I mean why are you even surprised
paradox2011 @ paradox2011 @lemmy.ml Posts 0Comments 200Joined 2 yr. ago
Meme goodness aside, if you want an analytical look at the psychology of Anakin, check out this video.
If you want a super deep dive on the philosophy behind Jedi thought (which is at the core of Star Wars as George Lucas framed a lot it from his experience as a Buddhist) take a look at this YouTube video. I've never heard a more complete explanation of the star wars universe and it addresses a lot of the superficial criticisms people direct towards the Jedi and general stance the movies take on good and bad.
As a secondary plug, for any who played the RPG Knights of the Old Republic II, here is an awesome breakdown of the Kreia character by the same creator. Not just interesting from the perspective of fans of the game, but philosophy in general.
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The general public's apathy towards privacy is quite frustrating. I think there are laws that are pretty much what you outline here to one degree or another in various countries. Whether people respect them or whether the government respects them is a totally different thing though.
That's very true, and as an actor Sonequa does really give the role everything she has. I think that touches on one of the other commenter's points a bit: Trek seems to thrive when they balance the story load between characters. When a lot of plot weight is put on to one character it starts to feel like they are simply a plot device. I've heard complaints about Kirk in TOS suffering from this as well, but perhaps nostalgia keeps me from being too offended 😄.
Your comment made me realize something that is a the root of why I never connected with the Michael Burnham character or Sonequa's acting, and its linked (from a writing perspective) to Ethan Peck's Spock: they're both portraying the clash of human and Vulcan culture, with a few key differences. Spock is a half-vulcan, half-human that was raised and shaped by Vulcan culture. Ethan portrays someone who is firmly rooted in logic, but struggles to control the human emotional elements within him. The key to his character growth is accepting and unifying the two halves of himself (although Trek as a series is not always clear about this. Sometimes it seems they indicate he does best when suppressing the human side, not integrating it.) Burnham is full human and raised through her formative years by human parents, but then goes through a massive childhood trauma and is adopted and given formal training on Vulcan. Sonequa portrays someone who tries to firmly root herself in logic, but who suffers greatly because that denies the experience of her inner self. The key to her character growth is rebelling against the expectations others (and she herself) had put on her in order to discover (pun intended 😏) who she actually is. Which of these two struggles we connect with depends on our own childhood and emotional make up, and the other may seem foreign and empty simply because we haven't experienced it. Spock's struggles always seemed more realistic and balanced to me with Burnham coming across like a teenage edgelord rebelling against her parents. I think now I'll be looking at it very differently, and it makes me excited to see what Season 4 brings. I might do some rewatches of the early seasons too, if I can ever finish working my way through Voyager 😅. Thank you for your comment, sorry mine is so long, brevity is not my strong suite 😵💫
And one more thing I agree with from your original post: Star Trek as a franchise really struggles "To boldly go where no one has gone before" anymore. The studio clearly values success over quality and the reliance on nostalgia for current shows is very disappointing. There are glimmers here and there, maybe the section 31 movie will bring some fresh air to the writing table.
I think its a reflection of the writers more than anything. Trek writers usually try to pull their ideas from current political and sociological issues. AI and genetic engineering (which I think is thinly veiled commentary on gender) are simply the current issues of our time. It is odd that they've chosen the federation to be the problem in the recent shows though. In older trek the federation was always the ones to stand up for the cause and the conflict came from worlds they visited. Of course, that's probably linked to the same idea as the AI/genetics, people are much more frustrated and disillusioned with western government these days and the writers are no doubt exploring that.
So there will probably be changes in the federations stance that are two steps beyond what we see happening in the world around us. Trek has always tried to lead people in a moral/philosophical direction.
I definitely agree with you. While I didn't like a lot of the elements of Disco season 1, it had a genuineness that was really compelling. Season 2 corrected the things I personally didn't like but kept the heart and soul which has made it some of the finest modern Trek in my opinion. Season 3 was alright I suppose, but didn't have that spark of authenticity. I'm dubious about anything more from Disco.
The big issue for me is also the show centering on Burnham. Season 2 put her along side Anson Mount's Pike which balanced the scale nicely and their personalities played well together, but other than that Burnham has always felt like the main character of a CW show to me. I don't know if it's the writing for her character or the acting, but she's a weak point of the show to me. Doug Jones on the other hand has been incredible and I could watch him play Saru all day 😄
If you use KDE, look for the "TV Glitch [burn-my-windows]" opening and closing animation. It's a default setting in the KDE Settings > Workspace behavior > Desktop effects > Window open/close animation section. It's really good in my opinion, especially if you tinker with the open/close timing to make it a little more crisp.
This Lemmy community is a pretty good resource for inspiration, and sometimes you can snag animation or icon sources from the descriptions or comments. It's not super in depth on the how to end of it though.
You only need a subscription if you use it over 300 times per day (or week, I can't remember). I haven't needed an API token and have been using it with no account successfully.
You could try Audile if you don't mind switching away from Shazam. I don't use the app heavily, but it has worked great for me.
I would be surprised if someone who games stuck entirely to open source options. Even so there are some pretty good entries out there like Shattered Pixel Dungeon. It's pretty amazing and better than any top down SNES game I've ever seen.
There's probably a mixture of those that do and those that don't, but I'd imagine statistically speaking there is a majority who play videogames, especially given the generation that is coding now has grown up with video games as a big part of their childhood.
Don't worry, you're not breaking it to me 😄. I've never found the need for more than 10 aliases myself and I could be wrong but I think that needing more than 10 functioning aliases at a given time is a bit of a fringe case when it comes to the average user. It sounds like your comments are based on pretty heavy usage.
I'm not saying that Simple Login is better than the other two services (which I've never used so can't compare) However, from using the free tier of the service for years now the free version of Simple Login is feature complete and does not make you bump in to pay walls.
Yes, and it is very feature complete. It's what I use.
The paid plans are largely just a way to support development, but specifically it allows you to use custom domains, not just automatically generated ones. There's some other benefits like PGP and wildcard domains, but the custom domains seems like the biggest draw to a paid plan in my book.
Start with either The Original Series or Next Generation. There's a lot of structure that gets laid down in those series that other installments rely on heavily. I think Deep Space 9 might also be a good one to get in to early.
Techlore, The New Oil, and The Linux Experiment. All three have YouTube channels as well.
From a recovering distro-hopping addict, there's two ways to dip your toes in to the various Linux experiences:
- When you install your distro, partition a separate /home folder that is distinct from your root and boot partitions. There are many good walkthroughs on YouTube on doing this process, it's fairly simple. Once you do that you can keep your home folder intact as you install different distros over the top. Just make sure to mark you /home folder each time and don't format it during install.
- Like another commenter said, try distrobox. It will allow you to test out the various distro bases pretty conveniently. Another similar option is learning how to set up virtual machines. Again, sounds more difficult than it is. There's many good videos that walk you through the process.
Aside from the mechanics of testing out different options, I would recommend KDE as a desktop environment. Cinnamon and Gnome are both flexible, but do feel more restricting than I like. You can customize nearly every element of KDE, I really like it.
Really, most distros are fairly similar, aside from using different package managers and having different sets of software pre-installed. The desktop environment is where you'll experience the most user facing differences.
If you like to tinker, make your way over to an arch based distro at some point. I've really enjoyed endeavourOS, but you will need to mess with config files to get your printer working and things like that.
I'm not totally sure on the gaming aspect, but I really liked CalyxOS when I was using it. It has good support for most Play store apps, and most Microsoft apps don't even need MicroG to operate. The things that don't work (on any non Google ROM) are casting to chromecast, Android Auto, and Google pay. RCS didn't work on CalyxOS, so I switched to GrapheneOS to get RCS functionality, but if I ever decide I don't want that anymore I'd go back to CalyxOS. There's some things I don't like much about the user space Google play stuff on Graphene and there is a ton of reliance on grapheneOS servers for low level system checks that I don't know how I feel about.
You won't be able to download paid apps unless you log in to Aurora store with your Google account, and some people have reported getting there accounts deactivated for doing that. Never happened to me though.
Installing Microsoft TTF packages on my distro used to be one of the first things I did. Sometime back I ended up finding suitable replacements that are stock (less packages, less installation steps, less proprietary software.)
I've recently found the Inter-font package (mentioned in one of Infinitely Galactic's YouTube videos. It's excellent, clean like Noto Sans, but slightly more readable. I'll swap in the Ubuntu font every now and then for fun though, I really like that one too.
Haha, that's great 😆
Seriously, it's rare for me to be so engrossed in something that I'll sit through a 2 hour video, but with this one I was legitimately sad when it ended 😄