|
kalstrams posted:"Long Play Video Games" are an author-invented category that can mean literally anything, fyi. k thanks
|
# ? Mar 19, 2016 05:36 |
|
|
# ? May 13, 2024 10:30 |
|
I'm mostly just upset that the scale is $/m and not m/$ because clearly the author wanted to show video games as the big winners.
|
# ? Mar 19, 2016 08:24 |
Tiberius Thyben posted:Maybe he means watching longplays
|
|
# ? Mar 19, 2016 12:05 |
|
MissMarple posted:I'm mostly just upset that the scale is $/m and not m/$ because clearly the author wanted to show video games as the big winners. "Going outside" just completely breaks the chart either way.
|
# ? Mar 19, 2016 13:06 |
|
Yeah it's clearly not intended to go into negative values
|
# ? Mar 19, 2016 17:11 |
|
|
# ? Mar 19, 2016 21:51 |
|
I love it.
|
# ? Mar 19, 2016 22:07 |
|
That made me want to grab my screen and shake it really hard.
|
# ? Mar 20, 2016 03:06 |
|
I tried to make it work but the strain made me poo poo myself. Then I saw the secondary x axis...
|
# ? Mar 20, 2016 13:51 |
|
Shut it down, it's over
|
# ? Mar 20, 2016 13:53 |
|
I laughed. Then I remembered that there are some super serious people here who will be triggered by that graph and I laughed again.
|
# ? Mar 20, 2016 16:14 |
|
kalstrams posted:"Long Play Video Games" are an author-invented category that can mean literally anything, fyi. I think the only thing that fits into that category is Minecraft, and I mean the version where this dude walks to the glitchy edge of the world for charity and it's literally gonna take him 20 years.
|
# ? Mar 21, 2016 07:58 |
Carbon dioxide posted:I think the only thing that fits into that category is Minecraft, and I mean the version where this dude walks to the glitchy edge of the world for charity and it's literally gonna take him 20 years.
|
|
# ? Mar 21, 2016 08:26 |
|
Tree Goat posted:
What sort of novels is this person reading for them to be more expensive per hour than a movie in a theatre?
|
# ? Mar 21, 2016 15:07 |
|
Count Roland posted:What sort of novels is this person reading for them to be more expensive per hour than a movie in a theatre? Maybe he hates reading and only enjoys a book for 10 minutes? For a $1 thriller novel the chart checks out.
|
# ? Mar 21, 2016 15:24 |
|
kalstrams posted:"Long Play Video Games" are an author-invented category that can mean literally anything, fyi.
|
# ? Mar 21, 2016 15:36 |
|
Spotted this in the Gay Marriage thread in D&D: What it looks like: Every state except California allows evil people to murder trans people and get away with it! What it actually means: In California, this defense will not work because the law says so and the judge will strike it from the record. Elsewhere in the US, this defense will not work because the prosecution isn't going to let psychopaths on the jury.
|
# ? Mar 21, 2016 15:46 |
|
dpbjinc posted:Spotted this in the Gay Marriage thread in D&D:
|
# ? Mar 21, 2016 19:43 |
|
Gay panic is still legal in Queensland. The north of Australia is like the south of the US.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 10:46 |
|
dpbjinc posted:What it actually means: In California, this defense will not work because the law says so and the judge will strike it from the record. Elsewhere in the US, this defense will not work because the prosecution isn't going to let psychopaths on the jury. Sadly, it does not take psychopaths. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gay_panic_defense
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 10:57 |
|
Going to Quote this one from the Political Cartoon Thread because
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 12:41 |
|
On a scale from Cute to Action-Packed, how Strange-Smart are you?
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 14:10 |
|
Well, left to right seems to be female vs male appeal. I can't figure out the top vs bottom equivalent though.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 14:13 |
|
Vivick posted:Going to Quote this one from the Political Cartoon Thread because
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 19:30 |
|
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 19:57 |
|
That's actually amazing, accurate, informative, and relevant. Probably in fact the absolute best use of a venn diagram I've ever seen
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 20:03 |
|
Judge Schnoopy posted:
Actually, this is the best venn diagram: But yeah, that's a pretty good graph.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 20:05 |
|
It'd probably be more accurate to say that Scientology ∈ paranormal bollocks ∩ religious bollocks ∩ quackery bollocks ∩ psuedoscientific bollocks, as you haven't proved that Scientology is the only member of that intersection.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 20:15 |
|
Hyperlynx posted:Sadly, it does not take psychopaths. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gay_panic_defense Not sure why you're looking upon that "sadly," as in not a single case listed there has it resulted in a jury finding the attacker not guilty: quote:In 1987, Joseph Mitchell Parsons, who called himself the "Rainbow Warrior",[21] claimed that he killed Richard Lynn Ernest to defend against a homosexual advance, but was unable to present any evidence at trial to support this claim...Parsons was executed by lethal injection at Utah State Prison in October 1999. Absent even a single case where a "gay panic" defense leads to an acquittal I'm not sure that a law prohibiting it is a necessary thing. Or even a wise thing, as we generally let defendants make whatever defense claims they feel like bringing up. They may be ridiculous and they may be barred by the judge in the case, but they're rarely excluded as a matter of law from even being attempted. This one seems especially questionable as a working defense, because a necessary element of "I killed him because he freaked me out by being gay" is "I killed him," which is the kind of thing you *don't* want to admit to the court.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 21:13 |
|
Phanatic posted:Not sure why you're looking upon that "sadly," as in not a single case listed there has it resulted in a jury finding the attacker not guilty: The goal of a defense is not always to get a not guilty verdict. A few of those have the people seem to have been convicted on lesser charges, which is the problem. The fact that "gay/trans panic" makes your decision to murder someone somehow less serious than if they weren't gay/trans.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 21:36 |
|
Saagonsa posted:The goal of a defense is not always to get a not guilty verdict. A few of those have the people seem to have been convicted on lesser charges, which is the problem. The fact that "gay/trans panic" makes your decision to murder someone somehow less serious than if they weren't gay/trans. On the information provided, there's no basis whatsoever to say that a gay panic defense had anything to do with the outcome of any case. Parsons presented no evidence at trial to support his claim, and was executed. Schmitz's attempted defense was pretty clearly rejected because claiming diminished capacity for a crime you commit *three days after* the event that supposedly diminished your capacity doesn't pass a laugh test; he was charged with second-degree murder, and that's what he was convicted of. In the Shephard case, the diminished capacity defense was disallowed by the judge. McGee pled out before it even went to trial. The only one where there's any indication that the prosecution settled for lesser charges than they felt were warranted was Cazares, who they offered a plea deal after being unable to secure a conviction, twice, and Cazares was only tied to the crime a month after the others defendants was arrested, when he was implicated by another defendant who was offered a manslaughter plea in exchange for his testimony against the other three; that case was messy enough that you literally can't say that one defendant's gay panic defense affected the outcome at all. To the contrary, both the DA and the victim's own mother said that the jury rejected that defense: http://www.ebar.com/news/article.php?sec=news&article=153 quote:Justice, in many respects, has been served, according to Araujo's family. Perhaps most importantly, said some advocates, Monday's murder verdicts soundly reject the "trans panic" defense, which argued that deadly violence should be expected or excused if it is committed in response to the discovery of a partner's transgender status. Defense attorneys claimed, to varying degrees, that the victim's "sexual deception" provoked a "heat of passion" response that lessened the defendants' culpability in Araujo's killing; the jury, in refusing to deliver convictions of manslaughter and lesser charges, did not allow such a defense to have merit. Interestingly, the California law in question doesn't actually bar the defense from claiming "gay panic made me do it." It actually doesn't concern itself with the accused at all, and is concerned about anti-gay bias on the part of the *jury*. In other words, it's not concerned with the idea that a defendant may claim gay panic, it's concerned with the idea that certain members of the jury might hear such a defense and say "Okay, yeah, gays are icky, not guilty." It states that in any criminal trial, if any of the parties to the case requests it, the court shall instruct the jury by saying "Do not let bias, sympathy, prejudice, or public opinion influence your decision. Bias includes bias against the victim or victims, witnesses, or defendant based upon his or her disability, gender, nationality, race or ethnicity, religion, gender identity, or sexual orientation.” That's it. It doesn't ban any defense. https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=200520060AB1160 It's a feel-good law of zero practical importance.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:09 |
|
This chart is bullshit, Uniracers is absolutely for stoner.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:20 |
|
One of our business partners sent us this "Market Analysis" document that supposedly represents the, uh... number of training organisations and exams? It's just pages and pages of these circle diagrams with no labels, no explanation of what the colours mean. What the gently caress
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:28 |
|
Tsunemori posted:One of our business partners sent us this "Market Analysis" document that supposedly represents the, uh... number of training organisations and exams? I think it's a colour blindness test.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:34 |
|
TinTower posted:It'd probably be more accurate to say that Scientology ∈ paranormal bollocks ∩ religious bollocks ∩ quackery bollocks ∩ psuedoscientific bollocks, as you haven't proved that Scientology is the only member of that intersection. Well, if you believe what the psychiatrists want you to believe you're right, and I'm impressed ∈ and ∩ work fine on my phone
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:42 |
|
CharlieWhiskey posted:Well, if you believe what the psychiatrists want you to believe Unicode has been really good! The only people kind of screwed by it in a major way are Chinese based languages, where they were all forced into one region despite having incredibly different glyphs.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:47 |
|
foobardog posted:Unicode has been really good! The only people kind of screwed by it in a major way are Chinese based languages, where they were all forced into one region despite having incredibly different glyphs. I thought the codepoints are the same, but they render into the appropriate glyph depending on phone locale. Which only screws bilingual people. And is insane.
|
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:53 |
|
Blue Footed Booby posted:I thought the codepoints are the same, but they render into the appropriate glyph depending on phone locale. Which only screws bilingual people. And is insane. Right, that's the problem. It'd be like if Cyrillic, Greek, and Latin all shared the same space and just changed based on country encoding. e: Actually, I guess that was the status quo under code pages, when everything was just the ASCII space mapped to different encodings. foobardog has a new favorite as of 23:04 on Mar 22, 2016 |
# ? Mar 22, 2016 22:59 |
|
Fair enough
|
# ? Mar 23, 2016 01:01 |
|
|
# ? May 13, 2024 10:30 |
|
Tsunemori posted:One of our business partners sent us this "Market Analysis" document that supposedly represents the, uh... number of training organisations and exams? screenshots of the marketing department playing agar.io, i guess
|
# ? Mar 23, 2016 02:13 |