Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:In other news...?? (Score 4, Interesting) 209

Thanks for sharing the article. Japanese Twitter users (quoted in the article) support Ubisoft's decision of including the Yasuke character. Guess there's no controversy here after all! Everyone agrees!

...a quick scan of relevant posts [on Japanese Twitter] shows that discourse seems to be a lot more focused on the game’s narrative and entertainment value than issues of race and representation. Users comment that choosing Yasuke was a good way to naturally introduce a protagonist belonging to the Order of Assassins to the Japanese setting, as making the assassin Japanese would have felt unnatural story-wise... Japanese users also highlighted Yasuke’s fascinating background... "The story is impressive enough to shut out the complaints about political correctness, and I hope the developers proceed with Yasuke as the protagonist...” The overall tone of discourse surrounding Assasins’s Creed Shadows’s Yasuke appears to be more far more lighthearted on the Japanese side of X."

Comment Re:In other news...?? (Score 5, Informative) 209

What "bad thing" did Ubisoft do? Wikipedia has a whole page about the black samurai Yasuke.

I think you're just too chicken to say "I don't like it when my videogames have black characters." (And so being an associate history professor consulting on Ubisoft's game becomes "lying down with dogs"/getting fleas.) You're wrong on the history of this one -- but that's always just been an excuse to express discomfort at the appearance of non-white characters... You might think everyone agrees with you... but they don't. And honestly, it seems like you're coming from a place of fear and weakness.

Comment Right-wing propaganda (Score 1) 2

Ever heard of "The California Globe" before this? They "utilize loaded words" to "favor conservative causes" (according to this media bias-checking site).

If you get out of your right-wing echo chamber, here's what you see from a normal site like Axios.com:

California's fast-food minimum wage law did not lead to job losses and has increased wages for workers by about 8% to 9% since going into effect last April, according to an updated analysis.

The analysis released this week from the UC Berkeley Center on Wage and Employment Dynamics builds off the findings of an initial study from September, showing that the minimum wage increase has not reduced employment or led to large price increases for consumers...

The law has not led to franchises closing as more fast food restaurants continue to open and are growing faster in California than in the rest of the U.S.

Comment Re:April Fools (Score 1) 72

All of that info extracted from the linked article.

Congratulations on actually reading the linked article. It'd be a better world if more Slashdot readers did that.

Although that information is also available in the second sentence of Slashdot's summary... ("The chatbot is available only to users in the United States on iPhones for a limited time...")

Comment Putin wants in Slashdot's submission queue (Score 1) 1

Wow, seriously?! Your source for this is "Sputnik News"? That's literally a Russian state-owned propaganda outlet. Here's a better headline:

"Russia defends Elon Musk."

I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader as to why Russia supports what's being done by Elon Musk...

By the way, the group in question is... ActBlue, which raised $13.7 billion for Democratic candidates. (Maybe that's why Russia hates them?)

Comment It's Musk's way of saying "I hate you" (Score 1) 4

Josh Marshall made a good point. Musk never actually says employees will be fired for failing to answer in the email. (He just claims he said that while bragging on Twitter.)

But I've heard that the whole point is to demoralize the federal workforce -- to make it easier to move them out the door. (Since Musk can't actually do this otherwise as fast as he wants...) It's like when Musk's first act at Twitter was to demand employees be prepared to work extra-long hours. He'd just wanted to lower headcount -- and that's what he's doing here. (I sincerely doubt anyone will even read the emails that get written in response. But several federal agencies are already openly refusing to even send those replies...)

And the specifics of it are the answer to your question. It's intentionally and aggressively denigrating an employee's worth -- demanding they re-establish they're a net-gain for the company (and. in your scenario, do it every seven days). You basically said you valued them and their work on the day you hired them, and on every day you kept paying them. So I'd only agree to your suggestion if every week the manager making this request began by saying...

"I am the world's stupidest manager. I have employees who are doing work, and being paid for it, while I'm ignorant of the great value of that work (and of my own employees' skillsets). And I'll probably remain ignorant and continue to harass my loyal workers, every seven days, even after they've explained their value to me. Because I'm not listening; I have a knee-jerk desire to fire people because I'm cheap and have no idea how things get done.

"Now let's start reading some of these bullet points...."

Submission + - New CIA Director Touts 'Low Confidence' Assessment About Covid Lab Leak Theory (cnn.com)

DevNull127 writes: "Every US intelligence agency still unanimously maintains that Covid-19 was not developed as a biological weapon," CNN reported today.

But what about the possibility of an accidental leak (rather than Covid-19 originating from wild animal meat traded the Wuhan Market)? "The agency has for years said it did not have enough information to determine which origin theory was more likely."

CNN notes there's suddenly been a new announcement "just days" after the CIA's new director took the reins — former lawyer turned Republican House Representative John Ratcliffe. While the market-origin theory remains a possibility, according to the CIA, CNN notes that Ratcliffe himself "has long favored the theory that the pandemic originated from research being done in China and vowed in an interview published in Breitbart on Thursday that he would make the issue a Day 1 priority."

“We have low confidence in this judgement," the CIA says in the complete text of its announcement, "and will continue to evaluate any available credible new intelligence reporting or open-source information that could change CIA’s assessment.”

Comment Re:Meeting Rooms? (Score 4, Informative) 151

Ironically, it's not meetings that's causing the short of meeting rooms (according to the article):

Staffers grew used to taking private phone calls throughout the day at their homes, the source said. Now, back in the office, they're ducking into empty meeting rooms to take these calls, which is causing a shortage — and leading some managers to have private chats with employees out in the open, the worker said.

Comment This is literally Chinese government propaganda (Score 1) 1

That second link goes to an article by Jianlu Bi -- who's a "senior content producer" for China's state-run China Global Television Network. With that in mind, read this paragraph from Jianlu's article:

While the United States is often portrayed as a land of limitless opportunity, many American netizens have shared their struggles with high living costs, particularly in urban areas. One common theme is the exorbitant cost of healthcare. “I just got a simple bill for a routine checkup and it was over $500,” shared one American user. “I can’t imagine what a serious illness would cost! I feel like I’m constantly on the brink of financial ruin due to medical expenses.” In contrast, Chinese netizens often express surprise at the affordability of many goods and services in their home country. For instance, the cost of housing, particularly in smaller cities, is often significantly lower in China compared to the United States...

Are you pushing foreign propaganda?

Submission + - American and Chinese Netizens Mutually 'Audit' Life Experiences in RedNote (go.com) 1

hackingbear writes: In a rare moment of direct contact between two online worlds that are usually kept apart by language, corporate boundaries, and China’s strict system of online censorship that blocks access to nearly all international media and social media services, a rare wave of U.S.-China camaraderie broke out in Chinese social media platform Xiaohongshu — or RedNote — as “TikTok refugees” migrating to RedNote to protest a now-delayed ban on TikTok. While American opinion elites have raised concerns of politicized issues such as free speech and social values, down-to-the-earth netizens are conducting mutual “audit” of life from cat photos to stuff that matters such as salaries, rent, healthcare and educational expenses. These online discussions are challenging deeply held stereotypes about both countries. While the United States is often portrayed as a land of limitless opportunity, many American netizens have shared their struggles with high living costs, particularly in urban areas. One common theme is the exorbitant cost of healthcare. While some Chinese netizens celebrate the relative affordability of life in China, others acknowledge challenges such as rising housing prices in major cities and increasing competition for jobs. RedNote, which counts Western celebrities such as Mariah Carey, Kim Kardashian, and Elon Musk’s mother Maye Musk as longtime users, hasn’t released official data, but two versions of the TikTok refugee hashtag have over 24 million posts, since the app has reached No. 1 in free downloads on both iOS and Android, remaining in that spot for days.

Comment Not a technical issue (Score 1) 1

It's not clear this was a technical issue. It's been suggested that the cause was... birds. That's 'according to CNN.

The Boeing 737-800 is one of the most widely used aircraft in the world and each one is used for about four or five flights per day, Geoffrey Thomas, editor of Airline News, told CNN’s Paula Newton. “It is the most reliable aircraft in the world, and it’s been in service for 20 years,” he said. “Everybody knows how it works. And it works really, really well. And the maintenance done in (South) Korea is as good as it gets around the world.”

Submission + - 'Raspberry Pi Holdings' Stock Price Nearly Doubles in December (proactiveinvestors.co.uk)

DevNull127 writes: This year the London Stock Exchange got a new listing for "Raspberry Pi Holdings plc." Ir'a the computer-making commercial subsidiary of their larger educational charity, the Raspberry Pi Foundation. "Access to the public market will enable us to build more of the products you love, faster," explained CEO Eben Upton in June. And in May Foundation head Philip Colligan added that beyond the $50 million already donated to their educational charity by the commercial subsidiary, the IPO would allow the conversion of some stock sales to "an endowment that we will use to fund our educational programmes... The Foundation will use any funds that we raise through the sale of shares at the IPO — or subsequently — to advance our ambitious global strategy to enable every young person to realise their full potential through the power of computing and digital technologies."

So how's that working out? A finance site called Proactive Investors UK reports that in September Raspbery Pi Holdings plc "reported underlying profits (EBITDA) of US$20.9 million, up by 55% from a year ago, on revenues up 61% to US$144 million... The Pi 5 single-board computer (SBC), launched at the end of last October [2023], sold 1.1 million units in the first half, with overall unit growth at 31%." And then in December its stock price suddenly shot up to more than double where it was at the end of November — giving Raspbery Pi Holdings plc a valuation "just under £1.3 billion."

Slashdot Top Deals

Syntactic sugar causes cancer of the semicolon. -- Epigrams in Programming, ACM SIGPLAN Sept. 1982

Working...