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There are different rules on scoring, Chinese rules don't care about stones in your territory. Japanese rules do. From what the page says, this uses the traditional japanese rules (Stone Scoring)

https://senseis.xmp.net/?Scoring


https://katarineko.com

I think by this point everyone that is learning a language knows that immersion is very important, however a problem I've had myself is that the content that interests me is beyond my reach, and the content that is within reach doesn't interest me.

This is my attempt at doing something to remediate that. You select the content you want, and I create a personalized study plan to learn the most important words to achieve a target % of understanding. Then I generate a short story each week for your particular level containing the new words in the context of your content.

The idea is to bring the content you want to learn to your level so you can watch what you want to watch.


That's a great idea, and I live the UI! I wish I have some time now to learn Japanese now...


Maybe I'm wrong but it sounds like a generic "you", not talking about you specifically https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generic_you



Huh? This is a completely different thing.


Maybe https://m.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:Main_Page is what you are looking for?


Yes! Thanks. In particular one might use "[is] instance of":

https://m.wikidata.org/wiki/Property:P31

So we would take in all items with that property to make the graph. Although we might have to deal with multiple roots.

There are also other interesting linking relations:

    Comparing items ...
    said to be the same as (P460)
    instance of (P31) - (is an example of ...)
    subclass of (P279) - (is a subset of ...)
    facet of (P1269) - (aspect of .../ subitem of .../ a broader perspective on the same topic is offered by ...)

    Item contains ...
    has part(s) (P527) - (contains ...)
    has part(s) of the class (P2670) (has parts that are instances of .../ some parts form subclass of ...)
    Example:

    Albert Einstein's brain (Q2464312) is part of (P361): Albert Einstein (Q937).
    Albert Einstein (Q937) is an instance of (P31): human (Q5).
    human (Q5) is a subclass of (P279): mammal (Q7377).
    mammal (Q7377) has part(s) (P527): mammary gland (Q189961).


For one datapoint, I've participated in many gamejams and I've never ever spent any time beforehand thinking about ideas.


How many big game jams have you won/placed very highly in though?


Game jams typically require games to adhere to a theme that is only known the day of, and the best entries will make a game specifically around that, not just adapt some pre-existing idea to it.


The themes are so open ended it’s very easy to adapt most game ideas. Games that win tend to be the most fun to play not necessarily the ones that fit the theme the best.


I've worked in 3 places that were fully 100% remote. I'm from Barcelona, ES. They are not the modt common but they do exist if you look for them and there are quite a lot.


I saw a post recently on linkedin. A founder was saying "If you had one year to live, would you still choose to work at this company? That is the bar to join <crappy nonsensical startup>". It was so incredibly sad.


Since slavery is forbidden, morons are the next best thing, I guess.


Boy, please share. I need something depressing to laugh about



Way more depressing than i thought. If that's what these YC folks are even in public, i want my time back wasted listening to their messages.


Interesting:

"How fast do you want to learn?": in my experience many companies in my opinion don't want employees that learn fast, because otherwise these employees would immediately see and call out a lot of bullshit.

"Would you feel ownership on day one?": in my experience many software companies don't want employees to really feel ownership about their code, since "ownership" means that the respective employee will be willing to fight hard that his vision of this "owned" code is retained and this code won't be "tainted" by "unworthy" ideas of other colleagues.


Wow, this is low even by LinkedIn standards.


I think it was a path to be able to see it in 1.5x, not to download it


well, it takes around 20 minutes to get an invite, so hardly a problem if you prefer only tech articles


How exactly does it take 20 minutes to get an invite? I have not tried it, but I can't see how that would be easy.


I got mine in about that time, joined their IRC and asked for an invite, someone DM'd me, asked me a couple of questions and sent me the invite. This was about 7 years ago when there as a lot less people, so I imagine it should be easier now.


No idea. Read only is good enough.


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