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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)张殿
🇨🇦🇩🇪🇨🇳张殿李🇨🇳🇩🇪🇨🇦 @ ZDL @ttrpg.network
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384
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1 yr. ago

  • The Apartheid Manchild has this weird obsession with Mars.

    There will be no permanent settlement on Mars in the next decade. (I frankly doubt that there will even have been human footprints on Mars in the next decade!) There will be no permanent settlement on Mars in the next century. There will likely be no permanent settlement on Mars in the next millennium. And I'm saying that last one not because I don't think we'd have the technology in a thousand years, but rather because there is no point in living on Mars.

    Mars has nothing we need that's worth maintaining a settlement in the face of conditions harsher than the absolute worst the Earth has to offer. If people want to live in a permanently cold shithole with nothing usefully accessible they can just build a house on Antarctica. It's a far cheaper way to fuck around and find otu.

  • Read George Polti's The 36 Dramatic Situations. It's a list of plot elements that have a snappy title, a list of participants in the plot element, a brief discussion of how it works, and then (unfortunately dated) references to dramas that used them.

    Using this when building a world, or a campaign, or a local setting, lets you quickly set up a bunch of conflicts (ideally with interlaced participants so that single NPCs (or PCs) can be in different roles in different dramatic situations. Then you just let the events flow logically, and as the dramatic situations get resolved you get a plot. PCs can interfere with these dramatic situations and thus have an impact on resulting plots even if the overall setting is far larger than they are.

  • For depth in world-building I use a rule I call "Y-cubed". (I got it from somewhere else but can't recall the source anymore.)

    For every detail you make, you ask the question "Why" three times.

    So a village the characters have reached stop all work every 77 days for a festival. Why? It celebrates an ascended local hero who saved the village from a magical blight. Why 77 days? It took 77 days for effort for the blight to be defeated. ... And so on.

    This is a rapid way to both build depth in your setting quickly, as well as inspire possible mysteries and intrigue for investigation later.

    A slight modification works also for giving NPCs depth.

  • Would this be the military that could only reach a standstill in Korea? That lost in Vietnam? That lost in Afghanistan? That ran away scared from Mogadishu? That "won" in Iraq by generating the world's largest collection of terrorists until the blowback lost you two large towers and a smaller one?

    That military?

  • You'll find that happens a lot when Americans comment on things abroad. Victims if their own educational system that they are, they really don't know anything about the world outside of their borders so they just make vague pronouncements and nod as if they've said something wise instead of having just shit their own pants for all to see.

  • Simon Whistler is a presenter and it often shows. He's pretty entertaining, and he has the look of a scholar which gives him some gravitas and credibility when he talks, but he isn't particularly knowledgeable of anything (including topics he's already covered in one channel when presenting the same topic on another).

    So of course he thinks ChatGPT is smart.

  • Dad Jokes @lemmy.world

    Why do Norway's naval vessels have bar codes on the bottom?

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Let's add one more thing to the long list of things the Apartheid Manchild doesn't understand, I guess.

  • In general there is no "neutral" source of information. At all. Yes, including Wikipedia with its "NPOV" policy. (It even says that there's no such thing in its own policies, so I'm not exactly saying anything new here.) Most of the sources you cite as "neutral" will actually be sources that agree, broadly, with your own cultural assumptions that you are likely not even aware of, not to mention actively questioning.

    That being said, since there is no such thing as a neutral source of information, you can still have good sources of information. Wikipedia is one such. Is it perfect? No. Because nothing is. But it is good enough for most general knowledge. It gets a bit dicey as a source when you leave the realm of western assumptions, or if you enter into the realm of contentious politics. But for most things it's just fine as a quick resource to get information from. It's a decent encyclopedia whose ease of access isn't matched by anybody else.

    Reddit is not, however. Because reddit has no disciplined approach to information-gathering and -sharing. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia (with all the strengths and flaws that form takes on). Reddit is a lot of people talking loudly in a gigantic garden party from Hell. Over by the roses you have a bunch of people loudly expounding on the virtues of the Nazi party. Over by the fountain you've got another group loudly expounding on how vile and gross the Nazis were casting glares in the direction of the roses. In the maze park you've got a bunch of people meandering around and laughing while they babble inanities. Out in the driveway you've got a bunch of Morris dancers practising their craft. It may be fun if you like that kind of thing, but it is absolutely not a source of reliable information unless you do so much fact checking that you might as well skip the reddit step and go straight to getting the facts from the places you're using to check.

    ChatGPT, to continue using strained analogies, is that weird uncle in your family. He's personable, bright, cheerful, and seems to know a lot of stuff. But he's a bit off and off-putting somehow, and that's because behind the scenes, when nobody's looking, he's taking a lot of hallucinogens. He does know a lot. A whole lot. But he also makes shit up from the weird distortions the drugs in his system impose on his perceptions. As a result you never know when he's telling the truth or when he's made a whole fantasy world to answer your question.

    My personal experience with ChatGPT came from asking it about a singer I admire. She's not a really big name and not a lot of people write about her. I wanted to find more of her work and thought ChatGPT could at least give me a list of albums featuring her. And it did! It gave me a dozen albums to look for. Only … none of them existed. Not a single one. ChatGPT made up a whole discography for this singer instead of saying "sorry, I don't know". And when I went looking for them and found they didn't exist, I told it this and it did its "sorry, I made a mistake, here's the right list" thing ... and that list contained half of the old list that I'd already pointed out didn't exist and half new entries that, you guessed it!, also didn't exist.

    And the problem is that ChatGPT is just as certain when hallucinating as it is when telling things that are true. It is PARTICULARLY unsuited to be a source of information.

  • Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Royal Society will meet amid campaign to revoke Elon Musk’s fellowship

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Elon Musk - The Early Warning Signs - (Musk vs Eberhard) Part 1

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Why Elon Musk Wants You Poor and Uneducated

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    You know, this somehow completely fails to surprise...

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Burn!

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Elon Musk Says He Longs to Get Pregnant So He Can Produce as Many Children as Possible

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Truth & Lies

    Fuck AI @lemmy.world

    Why Does "AI" "Art" Suck So Much? - SOME MORE NEWS

    Fuck AI @lemmy.world

    You know what's fun? Asking a Degenerative AI for help in destroying it.

    Song I Love (And Want To Share) @lemmy.world

    黑麒 [Black Kirin] - 黄河 [Yellow River] (2015)

    Song I Love (And Want To Share) @lemmy.world

    汤显祖 [Tang Xianzu] -《牡丹亭·游园惊梦》[The Peony Pavilion: Wandering in the Garden, Waking from a Dream] (1598)

    Song I Love (And Want To Share) @lemmy.world

    Traditional - 十面埋伏 (16th century/19th century)

    Anything But Metric @discuss.tchncs.de

    Smoot

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    GOP Cuts Child Cancer Research From Funding Bill After Musk Meddling

    Dad Jokes @lemmy.world

    Inside you there are...

    Dad Jokes @lemmy.world

    I used to rail against tautologies, but finally came to accept them.

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Tesla 'We Robot' Breakdown and Analysis - Part 1

    Enough Musk Spam @lemmy.world

    Elon Musk and the New Owners of Space – SOME MORE NEWS