Yohan Yukiya Sese-Cunetaㆍ사요한・謝雪矢(ゆきや)・謝約翰ㆍיהוחנן
♾️ #ActuallyAutistic #INFP 🐬
✨ Appeared: Sports Seoul; The Daily Report Arirang
©️ License: #CCBySA4
❗ only represent myself
🇵🇭 #Philippines
#Bibliophile #Writer #WebDev
Interests
* #FreeCulture #OpenKnowledge
* #Kosher #Torah
* #Hiking #Archery #Running
* #Violin #Flute #Ppop #Kpop #Jpop #Cpop
* #Games #Anime #Pdrama #Kdrama #Jdrama #Cdrama
@vk6flab@lemmy.radio That’s a very good question! Sadly, I haven’t received the update on Android yet. T_T
Good thing you mentioned it, I’ll pay attention to that once I get the latest beta update from our region.
@slazer2au Apologies! In any case, updated and moved the inline tags down.
@vasus It is!
And apologies, hashtags are important in the fediverse. _
Hmm… what I can do next time is to not use inline hashtags, and just have it in a separate line. Thank you for the feedback!
@trashgirlfriend I remembered, #Walkr, a space gamification fitness app, have an option to “boost” steps when you’re about to go on a long walk/run/jumping rope session. You can use it once every 24 hours only (and only lasts for 2 hours IIRC).
I think, now that you suggested it, that was maybe their solution to keeping the sensitivity fixed for their game, but giving users a chance to earn more if they’re about to engage in a long session.
🤔
@trashgirlfriend Ooh. I like that! It could be a widget too for easy access.
@hornedfiend @schamppu I think the game is set to medium sensitivity, or Low. There are some fitness apps with a sensitivity setting, and if you place it high, it is more accurate. The problem arises if you’re just moving your phone, since it’s high sensitivity, it counts those as steps. So, most apps have it at medium or Low. That’s my guess at least.
@commander_la_freak @emeralddawn45
That’s a new way to explain it, “frame rate”.
Most #scifi that touches on #ParallelWorlds and #TimeTravel use some sort of vibration or frequency. Even in the 90s Japanese #anime entitled #SerialExperimentsLain, it used the Schumann resonance to explain its plot. And of course in #Marvel and #DC they do the same.
But, yeah, I’m not sure either about it. Is there a way to find out which author/writer first thought of this idea? Or, was it based on a real-life theory that scifi authors picked-up independently? Or, was it Star Trek that created this approach?
(And again, that frame rate approach is great. _)
@Lunar Ahh! Fable, Fallout, and Witcher! I miss those too. Hmm, I think they’re on winter sale, I might be able to grab them as well. _;;
Yep, it is weird. There are strict guidelines for franchises. Sadly, I can’t find it anymore. But, it makes sense as an explanation why some stores have small chicken (like last week, a certain store along Kalaw their chicken obviously came from a small breed; not the big breed Jollibee is known for); even though there isn’t a reported chicken supply problem this year.
Or maybe, franchises have an option to order the big or small chicken breed from JFC? The small chicken breed is cheaper? But still, it’s a question why JFC doesn’t have the same breed of chicken across all stores in the Philippines, or even within NCR.
Like what I mentioned earlier, minsan na lang ako kumain sa labas, maliit na manok pa yung sa branch na 'yun.
Although I’m not sure if there’s any legal issues in doing that?
Maybe it’s fine to track which ones are franchise stores, and then store the information in #OpenStreetMap. But I’m not sure when it comes to if the branch’s chicken is big or small. _;;
That I’m not sure. I only recalled reading how franchise stores basically have more freedom, and they have an option to choose their own source (for example chicken) as long as they use the same recipe and pass HQ’s quality tests.
Since then, whenever the chicken is smaller, I assume it’s a franchise store that decided to source independently. Because the ones that come directly from JFC are from big chickens.
I guess the best way is to ask.
Hmm… that gave me an idea, track and mark branches that are franchises and have small chickens. _;;
@heliosef Ito? https://twitter.com/kippschickenph
Haha, I will try it! _
@heliosef Ganito siya lumabas (attached screenshot).
But, yeah, mamantika nga. Ginagawa ko, lagyan gravy.
Although if there are more options, Uncle John’s chicken and KFC Philippines chicken are better.
Uncle John’s chicken, it’s crispier, less grease, and consistently big. Sa Jollibee, if it’s a franchise store it’s small; but if it’s handled by JFC itself, it’s big.
While the chicken of KFC Philippines is soft and tastier, on the medium size.
Hmm… Mang Inasal too? Still, I’ll pick Uncle John’s or KFC Philippines over Jollibee and Mang Inasal.
Hmm… There is a misconception on what the #Fediverse is and what is the goal, which unfortunately is what the press are telling people.
The Fediverse is about bringing down the walls (silos / walled-garden).
It never had the goal or objective or vision to replace Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Instagram, Flickr, Blogspot.
The Fediverse software available today are the materialised ideas of developers who believe in a federated SocialWeb, which by the way, is the original #Web3 (not crypto). It goes all the way back to 2005 (probably earlier, I don’t have my notes).
The goal was to get existing silos to open up and federate.
It just that, there are more developers who are excited about it, so we started to see serious projects related to the Fediverse. If I remember correctly, Misskey was not a Fediverse project when it first started. So, one would say Misskey was the first non-federation project that joined the fediverse network.
If these silos don’t federate, it’s fine too, because there are existing software and instances available.
And it has always been about choice.
If users want to stay with silo #SNS by all means. The fediverse is not here to replace them, the fediverse is here as an option and as a solution to the issues plaguing silo networks (like ads, privacy, content license, to mention a few).
That’s what the fediverse is about and always have been to this day. It is never about replacing this and that, or recruiting people to switch over and encourage them to delete their silo SNS accounts. These other things were simply the passion and convictions of the users who migrated and some of the developers who developed fediverse software, it’s not part of the fediverse itself.
It’s just a protocol. Again, I’ll use email here. If you have a server, you can choose to install your own email software. The protocol is there. Various email software are there. OR, you can just use Yandex or Gmail or Zoho and use the custom domain feature (or use their email hosting services).
If Twitter and Facebook implement the protocol, hooray! Mission accomplished. If they don’t, that’s fine either.
So, yeah, people are hating that Instagram will implement the #ActivityPub protocol and join the #Fediverse network. They have valid reasons and it is understandable. However, the fediverse started to be a #WebStandard protocol to allow federation and bring back the #SocialWeb as it was intended to be.
For us who were there in 2005 already, and when the first Fediverse software and instance came online in 2008, that is still our vision and goal, to bring down the walls of silo SNS.
@lil5@fosstodon.org
It’s not “Firefox-only” per se, it’s CSS. Firefox is fast when it comes to implementing updates that benefits multilingual and Asian support, and Chromium is either slow, implements a small part only, or just ignores it completely.
(aside: Another good example is
Ruby
annotation. Firefox’s implementation of Ruby is up-to-date while Chromium’s stuck in 2010.And this is very very annoying, you have to design for Chromium when it comes to Ruby annotations; or use JavaScript to serve different Ruby codes per browser. Chromium is practically the “modern IE6”.)
It’s the same with
:lang()
.In Chromium, you still have to do it like this:
:lang(en-GB), :lang(en-US), :lang(en-AU), :lang(en-NZ), :lang(en-PH) { }
In Firefox you can do it this way:
:lang(en-GB, en-US, en-AU, en-NZ, en-PH) { }
or
:lang("en-GB", "en-US", "en-AU", "en-NZ", "en-PH") { }
Another example, in Chromium:
:lang(ceb-Tglg), :lang(pam-Tglg), :lang(fil-Tglg) { } :lang(ceb-Hano), :lang(pam-Hano), :lang(fil-Hano) { }
In Firefox:
:lang(\*-Tglg) { } :lang(\*-Hano) { }
or
:lang("*-Tglg) { } :lang("*-Hano) { }
^_~