2.0 in the US' back yard. To destroy an entire industry of a country, leaving lots of people down the chain unemployed, will hurt the state far more than what it would cost to later rebuild it.
As far as cost is concerned, the investment cost for new aluminium production facilities is between €4000 and €5000 per tonne of production capacity per year. At the maximum capacity of 430 000 tonnes a year, that's approximately $2.2B of equipment lost.

Venezuela's failings look a lot like those of some Arab nations

I'm not supporting Maduro, but you need to be able to have two thoughts in your head at the same time. Just because he is bad, doesn't mean that absolutely everything that goes wrong in Venezuela is orchestrated by him. And just because he has mismanaged the economy in the past, doesn't mean that specific incidents now couldn't be caused by foreign actors.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-14, 14:37 in Blackouts (revision 2)
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So does America.


Map of regime change actions undertaken by the United States
Red: United States
Dark green: Coups and regime change actions
Light green: Election interference
Blue: Territories annexed by the US following regime change actions and invasions

Edit: this map doesn't even include all of them. I was going to write out a list but it would be too much work. Former SU, Arab World, most of Europe (interference only), and various Asian countries.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-14, 15:15 in Blackouts (revision 1)
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allied_intervention_in_the_Russian_Civil_War

Severely short of troops to spare, the British and French requested that President Wilson provide American soldiers for the campaign. In July 1918, against the advice of the United States Department of War, Wilson agreed to the limited participation of 5,000 United States Army troops in the campaign. This force, which became known as the "American North Russia Expeditionary Force"[15] (a.k.a. the Polar Bear Expedition) were sent to Arkhangelsk while another 8,000 soldiers, organised as the American Expeditionary Force Siberia,[16] were shipped to Vladivostok from the Philippines and from Camp Fremont in California.



There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-14, 19:57 in Blackouts
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No, don't misunderstand me, I'm not saying that the current government is any good. All I'm saying is that from here it looks identical to a US color revolution, just like in the Arab Spring. And most of those countries are arguably worse off now than they were before the revolutions.
Most likely, you'll get your wish. But be careful what you wish for.

Take Libya, for instance:

After coming to power, the RCC government took control of all petroleum companies operating in the country and initiated a process of directing funds toward providing education, health care and housing for all. Despite the reforms not being entirely effective, public education in the country became free and primary education compulsory for both sexes. Medical care became available to the public at no cost, but providing housing for all was a task that the government was not able to complete.[6] Under Gaddafi, per capita income in the country rose to more than US$11,000, the fifth-highest in Africa.[7] The increase in prosperity was accompanied by a controversial foreign policy and increased political repression at home.[5][8]

Sound familiar?

Muammar Gaddafi, the deposed leader of Libya, was captured and killed on 20 October 2011 during the Battle of Sirte. Gaddafi was found hiding in a culvert west of Sirte and captured by National Transitional Council forces. He was killed shortly afterwards. The NTC initially claimed he died from injuries sustained in a firefight when loyalist forces attempted to free him, although a graphic video of his last moments show rebel fighters beating him and one of them sodomizing him with a bayonet[2] before he was shot several times as he pleaded for his life.[3]


The interim Libyan authorities decided to keep Gaddafi's body "for a few days", NTC oil minister Ali Tarhouni said, "to make sure that everybody knows he is dead."[30] The body was moved to an industrial freezer where members of the public were permitted to view it [31] until 24 October.[32] Video shows Gaddafi's body on display in the center of an emptied public freezer in Misrata.[33] Some people traveled hundreds of kilometres to see proof that Gaddafi was dead; one said, "God made the pharaoh as an example to the others. If he had been a good man, we would have buried him. But he chose this destiny for himself."[34] One reporter observed gunshot residue on the wounds, consistent with shots at close range.[19]

They didn't spread his organs out, but they did put him on public display in an industrial freezer after sodomizing him with a bayonet and executing him. So I would say it is close enough to what you want.

And where is Libya now? Are they better or worse off than before they toppled the dictator? Was it worth it?

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-15, 16:31 in Blackouts (revision 1)
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Posted by BearOso
Except in this case there's no organized militarized rebellion. There's no rebel fighters, the opposition is pacifist. The US is only denouncing Maduro and attempting to provide supplies for the general population. There's no incentive to invade except humanitarianism. Since you're hinting toward this angle: the oil supplies aren't needed and aren't sufficient. Mismanagement and stupidity, not especially tyranny, are ruining the country.

No, it's true that there isn't currently a militarized rebellion. However that was most likely what they were trying to achieve, with wanting the military members to defect and all.
As for the "humanitarian aid," to accept it would be to take the US at its word that there's nothing but aid in it. Clearly, they do not agree with this assessment. For instance, according to the Venezuelan FM, they contained nails and wire, for barricades. The US has smuggled weapons in aid shipments in the past, so it's not as insane a decision as you claim.
(It is however a great mystery why they don't just search it before handing it out)

I'm not saying the intervention is for oil. My guess would be that it's another escalation in the US/Israel–Russia/Iran conflict, in addition to the US not wanting Cuba 2.0 in their back yard (see: Truman Doctrine)

If it's for humanitarianism, then why Venezuela specifically? There are lots of oppressive regimes that the US has never bothered to invade, and some which they even back. The geopolitical explanation makes much more sense.

Posted by wertigon

Uh yeah, could you provide a more updated map showing everything post-WWII?

Because I promise you, I could give you a similar map for the UK, though most of those influences would be pre-WWI. After WWI, british economy tanked and they had severe trouble keeping the empire together. In WWII, the empire collapsed completely, which is why Australia and India now are their own countries (among many other things).

Does that mean we should crucify the UK for everything that happened over a century ago?

Is a list okay?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_involvement_in_regime_change#Cold_War_era

In the aftermath of World War II, the U.S. government expanded the geographic scope of its actions to foster regime change, as the country struggled with the Soviet Union for global leadership and influence within the context of the Cold War. Significant operations included the U.S. and UK-orchestrated 1953 Iranian coup d'état, the 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion targeting Cuba, the anti-communist purge in Indonesia, and support for the Argentinian Dirty War, in addition to the U.S.'s traditional area of operations, Central America and the Caribbean. In addition, the U.S. has interfered in the national elections of many countries, including in Japan in the 1950s and 1960s to keep its preferred center-right Liberal Democratic Party in power using secret funds, in the Philippines to orchestrate the campaign of Ramon Magsaysay for president in 1953, and in Lebanon to help Christian parties in the 1957 elections using secret cash infusions.[3] The U.S. has executed at least 81 overt and covert known interventions in foreign elections during the period 1946–2000.[4]

In contrast, the only one in modern times Britain did that I can think of would be Rhodesia, and that was their colony after all. Still incredibly rude though, but that's for another thread.

Posted by tomman
I do get your point, but that's the same excuse that everybody and his dog is using to do nothing ("we must stay aside" - that's not like the '80s USA which was willing to get rid of commie pigs far less dangerous than Maduro - the current one only worries about TERRIRISM™ and doesn't give a fuck about what happens to us because we aren't a threat to anybody but ourselves, and all we got from the international community is token acts which really don't help us at all), which clearly is a unsustainable position in the short run. As I've just said: the next blackout likely will be permanent and most of us will not survive the ensuing chaos.

The current USA has done lots more of regime change than that. Ukraine and Arab Spring are fairly recent examples. The reason was fairly simple, they were aligned with Russia when they should have been aligned with the US.

If they don't give a fuck about you, then what does "5,000 troops to Colombia" mean?
Posted by tomman

While we get that we are likely to repeat the same errors if we get rid of Maduro (and trust me: it will happen because 90% of the Venezuelans are complete and absolute morons; the other 10% are waiting its turn to take advantage of the situation to satisfy their own personal agendas), we STILL may have hope of actually getting back into the rails. Venezuela isn't exactly an Arab hellhole full of hateful people willing to kill between themselves (YET!), but if we let this shit continue without an effective and HARD solution, we might as well become one, and if that happens, well... all bets are off. America only has room for one Cuba, not two.

Remember: we are also becoming the next drug cartel haven too. Mexican mafias don't really like the competition...

That's a fair point. Venezuela is probably more capable of an orderly transition than, say, Libya or Syria. It is a legitimate country with legitimate industries and a reasonably well educated population. Cartels pale in comparison to IS, and there isn't much religious extremism in the region from what I know of. So it might turn out like Tunisia if you're lucky.

Posted by tomman

If Venezuelans are dumb enough to let another commie asshole to fuck us hard in the ass, well, it's time to send the nukes. There are too many countries in the world, noone will miss a tiny piece of desolated land in their next Geography quiz.

I've lost all hopes at this point. I don't even want to talk at my family anymore (it's split between "I don't care about you anymore", "Maduro will leave the power in the next 3 days, BE POSITIVE!!!" and a lone communistoid that still defends the ill-fated actions of the regime). I've developed a state of anxiety that I never expected to have in my life. I don't even have a outlet to express my frustrations anymore (much less with my faulty DSL which will never -and I repeat, NEVER- get repaired)... except for this messageboard, and even I understand that out of all places, this is not the best place for it.

OH FUCK, POLITICS REALLY PISS ME OFF!!! Politics destroyed my career, disbanded my family and friends, nuked my incomes, are leaving me to starve to death while I fight with this brokenass laptop that didn't even wanted to turn on after 4 days of being without power, and definitely have pretty much ruined my life, my hopes and dreams, and my expectations for the future.

No matter the outcome of all this, I'll never have respect for anyone engaging into a politics career anymore in my life.

Just because you do not take an interest in politics doesn't mean politics won't take an interest in you.

You're posting in a politics thread, and people can just skip it if they want, so I don't see what makes it inappropriate. It's in the "Discussion" forum and there is discussion in the thread.

But if you're feeling extra masochistic one day, why not head to one of the myriads of other forums on-line intended for discussion of politics, Venezuela, or Venezuelan politics?

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-16, 16:15 in Something about cheese!
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• When he was younger, he was arrested on drunk-driving charges and played in a punk band. Now 46, he still skateboards.

How do you do, fellow kids?

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-17, 02:24 in Mozilla, *sigh*
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Posted by Screwtape
Old news, but Stay classy, Pale Moon. (why Pale Moon does not have an OpenBSD port)

mattatobin seems like a fairly reasonable guy, only his sidekick who seems a bit too pissed off for his own good. They both seem to have the same issue many of those kinds of developers do; due to spending too much time interacting with complete idiots they respond to anyone doing anything with complete hostility. You can see it clearly in the FAQ/rule lists of cough some websites as well, where the author sometimes appears to have been figuratively seething with rage when he or she wrote it.

All this branding nonsense is insane, but then again they didn't start it, Mozilla did. Meanwhile, no other open source projects have any legitimate issues with people making substandard forks without changing the name. No self-respecting hack would do that. Either they're competent enough to actually make something of value, in which case there is no problem, or they are incapable of this, in which case they are the kind of person who wouldn't need a complicated license agreement to get persuaded into rebranding the project they're forking into something along the lines of "PaleMoon+ Optimized Edition by somedude123", in which case any sane person would avoid it, in which case there is no problem either.

It feels like somewhere along the line, the free software movement got mired down in the legislation they were fighting against (GNewspeak: "use copyright to guarantee their freedom" - direct quote), confusing the map with the territory and getting us all into this great big hash of licenses and regulations. For all practical purposes, The Pirate Bay accomplished far more in six years (operating at a net profit) than the FSF has done in thirty-six (spending about $1mil a year) and counting. Even if the heroes who ran TPB would have paid their fines, which they did not, it would still have been a vastly cheaper endeavor ($6.5mil) than whatever the FSF did (something to do with India?) with their money.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-17, 18:25 in Mozilla, *sigh*
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Posted by Screwtape

Really? The guy who starts off the very first post with "You will..."? Not even "Hello, I'm a fan of the Pale Moon browser, and I noticed you're doing this particular thing that the project leaders hate" or "Thanks for helping to get Pale Moon working on your platform, but we've got some problems with the way you're going about it"?

Regardless of the legal or technical merits of his position, that's not the way to get people to want to help you.

Oops, I meant the other way around. wolfbeast seems like a fairly reasonable guy, only his sidekick who seems a bit too pissed off for his own good.
Posted by Screwtape

That's definitely a problem - there's always more jerks in the world, and it can be very difficult to give the next person the benefit of the doubt when the last five people you interacted with were assholes, just ask anyone who's worked retail.

That's really part of the job, though. Some people have the emotional maturity and support network to handle that kind of work, and other people don't, in the same way that some people have the upper-body strength and fitness levels required to haul loads of bricks around all day, and other people don't. If you have those things, you can do the job well, but if you don't have them you're going to do the job poorly, or do OK for a little while and then burn out. If you can't do the job, there's no shame in finding a more appropriate way to contribute.

They're not working retail, though. It's not a job. As harsh as it sounds, they have no obligation to be nice. Linus (until things started going off a cliff) never was a fan of the excessive politeness, and he did just fine.

Posted by Screwtape

All that to say, if the Pale Moon developers and their proxies can't send legal requests in a polite manner, they should find somebody who can do that on their behalf, for their own good, and the good of the project. Heck, if they'd just called their lawyers instead of creating that GitHub issue, the resulting cease-and-desist letter would probably have been more pleasant to read.

Why would they have lawyers, when they can just tell people to knock it off? Their tone is rude for sure, but the law is the law and people following it is not contingent on you being polite. They could send the same request but riddled with expletives, and it would be just as legally effective. They lost the port, and maybe that's not good (or maybe it was, since they didn't seem to be huge fans of the way they were running it), and they appear to have made some spectators on the sidelines upset, but it doesn't really have any bearing on anything. The project climate becomes a little harsher, but that's neither here or there. Some people like it better that way.

Personally, I'm no fan of either, but I would much prefer contributing to a project with a perpetually angry but honest maintainer, than the one with one who uses the disgusting corporate sickly-sweet tone, referring to problems as "challenges," expends large amounts of time on writing meaningless documents about "inclusive language" (and actually enforcing them, instead of treating them like repository ornaments like the gratuitous makefiles), and uses expressions such as "yikes" and "sweetie" instead of explaining their issues with a given suggestion clearly.

Man, I hate those people. The screaming rage-type is generally just hazing anyway, and should not be something about which one worries excessively. Rather aggressive-aggressive than passive-aggressive, which is what all these "communication policies" generally tend to boil down to.

Posted by Screwtape

There's also the people who take browsers like Firefox and sell "subscriptions", where for an monthly fee they'll send you a copy of the Firefox installer and tell you they've scanned it for viruses. There's even people who will build Firefox with an insecure configuration, or with nefarious CA certificates bundled, or with spyware, and pass it off as the real deal.

Sure, you and I probably wouldn't fall for such tricks, but with a product as widely used as a web-browser it's good to have some level of protection; protection that trademark law was invented to provide.

Never heard of this. Wild guess is that these people aren't overly concerned with licenses. Also, trademarks are quite expensive and cumbersome to register. It's only a select few countries that have much protection for unregistered ones. Pale Moon don't seem to involve trademarks either, just copyright law.

Posted by Screwtape

It's not just browsers, either; I remember hearing about a bunch of punks who would take every VBA-M release, hex-edit the binary to replace the original attributions with their own names, then upload it to their own website with changelogs like "improved HDMA timing accuracy" and "higher-fidelity colour reproduction for mode-3 graphics", and ridicule the original VBA-M team for being unable to provide such improvements themselves.

It's enough to make a man want to invent a device to punch people in the face over the internet.

That's a violation of most licenses already. No need to bring trademarks into it. Can just send an ordinary C&D, assuming it isn't public domain or similar.

Posted by Screwtape

I'll grant that TPB probably provided more practical freedom than the FSF in the time they were around, but where are they now?

It was a triumph. I'm making a note here, huge success.
It is still online, and works just fine. It's true that there wasn't any more development after the initial release (short of DHT/magnet links decentralization), but the fact still remains that paying for media today is effectively optional, and this improvement persists regardless of whether any future ones are gained. What has the FSF accomplished? Helped large companies externalize software maintenance?

Posted by Screwtape

TPB was an attack on the excesses of copyright law from the outside, the FSF is an attack from within. TPB had much success with little effort, but the System brought its resources to bear, the System squashed TPB, and the System will be immune to such attacks in the future (why download MP3s when you have Spotify? Why download movies when you have Netflix? Why download an office suite when you have Office365.com?). The System cannot attack the FSF, because the FSF is made of the same stuff, so it would just be attacking itself.

I don't see in what way it was squashed. The Pirate Bay came out of the dotcom crash, and filesharing arguably had its heyday in the wake of the 2008 crash. Of course people are using it less today, but this is due to economic conditions. That it still manages to remain relatively popular despite no innovation at all is a testament to its efficiency. Just think, how much effort was expended on The Pirate Bay and how much was expended on streaming services?

Imagine if Popcorn Time didn't suck, and you would have been the same scenario over again. Right now, innovation in this field is stagnating because nobody really cares - for technical users, torrents are fine, and nobody is bothered enough by copyright law to go further - but if someone were to make a version of Popcorn Time with better UI, smarter torrent downloading, subtitle sync that doesn't suck, and smooth integration of I2P or the likes, it would probably have a noticeable impact.

That it's no perpetual motion machine where you give it a push once and it just flies away as if it had negative friction doesn't mean it's no good. The system didn't emerge unscathed as you seem to think. Spotify is barely profitable (and more importantly, has little room for growth), and music industry revenue is down by more than 60% since its peak in 1999 (including streaming). I'm not saying that piracy did it, but it's nowhere as big an industry as it was back in the day.

Posted by Screwtape

Honestly, if anyone wants to make any kind of techno-social change, investing the money in India or Africa or somewhere like that is probably a far smarter move than doing something in the USA or Europe, calcified as they are in their existing systems. If you really have a better idea, you have a better shot at getting it adopted in a culture that's not already heavily invested in an alternative. For example, the ideas behind Kaizen were invented by Americans, who couldn't get them adopted in America because American industry was in love with Ford-style mass production. It wasn't until those ideas came to Japan post-WWII that they were successful, because Japan's industry was largely destroyed during the war and they were ready to try something new.

No. The Global South at best perpetually skijors on the achievements of the West, and so does China but with actual, quasi-legitimate industry. There isn't any change to affect down there anyway, since nearly nobody uses computers and if they did they would all just use whatever shipped on the computers the West sent them.

It is a common fantasy, that the oppressed third world will rise up against their capitalist masters and do something, but it's not a realistic one. Even the so-called independence movements were mostly just the Soviet Union funding proxy wars, or power struggles that had completely nothing to do with ideology (Sierra Leone). Possibly you might be able to do something in Asia, but they are just like us entrenched in their ways. It is however true that Japan innovates within file sharing, but if someone would solve the issues the anonymous high-latency file-sharing networks have, they would begin to be used here too for other applications than you-know-what. IPFS is doing some work but they are incompetent.

I'd sooner put my faith into "the Blockchain" than Africa to save the day.

If you think that we'd have a hard time changing our system, just think how hard it would be if it's not even your system you built up yourself but rather just a white-label import you adopted having no idea of how it works.

The only reasonable expense Mozilla/FSF could have down there would be outsourcing, but I've never heard of any software development in Africa (excluding South Africa (Ubuntu) and Zimbabwe/Rhodesia (TrueCrypt), neither of which were developed by Africans), and Indian outsourcing is probably not something you want to do for mission-critical software. But that is a great mystery. If they're paying their developers something like $100k a year, why not just move to somewhere that isn't Mountain View, California? Even if they would be hiring slightly worse developers, they'd avoid the "code artisans" which would drastically improve the quality of the product.

I'm not even saying that they should move to Russia or even West Europe, it would be enough to move to literally anywhere else in the United States that isn't Silicon Valley.

All of these people have been dependent on massive amounts of funding for so long that they've gotten addicted to it without having anything to show for it. When three guys with little to no resources or formal education manage to accomplish more than you did in a fraction of the time, someone is doing something wrong, and it ain't them.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-17, 19:41 in I have yet to have never seen it all.
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Posted by Screwtape
Sophie Wilson - The Future of Microprocessors - in this talk from 2016, one of the designers of the original ARM1 CPU discusses how CPUs got ten thousand times faster over the course of her lifetime, and why they aren't going to get much faster than they are now. Among other things, she discusses Moore's Law, Amdahl's Law, and has a cool "power density" chart that plots Intel CPUs from the 80386 to the Core i7 against "hot plate", "nuclear reactor" and "rocket nozzle".

Spoiler: Intel hit "hot plate" shortly after the Pentium Pro, but they chickened out before the P4 could reach "nuclear reactor".

Don't worry, man. They'll start optimizing their code any second now that Moore's law is dead.

It feels like all the technology is stagnating and we're left with nothing but cleanup work. They're all just releasing the same products over and over again with a higher price tag and hoping nobody notices.
Were the "end of history" folks right? The only significant events that have happened this millennium are 9/11 and various cleanup work after it, and that's coming to an end.
It all feels rather depressing, really. Hope something happens.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
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Posted by tomman
Before my DSL dies (again), here is it:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1YAtq4knigW74p8dA1PBZhCx_JBG9TXlrvi-ylQKatuM/edit?usp=sharing

Yes, that's a Google Docs link. Turns out that it's far easier to force YOU -the reader- to download Google's shitpile of Javascripts rather than dealing with Excel's proprietary HTML junk or LibreOffice HTML export artifacts - by default it produces nothing resembling a spreadsheet; if you install Writer2XHTML, the results are far better but the resulting HTML requires A LOT of cleanup due to redundant CSS junk that it's a PITA to deal with on such a document. Plus, clown computing is useful for once (also, yay backups~)

Export to CSV, then convert that to HTML.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-18, 10:44 in Computer Technology News/Discussion
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Posted by tomman

But... for some stuff, things are not so easy. Dubbed anime is a good example, particularly for languages not named "US English". Sure, for most licensed titles you can simply buy the DVD/BD and rip those as many times as you want (for out of print titles you may have to resort to eBay and its legion of scalpers and crazy collector nutjobs), but in some markets we aren't that lucky to get releases on physical media of any kind. I have a 1TB HDD dedicated solely for my Latin American Spanish collection - most of it is irreplaceable because of many reasons ("Sony killed Animax LA" being the #1, while "FBI seized Megaupload" and "people in Latam hates torrents" being #2 and #3, respectively), and recently when I emptied an spare HDD with old backups, I decided it would be a good idea to repurpose it to backup the (in some cases already failing) collection of DVD-Rs with years of downloads. ~250 discs managed to fill the HDD, leaving little spare to spare.

You haven't considered doing like in Russia, separating out the dub to make a separate .aac file?
It makes it drastically easier to share and store, with no real downside.

Could also upload the ISO files to archive.org and then only keep the re-encodes. I think their policy is "anything goes", and don't delete anything short of overt spam, just hide it. Although it might be cumbersome to get the ISOs when you need them again.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-18, 13:16 in Computer Technology News/Discussion
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Posted by tomman

1) Preserving loose audio tracks is of dubious utility - they're not meant to be consumed as a standalone product! I know, I was there, I still have .FLACs of every audio I managed to rip from Animax. Noone wants them, except those making their own encodes/remuxes.

No, they're played together with the regular video files, just like you have separate .srt and video files if you watch a movie. In mpv and VLC, all you have to do is drag and drop the audio file on the video and it attaches. And at least in mpv, it automatically adds any audio file with the same name in the same folder as a new audio track to choose. Of course this doesn't work if you have multiple dubs (unless you put them in one .mka file with multiple streams), but if you only have one official dub you'd like to ship it should be fine.

Also, you can bundle the international encodes (raws/non-hard fansubs) for convenience. Then you could back up just the audio files, and only keep a temporary copy of the video for seeding that can be found elsewhere anyway.

It's curious that only Russia does it this way, while the rest of the world still insist on muxing everything into one file. It would become much easier to make fansubs if you don't have to worry about the legal aspect of it all or bother with encodes.

Posted by tomman

2) Uploading the ISOs to the Archive is actually a great idea, to be fair (why didn't I thought into that!). If my DSL ever gets fixed, I may look about their offerings and how they would deal with those. The goal of my collection is not a private stash where stuff would be lost forever if all of my HDDs were to suddenly die the very same day, but to share and spread the word about those weird and wonderful Touhou fan animations and concerts. If their rule is "anything goes", why not? They preserve absolute turds like the SCD32X library, and those Touhou DVDs are more worthy of preservation than that. Plus, anything that can be done in spite of Chinese file hoarders is always welcome~

Well, the caveat is that that uploading is easy, but if it gets marked as copyrighted it becomes "hidden" and not publicly downloadable, so you'll have to hope they can send you a copy over email or something if that happens.
If they're seeded as torrents, you can upload the torrents there and they will download and save them into the archive automatically.
You could also try uploading the ISO files to rutracker. They appear to be much more interested in raw ISOs/remux/etc than other torrent sites, and seed for a longer time. Although it's not really an archival solution, and only applicable for raws.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-18, 17:00 in Computer Technology News/Discussion
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Posted by tomman
1) Russia does everything wrong, from politics to piracy. I do watch my dubs. Having to remux them prior to watching kills the enthusiasm, thus why noone does that. I'm not one of those Troo UNIX® Way™ nerds that love really convoluted non-solutions, so don't bother. Once again, HDD space is not a problem if you consider that outside US English, the percentage of dubbed anime licenses is rather small. Dragon Ball dubs are not going to be lost anytime soon, while archiving, say, Di Gi Charat Nyo! LA Spanish dub (complete with average quality MPEG-4 video encodes) only requires 3 DVDs, and for a modern multi-TB HDD that's peanuts.

I don't see what Russia does wrong piracy-wise. Library Genesis does not even have a Western counterpart, Sci-Hub (Kazakh, but relies on Russian infrastructure) is useful enough to effect actual social change, and Rutracker tends to have better seeded torrents of better quality than The Pirate Bay, especially for music. To be honest, I think they are miles ahead of the West, unlike the Chinese who can't manage it in a civilized manner despite it being 100% legal and supported by the government.

As for the actual issue: You don't need to remux them, that's the whole point.
Try putting a random mp3 file in the same folder as a video file with the same name (e.g. video.mkv / video.mp3), then play it.
In mpv, the audio track becomes added and selected. In MPC-HC, apparently the same goes but I haven't been able to verify it. In VLC, I was wrong and you need to do some convoluted "open multiple" thing.
I can't think of any other media players that people often use to watch anime. At any rate, you could use ordered playlists to force VLC et al to load the audio files, like Coalgirls does with splitting out the OP/ED. That would also remove all the failure modes of files getting renamed, since it goes by hash instead.

There is another slight gain to this, in that if a new BluRay remaster comes out but only in Japanese, there is (theoretically) no need to encode a whole new release.

2) Rutracker is cool (it has saved my ass in at least a few occasions), but not for Touhou stuff. They do have some stuff (mainly music and maybe the games), but nothing regarding the videos (once again I know because that's one of the places where I look for new material from time to time).

No, I mean you should upload it there. They only have the first three episodes of it, so I'm sure they would appreciate it.
Regarding the copyright part, most circles don't give a damn (considering that they're doing derivative works from another copyright which belongs to a dude that basically has a "anything goes" rule regarding said works), although I've seen some stingy ones in the music arrange area that are trigger happy with those DMCA takedowns. On the video scene? Not so much - most circles are fine as long as you don't go and upload their latest Comiket releases right away (case in point: Manpuku Jinja -of Fantasy Kaleidoscope ~The Memories of Phantasm~ fame- is fine with reuploads, but only if you respect their "first dibs" right on YT/NND uploads, and that's just one example from personal experience)

Ah, probably fine then. Considering even ordinary anime is often found on YouTube (!!!) without anyone bothering to call it in, they should survive a pretty long time.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-18, 19:30 in Computer Technology News/Discussion
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Posted by creaothceann

If the streams are separated into several files, people may only download the files they're interested in, making it harder to ensure the torrent's completeness. Sooner or later the unpopular files are no longer backed by the swarm.

If you have multiple dubs, you mean?
Yeah, that's true, but on the other hand the dubs might be possible to find inside another torrent. If you have five dubs and mux them together, now you get a new file, and it's all or nothing. If you don't then the original torrents might still work.
In this use case, it shouldn't be a big problem anyway. Audio is quite small (below 1 GB for a 2-cour series), and there aren't that many LatAm dubs of each series, compared to Russian where you usually have three or more.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-18, 20:24 in Something about cheese!
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Posted by https://twitter.com/Telstra_news/status/1107526963583844353

We've started temporarily blocking a number of sites that are hosting footage of Friday’s terrorist attack in Christchurch. We understand this may inconvenience some legitimate users of these sites, but these are extreme circumstances and we feel this is the right thing to do.

According to a Reddit thread, that would be 4chan, 8chan, Voat, Bitchute, and Zerohedge.

Man, it sure feels great when a monopoly ISP blocks websites on completely arbitrary grounds. Good luck getting the free market to fix that one for you.

Oh well, it's fine, they can't block all the encrypted VPNs. It's like nailing Jello to a wall, right?

First they came for the socialistspirates...

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-18, 23:27 in I have yet to have never seen it all.
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Posted by creaothceann
F-Zero rendered in 4k

I thought it'd be cool before clicking, but it just looks so flat. It's pretty neat at native resolution though, as long as there is no anti-aliasing.


There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-19, 14:36 in I have yet to have never seen it all.
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Posted by Kawa
Of course it looks flat lol. Such is the nature of the effect 😸

Yeah, but at native res the undersampling helps smooth out the patterns quite a bit. In 4K with AA, it looks more like a texture.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-19, 15:30 in Announcing the bsnes history kit
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Posted by Screwtape

- Sometimes, I'm pretty confident I got it wrong. For example, there's two "new WIP" posts in the v037 thread, then a post that mentions changes that might have landed in wip 4 or 5, so three WIPs are missing but I have no idea which ones.

Four by my count:
Posted by https://board.zsnes.com/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?p=182489#p182489

~\bsnes_v037_wip06>upx -9 bs1.exe
Ultimate Packer for eXecutables
Copyright (C) 1996 - 2008
UPX 3.03w Markus Oberhumer, Laszlo Molnar & John Reiser Apr 27th 2008

File size Ratio Format Name
-------------------- ------ ----------- -----------
1063936 -> 348160 32.72% win32/pe bs1.exe

Packed 1 file.

~\bsnes_v037_wip06>upx --brute bs2.exe
Ultimate Packer for eXecutables
Copyright (C) 1996 - 2008
UPX 3.03w Markus Oberhumer, Laszlo Molnar & John Reiser Apr 27th 2008

File size Ratio Format Name
-------------------- ------ ----------- -----------
1063936 -> 306688 28.83% win32/pe bs2.exe

Packed 1 file.



Also, I don't think all of the WIPs have neat, sequential numbers like that. Take "bsnes_v039_wip20090307.exe", for instance.

It's a damn shame everything was on byuu.org and that wasn't archived. Google code doesn't have changelogs, only binaries.

Maybe it would be of interest to try and match the dates of news published on https://web.archive.org/web/20071002155056/http://byuu.cinnamonpirate.com/?page=bsnes_news to releases?

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
Posted on 19-03-19, 16:40 in Something about cheese!
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I might be mistaken about Telstra, but isn't it a regional monopoly? In such cases, someone desiring Internet access has no choice but to use their service.

The filtering is on a DNS level, so there is no actual interference done. In general, the censorship (not talking about Australia now) is surprisingly efficient. Googling "christchurch video" nets no relevant results, and even good old LiveLeak has fallen (although to be fair, they started censoring content a long time ago)

For someone with about average tech skills and only a smartphone, to find it would probably be quite difficult. That the cat's already out of the bag if anything makes it less bad, not worse. Considering it's a very important primary source for a current news event, I feel the people have a right to know what is going on and not get it censored, in order to be able to form their own opinions. If the censorship actually were successful, we wouldn't be living very far off from Orwell's dystopia where the past gets retconned on seemingly arbitrary grounds. (That said, being incompetent doesn't make you an upstanding moral citizen, just incompetent)

It would be very concerning if the only ones who had access to primary sources were the media, who you then would just have to trust unconditionally to not get anything wrong, no? I can go to a public library and borrow Mein Kampf if I feel like it, and I can do this because it is my right as a citizen to retrieve such information in order to be able to form an opinion. Why is the matter suddenly different when digital?

I understand the argument about privacy, but the material is shot in a public space and of (involuntarily) public figures, and as such it shouldn't apply. I can't see that it would have a lower probability of getting taken down if you were to blur the faces out anyway, so it just feels dishonest to argue the point.

They might not be able to block encryption, but they sure could prosecute you for sending and receiving encrypted content. The GFW even can block most proxies. If they would prosecute people instead of just cutting the connection, it wouldn't be very hard to reach 100% efficiency, since you'd only have to slip up once.

And for a country that has already banned encryption and anonymous prepaid SIM cards, it's not that big a leap. After all, just think of the childrenwhite supremacists...

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
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Regarding Windows 10, I heard of this and would like to hear what someone who's more qualified thinks about it:
Posted by https://ameliorated.info/
Windows 10 AME (Ameliorated) - What Is This Project?

Windows 10 AME aims at delivering a stable, non-intrusive yet fully functional build of Windows 10 to anyone, who requires the Windows operating system natively. Spyware systems, which are abundant in Windows 10 by default, have not been disabled using group policy, registry entries or various other workarounds – they have been entirely removed and deleted from the system, on an executable-level. This includes Windows Update, and any related services intended to re-patch the system via what is essentially a universal backdoor. Core applications, such as the included Edge web-browser, Windows Media Player, Cortana, as well as any appx applications, have also been successfully eliminated. The total size of removed files is about 2 GB.

Great effort has been invested in maintaining the subsequent system’s stability, bug-free operation and user experience, as many of these removed services conflict with core Windows 10 features.

It sounds too good to be true, and I have no idea how they're able to legally distribute it, but the core concept seems reasonable.

There was a certain photograph about which you had a hallucination. You believed that you had actually held it in your hands. It was a photograph something like this.
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