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Even China doesn't rely on controlling information from the user-side, they know any devices can be hacked lol. They rely more on controlling the server-side (WeChat, Douyin, Weibo, Bilibili, etc) and infrastructure (GFW).

Well mostly, aside from some exceptions like (allegedly) Apple's AirDrop limitations.

Many Chinese brands still support unlockable bootloader: https://github.com/melontini/bootloader-unlock-wall-of-shame...

Although going forward, there's a strong incentive for manufacturers to follow Google and lock their devices.


Most chinese small brands are trivial to unlock and root. I doubt that will change; they dont care, which is great.


Uhm actually almost none let you unlock the bootloader anymore


Yeah, there has been a major crackdown.


Most people in the world don't really care about politics. They're too busy working to pay off their all sorts of debts.

If it's useful and cheap to them, it is useful and cheap to them. Deepseek just happens to not be useful to you.


You missed my point - post training censorship increases likelihood of hallucination in general


It's just on Chinese politics, on a very select topics too.

Yeah I think Deepseek will be just fine.


Yeah I don't understand why people make the connection between Squid Games and Battle Royale.

Hunger Games is the one closer to Battle Royale, while Squid Games is just Kaiji with better presentation.


While I fundamentally agree with you about the lineage, I can appreciate that there is a direct thread of artistically psychotic surrealism in Squid Game that feels inherited from Battle Royale.

The pink caskets (which might be my favourite visual element) feel like they would be at home in the world of Battle Royale, but IMO feel way too dark humor for Hunger Games.

Battle Royale and Squid Game both feature characters reaching quivering ecstacy when players die. My memory could be rose colored at this point, but Hunger Games just wasn't that dark.


I always thought of Hunger Games as Battle Royale for children. The violence and darkness in general is so very stripped down. IMO that's what made Battle Royale and, as you point out, Squid Game interesting. I do think that's more common in Asian cinema and tv though.


cough Oldboy cough


There are several characters in the first Hunger Games that revel in the death of their competitors, including several that torture their victims to death. A number of the competitors go into the games knowing what they involve, having specifically trained to kill other children.

In the second and third Hunger Games novels, the traps and obstacles are designed to torture, maim, and/or inflict painful deaths, for the viewing pleasure of those watching (in the second) or just to inflict pain (in the third). At the end of the final novel, the "good" guys murder a bunch of innocent civilians (including children) in order to assure their ascendancy to power.

In terms of darkness, the Hunger Games is darker than Battle Royale. But it's not a direct comparison, since Battle Royale is a satire and Hunger Games is not.


As a white male American, I've sort of started to realize that 'asian' media plays with life/death more than american media, which seems to simply delineate: life = good; death = bad instead of exploring the notion of acceptance.


Sounds like you might enjoy the 1999 movie After Life. A+


> Squid Games is just Kaiji with better presentation.

The presentation comparison is apples to oranges. Kaiji just wouldn’t work as live action (although they tried with a movie) as it relays heavily on the affordances of anime/manga as a medium to present Kaiji’s inner world and show visual metaphors for his emotions. Without that you take away the substance. It’s fair to say Squid Game steals a lot of themes and ideas from Kaiji, but it’s certainly not just Kaiji with different wrapping (unless there is something I am missing having not read the manga).


I guess, it takes a lot of effort to do cross-medium adaptation. Personally I dropped the show mid-series because I have consumed similar stories (Kaiji, Liar's Game) so the show didn't sustain my interest. YMMV

That being said, I was thinking of the article when I wrote my comment, they should've featured Kaiji instead of Battle Royale since it's the main inspiration behind the show.


Same, Battle Royale always seemed anti-government to me where Squid Games is very explicitly anti-capitalist.

I know there was a reward for winning and the fundamental reason for the Battle Royale was economic, but I always got the vibe the government was the problem.

Like, the kids in Battle Royale weren't exempt if they were rich, right? It was a lottery. Squid Game only appeals to people struggling under capitalism.


Kaiji and Squid Games could be happening last week, in some warehouse complex, or a missile silo, and we'd never know. The contestants choose to be there, even if the choice isn't exactly free. Meanwhile the point of Battle Royale and Hunger Games is to have the entire world watching. Pure amusement for the rich vs political propaganda trying to remind the masses how little they are worth. A Battle Royale participant is semi-worthless, because every teenager, possibly every person, is seen as worthless. In Kaiji they are setting up situations to show how stupid and immoral the dregs of society are.


There's "Death Race 2000" then from 1975 (from a short story from 1956) where the killing is televised.

Love that film.


Yes! Squid Game is voluntary and motivation is economic pressure or greed whereas Battle Royale is a randomly selected school class which is explicitly a punishment for young people.


I wanted to add in BR the schools selected are the ones with the worst academic scores, IIRC.


I don't think this is correct. I remember it being a lottery

Maybe in Battle Royale 2 it was revealed this was the case


Battle Royale was about curbing juvenile delinquency, no overt or fundamental economic reasons. So, same boat, Battle Royale is anti-authoritarian thus in the same line as Hunger Games. Squid Games is anti-capitalist thus in the Running Man (the novel, 1982) line.


Because Kaiji is just less popular


That's the correct analogy and chronology.

Another one is Ready Player One borrowed from Sword Art Online, which borrowed from .hack, which borrowed from Serial Experiments Lain, which drew upon a rich pantheon of cyberpunk novels.


If we're talking about the movie, RPO is roughly 40% Summer Wars.


Wow you make it even more inspiring if you put it that way


There's also the TIOBE index: https://www.tiobe.com/tiobe-index/ruby/

It conveys similar trend to Google Search chart


Because it uses same metrics.

If you want to see real usage statistics you need to consult GitHub, JetBrains, RedMonk ratings.


Okay:

https://octoverse.github.com/2022/top-programming-languages

Ruby took a nosedive from 5th "top used" programming language in 2016 to 10th in 2022


Those are relative positions. We can't talk about a "nosedive" from that. It may be the case, but also maybe Ruby was just the slowest growing out of a number of languages growing in popularity. We don't have enough data from there.


> since ruby is a language that is less and less used by many programmers

But this statement from thread starter is about Ruby's relative position.

If Ruby's rank in top-used language ranking drops, then we can say that the language is less used by programmers in the survey pool.


> thread starter is about Ruby's relative position.

I guess we disagree on that part.


Chinese academia use VPNs all the time to access foreign sites.

I doubt this is effective to deter applications coming from China.

It's probably just a page admin trying to be an activist at best, or being racist at worst.


It's not even activism, just a common snakeoil DDoS-away. Not to say it's okay but not rare.


This is Tokyo U though, one of the best university in Japan.

If they're really having a DDOS/spam problems, I don't think it's difficult for them to hire competent IT people to mitigate them (Cloudflare, captcha, AI spam detector, etc)


It is way over-rated, but it’s still among Leonardo’s best works IMO

Personally I like “Virgin on the Rocks” more


Much better. Also Ginevra di Benchi


Wow I butchered the spelling but too tired to delete &repost


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airship_accidents

This list is quite comprehensive I think


That’s a good article. I found this one:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-8

The L-8/Ghost Blimp took off with a crew of two from San Francisco in 1942. They found an oil slick (which was the last time either crew member was known to be alive) and then drifted before it crash landed in front of a home in Daly City.

I had never heard of this event before now and it’s a heck of an interesting late night rabbit hole. Thanks for the link!


But even then, forecasted storms mean more delay to the already-slow airship.

Also the airship is simply too slow to dodge any sudden severe weather, even if they saw it coming hours before.


Perhaps. Airships will likely want to travel along jet streams since the wind speeds can outpace the airspeed of the airship. The neat thing here is that weather that will be problematic can be predicted days in advance, not just hours. Even 2 hours gets you pretty far in an airship in wind-calm, especially compared to (say) container ships. When you aren't in wind-calm, you can probably take advantage of winds by choosing your altitude wisely.


If you live in neoliberal capitalist country, your wellbeing is tied to the profit of the private company that runs the infrastructure…

If they don’t find things profitable, then they would just not run said infrastructure, disrupting the lives of many people.

This is why strikes make people nervous.


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