Thoughts on Kagi?
force @ force @lemmy.world Posts 1Comments 458Joined 2 yr. ago
They are all palatal sibilants in Japanese, while in English they're palato-alveolar sibilants. Very hard difference for English speakers to hear, but the distinction is common enough to exist in many languages. And the "ch"/"j"/"sh"/"zh" sounds I speak of are just common variations of "t"/"d"/"s"/"z" that occur before "i" (they are spelled si -> shi, zi -> zhi/ji, ti -> chi, di -> ji).
Usually "zhi" isn't spelled out in Rōmaji though, actually it's often spelled "ji" even when they're sometimes pronounced differently (so "zi" and "di" end up being spelled the same, perhaps confusingly, but most people pronounce them the same so it doesn't really matter). But I think pronouncing them differently is more of an archaic, obsolete, ot dialectal thing anyways.
The "h" in "hi" also sounds different.
The spelling also changes in the same way before a syllable that starts with a "y" sound, e.g. syu -> shu or dyo -> jo.
Before "u" some consonants also change (hu -> fu, tu -> tsu, du -> dzu).
These sound changes don't occur for all speakers/dialects, some don't have a "shi" and just say "si" for example, but they are the most common and standard I believe.
The vowel sounds in "près" and "pré" are very clearly different, and the sound in "prêt" changes from "è" to "é" when in liaison because it always sounds like "è" at the end of words (and separately, in closed syllables) and always sounds like "é" in open syllables otherwise (liaison triggers a change in the syllable structure which changes the vowel here). This does not contradict what I said. You said "(pr)é" and "(pr)è" sound the same, nothing about "(pr)ê".
Russian speakers might say the same thing about things that exist in English but not Russian like articles (the words "a"/"an" and "the"), Afrikaans speakers may say the same thing about verb conjugation at all, Chinese speakers may say the same thing about tense, Japanese speakers may say the same thing about having a separate present & future tense. There is a good explanation here or two already, but language features that seem "useless" or "complex" to us are important in other languages and are there for a purpose. Every language has features that would make others question it.
Yeah in Japanese a few consonant sounds like 'r' and 'l' sounds or 'h'/'f' or 's'/'th' or 'z'/'ð' are basically heard as the same (an American 'r' might even sound like a weird 'w' to Japanese), and English has around 17 to 24 distinctive vowel sounds generally (based on quality) while Japanese has 5 plus vowel length and tones (pitch accent). As a result of the phonetic differences between the languages, it can be hard to hear or recreate the differences in sound quality (especially when it's Japanese on the speaking/listening end, but Americans also sure have a terrible time trying to make Japanese sounds like the "n" or "r" or "ch"/"j" or "sh"/"zh" or "f" or "u". they just perceive it as the same as the closest sounds in English)
In my experience, only God can hear the difference between Polish "dż" and "dź" / "cz" and "ć" (and the others)...
"Pré" and "prè" consistently sound distinctly different in most, dare I say almost all, accents in mainland France. The difference is the same with basically all words spelled with those vowels. "Ê" also sounds like a long "è" in most words for most people. "e" also sounds like "é" when before silent letters except for "t", and sounds like "è" when before multiple letters or before "x" or before silent "t" or if it's the last sound except for open monosyllabic words, and it sounds special or is silent elsewhere. "-ent" is always silent too. Obviously doesn't apply to "en/em", also special exception for "-er/-es".
"machine (à laver)" is feminine and it seems to have something to do with power or industry
I don't know if you're trying to imply that Microsoft does for Windows, but I seriously doubt he gets sponsored by Windows
I approve! Perfectly stated.
Well yeah, the problem is a large portion of tradesmen are often misguided or just wrong on like every topic in the first place. My experience with welders and specific types of electricians, for example, is mostly filled with extremely misogynist people who take pride in ignorance. They aren't very reliable for opinions on education or even common sense. Of course, this doesn't apply to all tradesmen by any means, but those who aren't like this are likely to get strongarmed into acting the same or just get bullied out of the field. Like these are professions where employers will decide to not hire you based on the vehicle you drive, you have to conform to this "culture" of theirs in order to be taken seriously.
Something which doesn't really apply to "lower" skill welders, but I've heard from some "higher" skill (pipe/aerospace) welders, is complaints about not being able to do basic arithmetic&algebra or understand trigonometry... I'm not ripping on them, but they've seemingly had a lot of annoying situations and wasted a lot of time because they don't know multiplication well, and don't understand the logic behind the mathematics that they frequently encounter in their job. Sure, a lot of times the mathematics in trades can just be measuring and reading schematics and nothing else, but some work needs that kind of education and most tradesmen just seem to not have it.
Other types of education involved with communication, psychology, sociology, etc. can be extremely important for these professions, even if they don't affect the manual labour itself. A job is usually a lot more than just doing the work you were tasked to do, you have to actually discuss with people, and a lot of tradesmen completely lack skills in that department to the point it frequently causes issues...
I don't think the request is obvious when it's worded that way, could you elaborate?
I mean that's mostly because a separate Nintendo controller that wasn't highly specialized for Nintendo games specifically is mostly a new thing.
We've had Xbox controllers and Playstation controllers for 2 and almost 3 decades respectively, and Nintendo games are the most targetted for emulation so of course there will be a lot of community effort put into mods for those.
Meanwhile your options for Nintendo controllers practically boiled down to Wii controllers, the Wii U gamepad, the NES controllers, the N64 controller, the consoles themselves like the 3DS/DS/Gameboy, and some others. Most of them are part of the consoles themselves so are out of the picture, the Wii controller is just not suitable for other consoles, the NES controllers don't have joysticks, and the N64 controller has a single joystick.
The Switch controllers, which are relatively new, are really the only ones suitable for emulating other consoles' games, and you can use the Switch controller to comfortably emulate many non-Nintendo games now.
Considering that, another important factor is that since the Switch controllers are more recent, they're less likely to have been adapted to older or more obscure games especially, since to do that people now have to go do "back in time" modding for old games years or decades after their release. And since most modern non-Nintendo console games are available on PC natively and aren't emulated, there's really no incentive to make QOL mods for people using Switch controllers (or any other kinds of controllers for that matter, including PS & Xbox controllers) on newer titles.
It has nothing to do with the button layout itself, it wouldn't even make sense for that to be the reason. People will use whatever controller they have available, so people who play Nintendo games most often will likely use Nintendo controllers and people who play the Xbox most often will likely use Xbox controllers.
I can't tell if you're being serious or not, ngl... if you're being serious though then why do you suppose that having B be above A and Y be above X is the "correct" way? The way I see it, having A be the interact button seems more natural than having B be the interact button, and the former is how it's set up on games like BOTW that use Nintendo controllers. Tbh though I actually wish bottom was X, left was A, right was B, and up was Y. An abomination to modern gamers, I'm sure, but it seems the most sensical considering the cultural perception of the symbol X imho.
Also Xbox isn't the entire game industry... Playstation doesn't even use the same symbols, and I can't think of any relevant consoles which use similar controllers to those 3. The only "official" controllers I can think of that use the Xbox order are ones made for specifically Xbox/Microsoft. I guess also the Sega Dreamcast? But that's more because Microsoft played a large role in making the Dreamcast, and later based the Xbox heavily off of Sega consoles/controllers, and the button layout just came along with everything else. They didn't want to conflict with Nintendo and potentially get into legal issues based off of controller button layout, so that was the easiest route.
That being said, I'm so used to the Xbox controller layout that using Nintendo controllers gives me an aneurysm because Xbox switches the buttons. Any time I emulate a Nintendo game I just use my Xbox One controller and a mod to display the input tips differently. But that's not anyone's fault.
Nintendo put the buttons in their order 2 decades before the Xbox even existed, if anything Microsoft is putting buttons on the wrong way around. Unless of course you're referring to something other than the order of X Y A B.
It says in the post description, it was originally set for Q4 2024 but now it's going to be in Q1 2025 allegedly
Dude wtf you're all over this site, are you John Lemmy or something?
Anyways, Japanese uses different writing systems – the first two that people usually learn (Kana) are basically just symbols for syllables (also called "mora"), Hiragana and Katakana. They use a different set of "letters" which represent the same sounds (you'll find a "ka", "m/n", "fu", "o", etc. in both, but they look different). There's also Kanji, which is an umbrella term for the various usages of characters which were adapted from Chinese, this includes Kana but generally people don't mean to include Kana when they say "Kanji". One Kanji can have MANY meanings and pronunciations, due to many multiple ways in which the character was adapted from Chinese, so the writing is extremely contextual. You can generally "spell out" a Kanji with Hiragana or Katakana, often times this is used when learning new Kanji or to disambiguate meaning. It's also one of the ways you use to type Japanese on a device/keyboard (the characters can be converted to a Kanji using software where you can pick based on a list of most common Kanji which are pronounced the way you typed).
Since Japanese doesn't use spaces or dots or anything usually, you'll often see all three mixed together in order to separate different words, although in modern times Katakana has especially been used for borrowings from foreign languages.
There's also Rōmaji, which is a term for the various romanization/latinization systems for Japanese. This one is also commonly used to type Japanese text.
The JLPT is the Japanese Language Proficiency Test, you take it to get a certificate stating your Japanese language abilities and the results are ranked from N5 being the lowest (correlates to A1-A2 CEFR, slightly more than beginner knowledge) to N1 being the highest (B2-C2 CEFR, high level of abilities in the language)
The "alphabet" is generally the easiest part of learning a language, and an obviously important part, so the person being unwilling to put the time into it means he probably isn't serious enough about learning the language to actually follow it through.
Apologies if my explanation is off, I don't speak Japanese.
Do you often hear the ringing of switching power supplies and devices when you are in a quiet space?
It's especially common among people with Autism/ASD and ADHD to hear noises other people often don't hear. Like those LED light bars, or coffee pot crackling, or electricity from appliances. For ADHD I've seen a few people claim that those sounds are just as audible for everyone else, but everybody just subconsciously filters it out and doesn't notice it, while people with ADHD are easily caught by it. I assume for ASD it would be somewhat similar – plus Autistic people are a lot more susceptible to sensory issues, although people with ADHD also often have fucked up senses, which can make noises like that a LOT more noticeable (and even problematic/headache-inducing/stressful/painful).
The guns included 11 machine guns, 133 handguns, and 60 assault rifles, authorities said.
A little confused by this... a majority of assault rifles are machine guns, no? And I can't imagine what other kind of fully auto weapon he could have gotten. What are the "11 machine guns", SMGs or LMGs/GPMGs?
Edit: He straight up just has belt-fed machine guns, how the fuck do you obtain 11 of those?
what the hell is a "hon"
libraries with library cards don't exist around here
I have 2000 searches in the past 7 days... 300 searches a month seems so miniscule