Interesting Links for 04-04-2024
Apr. 4th, 2024 12:00 pm- 1. Looks like nearly 60% of Scots no longer identify with any religion
- (tags:religion scotland demographics )
- 2. Did you know that Edinburgh has a Board Game Library?
- (tags:libraries boardgames edinburgh )
- 3. Traditional Chinese printing process
- (tags:video china printing history )
- 4. Behind the lurid headlines: What the Scottish hate crime legislation actually says
- (tags:scotland bigotry law )
- 5. 'Lavender': The AI machine directing Israel's bombing spree in Gaza (with a 10% error rate)
- (tags:ai palestine israel war )
- 6. One third of Thames Water sewage sensors are faulty
- (tags:water uk pollution OhForFucksSake )
- 7. 60% of time spent playing computer games in 2023 went to games at least 6 years old. Only 8% went on new, non-annual titles (like Baldurs Gate III)
- (tags:games business )
no subject
Date: 2024-04-04 01:14 pm (UTC)https://www.green-coursehub.com/research-blog/traditional-chinese-movable-type-printing
Clay type is the oldest, then wood, then metal.
no subject
Date: 2024-04-04 04:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-04-04 04:45 pm (UTC)And so far shutting down old versions of games to force people on to new versions has gone very badly indeed.
no subject
Date: 2024-04-04 05:50 pm (UTC)Regarding games in series, my anecdotal impression is that something like Call of Duty or FIFA, which puts out annual games in the same line, will sell a chunk to existing players looking for the new campaign/features/whatever, and a chunk to new players who've just bought a new console. Very few games these days require knowledge of previous instalments - even a game like Witcher 3 took care to be accessible to brand new players. With a lot of franchises now releasing across multiple platforms, frequently older instalments aren't even available to a sizeable chunk of the player base (eg Witcher 1 and 2 never released onto consoles, as I recall).
Assassins Creed or Far Cry would be good examples of long running franchises that put out a new game every couple of years, using essentially the same mechanics but in a new setting. Some people who start with later games in the series might go back to pick up the older ones, but when the new games offer 100+ hours of content to play through, I would guess that's a minority of players. I think the older games of that type sell more to players who are new to the franchise and don't want to drop £50+ on the latest and greatest instalment, when they can get the same gameplay and slightly worse graphics for £10 in a sale.
no subject
Date: 2024-04-05 06:17 am (UTC)Or, perhaps, applying a 'militarily necessary' gloss on crimes against humanity.
So we can now regard AI as useful, to regimes who see collateral damage and terror as inherently desirable outcomes; and I find myself wondering how this will work in civil society, with 'deviants', dissidents, and 'potential terrorists' being targeted for 'soft sanctions' of economic exclusion and social-network disruption.
Not that this will affect anyone you and I know.
Not overtly.
I wonder if it is possible to build in a statistical algorithm that obfuscates indirect discrimination.
'Lavender': The AI machine directing Israel's bombing spree in Gaza (with a 10% error rate)
Date: 2024-04-17 05:19 pm (UTC)