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i_love_FFT, to aww in Caracal laser noises
@i_love_FFT@lemmy.ml avatar

That title sounds like an XKCD password.

reddig33, to star_wars in The Bad Batch | The Final Season Official Trailer | Disney+

I always wonder if these current three dimensional CGI animated series are cheaper to produce than live action or traditional animation.

marcos,

You meant if the 3D GCI where only the voice and movements of the people are used is cheaper than the 3D CGI where the people’s appearance is used too?

I have no idea, but the difference can’t be very big.

EndlessApollo,

3D animation is definitely a lot easier/cheaper than 2D, and probably a lot cheaper than live action. Making a good looking 3D character is harder than drawing a frame in a cartoon, but once you have it, animation is much easier, since you don’t have to make a new model for each frame. I assume it’s also easier to make effects for 3D than live action, since they’re stylized and don’t have to look lifelike, which is the goal of most CGI in live action media

setsneedtofeed, (edited )
@setsneedtofeed@lemmy.world avatar

Mandalorian was about $15 million per episode in season 1.

Clone Wars was about $1 million per episode.

Certainly cheaper to make cartoons than live action, but not exactly shoestring.

It’s difficult for me to find a good price analog to a 2D cartoon made recently that has a similar amount of action, and doesn’t have the budget weirdly skewed by licensing.

I would guess that to make a traditional animation as detailed, full of motion even in backgrounds, and full of constant action scenes it would probably be more expensive and time consuming compared to 3D.

neuracnu, to movies in Half in the Bag: Derivative Holiday Horrors
@neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Reposting from Patreon…

I can’t let this go: Joel McHale’s character in It’s A Wonderful Knife was an outright bad guy that gets zero comeuppance. In the original timeline, he’s the mayor’s stooge with zero spine, helping bully Cigarette Smoking Man into selling his place. Then, a year later, he’s cruelly favoring his son over his daughter, ignoring her future and getting her workout clothes for Christmas while he partners with his son and buys him a new truck. Then, in the alternate timeline, he’s off COMMITTING MURDERS, which his daughter stops by KILLING HIM. But then, in the end, the timeline reverts, and he’s seen giving Winnie a camera for Christmas and… all is well? Winnie still has a terrible, spineless, one-corporate-ultimatum-away-from-being-a-serial-killer dad. But it’s cool cuz she has a girlfriend now. 🤯

CH3DD4R_G0BL1N, (edited )
@CH3DD4R_G0BL1N@sh.itjust.works avatar

The AI just kind of forgot about his comeuppance. I knew it was bad when watching it, but forgot about the possibility of it being an AI script until they brought it up and it makes so much sense.

Australis13, to risa in Was updating my Christmas Trek Music playlist and realized y'all might like

I needed that laugh. Thankyou!

lvxferre, (edited ) to programmer_humor in The truth about the OpenAI drama - The Code Report
@lvxferre@lemmy.ml avatar

My guesses:

  • Toner’s role is being underplayed by the video. She’s potentially calling Altman out, for underrating the dangers of AI.
  • At least Altman is lying about something - about how much OpenAI is going towards AGI in the short term. The above might’ve bought the bullshit fully, while Sutskever knows that it’s bullshit.
  • I’m not sure if the board is also lying or not.
  • The boiling point was likely OpenAI potentially receiving some cash grant from some scummy party, that would be in a moral grey area considering the "non-"profit goals of the company.
  • Everybody will get a bit more of free popcorn for a while. 🍿 This mess is far from over.
registrert, to asklemmy in Do videos like this come across right?
@registrert@lemmy.sambands.net avatar

All short form, vertical videos comes across like an abomination of video production.

PP_BOY_,
@PP_BOY_@lemmy.world avatar

I remember when people would be shamed for recording in vertical. Now, videos that were originally recorded in landscape mode are being cropped to fit vertical play. It’s insane

pruneaue, to linux in What do you think about this?

In my opinion what hes saying is true, but has to be taken with a grain of salt. The choice of the word “pointless” is a little harsh but i understand what he means. They are only derivatives that dont accomplish anything that the distro they forked cant accomplish, ergo they are useless because you could make Ubuntu on debian.
As for why debian and arch are the best, they are the two most well established community maintained distros. That means they have the most people working on them, the most support out there on the internet when you encounter issues, they tend to be the most stable, AND they have no corporate backing which can be seen as “evil” by some people (like Chris in this video).

netburnr, (edited ) to datahoarder in Remember Seagate’s Dual Actuator HDDs? They’re Back, in SATA Form
@netburnr@lemmy.world avatar

It’s a Seagate, i would never buy it. Host (now wd) for life.

roawre, (edited )

Care to elaborate? Seagate is one of my favorite brand. And i read a lots of reviews and tech articles before purchasing any components. I am curious to learn about what i have missed about them. Thx

Nollij,

Not OP, but this comes up regularly.

A lot of people have very strong opinions of brands based on a woefully inadequate sample size. Typically this comes from a higher than expected failure rate, possibly even much higher than expected. It could’ve been a bad model, a bad batch at manufacturing, improper handling from the retailer, or even an improper running environment. But even the greediest data hoarders only have a few dozen drives, often in just a couple of environments and use-cases.

Very few of these results are actually meaningful trends. For every person that swears by WD and will never touch a Seagate, there’s someone else that swears by Seagate and will never touch another WD. HGST and Toshiba seem to have a very slight edge on reliability, but it’s very small. And there are still people that refuse to touch them because of the “Death Star” drives many years ago.

It’s also very difficult to predict which models will have high failure rates. By the time it becomes clear one is a lemon, they’re already EoL.

I avoid buying WD new because of their (IMHO completely illegal) stance on warranty, but I’m comfortable buying their stuff used.

Don’t worry too much about brand. Instead go for specs and needs. Follow a good backup strategy and you’ll be fine

roawre,

Thank you

LeafOnTheWind, (edited )

HGST is a part of WD and has been for quite a while.

But a big part of why the average consumer drive kind of sucks is that there is way more money in enterprise level drives so very little resources get put toward client drives.

Nollij,

Owned by, yes. Have their operations actually been integrated though? I haven’t checked in a long time, but it was still a separate division last time I did.

LeafOnTheWind,

It’s integrated. Only a few things internally are still labeled HGST.

Sharpiemarker,

Yep. Seagate have earned their reputation. Pass.

pastermil,

Care to elaborate?

Sharpiemarker,

They’ve had some of the highest failure rates among drive manufacturers.

EasternLettuce,

deleted_by_author

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  • ShortN0te,

    You would think ppl on Lemmy are somewhat more able to read, understand and interpret data like published by backblaze but it seems like they are just as everywhere blind because of a onetime experience 10 years ago (3tb constallation drivr by Seagate)

    Experience bias ay it best.

    agressivelyPassive, to upliftingnews in Man receives world’s first eye transplant after high-voltage electrical accident

    I kinda hoped for a high voltage eye, but this is also cool.

    charles, to fuck_cars in Chicago Sold it's Parking Meters to Morgan Stanley for 75 years. (The consequences have been terrible)
    @charles@lemmy.world avatar

    I love Climate Town, but have such a hard time consuming long-form YouTube like that.

    anothercatgirl,

    it’s under an hour long so I can watch more than one like this during my lunch break. It’s the long form content over an hour long that I have to avoid because it’s usually just vods which severely bore me.

    Pantherina, to linux in 10 REASONS why Linux Mint is the desktop OS to beat in 2023

    I too think Cinnamon is a pretty great Experience. I am using KDE and heard from many people that it feels better, its more unified and has way more features.

    Wayland is important for security, and Mint will need a long time to adopt that. There are already apps only running on Wayland for reasons.

    KDE is a bit unstable as its a huge project. I hope that will get better in Plasma 6.

    I sure wish to have something like KDE more stable. But once you are used to it, its just better. Things that are not there yet on Mint are on KDE since years.

    Its a bit of a mess as its so old. Extensions need to be cleaned up. But like, Dolphin extensions are so great, I dont know an equivalent on Cinnamon.

    Also the distro model is the standard one. A Fedora Atomic Cinnamon variant, with modern presets and everything working, would be a great thing to install anywhere. Automatic atomic updates, easy version upgrades, transparent system changes and resets being just one command away.

    stella,

    Cinnamon is more unified, but I don’t think any DE has as many features as KDE.

    comicallycluttered,

    You can get a Cinnamon image via U-Blue.

    U-Blue in general is a nice collection of images because not only are there various unofficial options, but a lot of things like RPMFusion, etc. are preconfigured in their versions of the main editions (SilverBlue, Kinoite, Sericea, Onyx).

    Or you can just rebase regular SilverBlue (or one of the three other official variants) to one of those images if you’re running it already. Can roll back if you don’t like it.

    I doubt there’ll be an official edition until Cinnamon has full Wayland support since Fedora is going all in on that now.

    In the meantime, the community has it covered.

    Pantherina, (edited )

    Right! I have to try that.

    Personally I dont care for cinnamon, but it is easy for users and ublue is great.

    My personal wishlists are a Fedora-based TV OS, a hardened version and a rawhide kde 6 one

    Shady_Shiroe, to linuxmemes in Average Linux user
    @Shady_Shiroe@lemmy.world avatar

    Oh it’s the templeOS guy

    light_mnemonic, to star_wars in A Disturbance in the Force - Official Trailer (2023) Seth Green, Weird Al Yankovic

    Damn. Any idea what platform it’ll premiere as a basic option on? I assume it’s premiering as rent/own on Amazon?

    Ultragramps,
    @Ultragramps@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Yarr. Some say there’s a map to the treasure.

    khan_shot_1st,

    Blu-ray is available already.

    skullgiver, to linux in Created a Java Application for Easy '.desktop' File Creation
    @skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl avatar

    I believe this tool will allow you to register an action in nautilus for your desktop file.

    MrOzwaldMan,

    Does it allow java applications to be used as an ‘action’?

    skullgiver,
    @skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl avatar

    I don’t see why not. The example config file has a whole bunch of complex commands, far more than just the java --jar you need to run a Java application.

    MrOzwaldMan,

    Great! This is going to be my first time doing this, hopefully this comes to everybody’s machine as default.

    fakeman_pretendname, to risa in Venetian Snares - Koonut-Kaliffee

    I was initially wondering what a random jungle (I don’t know the specific subgenre) track had to do with Star Trek, until I realised the main sample (and song title) was Spock from Amok Time, before his “wedding fight”.

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