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kbin.life

10_0 , to asklemmy in What duration of time do you connect to intellectual property?

Life time of person who made it. Nothing more, nothing less

Erika3sis ,
@Erika3sis@hexbear.net avatar

Frankly, if you’re a small creator, copyright already doesn’t really exist for you in any meaningful sense: because copyright is enforced through the courts, you only really have rights over your work to the extent you can actually pay the court costs of continually defending your rights again and again and again — and if you have that kind of money to spare you aren’t exactly a starving artist.

10_0 ,

Your argument has nothing to do with my point of the copyright time limitation being the lifetime of the author.

Erika3sis ,
@Erika3sis@hexbear.net avatar

What do you think the purpose of copyright is?

10_0 ,

My argument is about time limitations, not enforceability : l

very_well_lost ,

I feel like this could create some pretty toxic incentives.

Like, imagine if the moment a person dies all of their works immediately go into the public domain… What’s to stop a company like Disney from just straight-up assassinating people who create promising IPs? They paid 4 billion dollars for Star Wars — but why not just have George Lucas murdered for a fraction of the price?

10_0 ,

This would imply I’d have thought out every scenario in my head before making this comment, so let me do some thinking for you, the copyright hold would have the right to transfer that copyright to another person, but if op dies the copyright is transfered to the public domain. Disney would buy it sooner not later. And if something’s in the public domain it wouldn’t matter since Disney literally started existence by adapting public domain works. The main benefit of buying it sooner instead of killing them is that it would ensure the exclusive rights to profit from the IP. (4 billion quid is for a matured idea, not a draft script that hasn’t sold anything). (There’s also the risk that the immature IP isn’t worth anything even after murdering the op, also the obv papertrail of, op dies -> Disney releases movie faster than everyone else. And then the market saturation if the IP is matured).

givesomefucks , to askscience in Can you safely heat people with microwaves?

Microwaves work by exciting water molecules.

Put an empty bowl in and it comes out cool to the touch.

A bowl of soup and the bowl is crazy hot, because the soup warmed the bowl.

Heating a person with a microwave would make us pop as the water inside heats up faster than everything else. And blood is pretty fucking similar to water…

You could try it with an incredibly low dose, but you’d have to do it in carefully measured bursts. Even for hypothermia, warm baths are dangerous because the increase in body temp is too sudden and can fuck up the heart.

So there’s a whole bunch of risks and you’re still limited to what won’t freak out your heart. Warming just one part warms up the blood that’s there and send it through the cold parts. Like how you’re not supposed to immediately add water to a radiator after a car overheats. The thermic shock can cause massive problems.

So we could

It just wouldn’t make any sense to do it

explore_broaden ,

Microwaves don’t just heat water molecules, although due to density they absorb a large amount relative to many other substances. Also since humans are mostly water, the heating should be even enough to not be quite as problematic as you describe. Some sensitive areas like eyes are an issue, but otherwise it’s possible a low enough dose could warm someone a couple of degrees without causing any harm.

givesomefucks ,

Bruh, it’s the heart that’s the issue…

The thermal stress is too great. Microwaves would heat the blood up, which within seconds would go into a cold heart

It’s why they won’t use a warm bath to hear someone up who’s dangerously cold.

Slow and steady is how you do it. So even if you used microwaves, it would be limited to pretty much the same delta temp as other methods.

It’s all risk no reward

explore_broaden ,

But wouldn’t the microwaves also warm the heart? There’s no reason a microwave at the right power couldn’t slowly heat someone up. I don’t think the OP is asking about someone who is dangerously cold either, so the extreme care that needs to be taken when someone is in serious danger due to how cold they are might not be relevant in this case.

givesomefucks ,

But wouldn’t the microwaves also warm the heart?

If it’s pointed at it…

But you know what heats a cold heart faster than blood from another body part?

Direct exposure to microwave radiation…

That’s what I mean, there’s a safe temperature differential to warm the body, and even stuff as conventional as a warm bath or hut tub can be too much.

If we shoot microwaves at a heart, the heat increase is waaaaaaaay above the safe limits.

So if someone was in a situation where the only method was microwave radiation, it wouldn’t result in an increase in heating without running serious risks.

There’s just no benefit and it introduces insane risks if you tried to do it slow enough.

explore_broaden ,

My point is that the heat increase of the heart doesn’t have to be so insane. If someone was designing a microwave human heater they would have to make the power level such that it would always result in a safe rate of temperature increase. Obviously using an off the shelf food microwave wouldn’t work.

Is heating someone too quickly a concern if they don’t have hypothermia? Like if I’m sitting round in my house and start to feel cold, and I get in a hot bath, it’s not going to heat me up too fast, right?

Eiri OP ,

Thanks. Your comment is the one that helped me understand the limitations the most.

slazer2au , to askscience in Can you safely heat people with microwaves?

Safely? Not likely. We have rules for Electromagnetic radiation for a reason.

circuitfarmer , (edited ) to science_memes in PhD Grads
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

It took me about 5 years to really transition into industry. It will, of course, vary greatly by industry specifics (mine ended up being tech, but my background is in Linguistics).

My best advice to anyone in this position is: stay in academic positions as long as you can (I lectured for nearly 10 years), but take on contract work concurrently until you find your foot in the door. A PhD is not really a “get a job out of academia” degree, and it really needs more work/networking to be respected in industry.

Edit: want to clarify this:

A PhD is not really a “get a job out of academia” degree

Remember that, typically, a Masters degree is where you go if you want to stand out in industry immediately, as it tends to be a more involved version of an undergraduate degree since it will have a more defined course structure and direction vs a PhD. Universities know this, which is why so many Masters programs are unfunded (many PhD programs are also unfunded, but friendly advice: never, ever do a PhD program that costs you money).

At the same time, it tends to be easy to get a Masters on the way to a PhD – usually just some paperwork. In that sense, you may have a leg up just only reporting your Masters to certain companies. And of course, if you are in a PhD program, ask if you can sign off for the extra Masters on your way.

The PhD is unique in that it is specifically designed to require new research. Many companies do not see the value in paying more for that, though if you have a chance to show them the difference between you and another candidate, you’ll win 99/100 times.

Edit 2: this is specifically PhD programs in the US, which are markedly different than other parts of the world.

Edit 3: and of course, the adage “publish or perish” does apply in academia. But academia, in my opinion, is not the meritocracy it used to be, at least in the US. Of my entire cohort of about 25 people, 2 became tenured professors – and both of them have parents who are professors. Nepotism is rampant and probably means more than publishing in certain fields.

For industry, publishing means very little.

Not trying to be defeatist or change anyone’s views here. Just giving my 2 cents since I have been in a relatively unique situation before.

frobeniusnorm ,

This all sounds so weird coming from germany since here you do you bachelors degree, then your masters degree and then optionally your PhD. While the usefullness of the PhD and its duration vary between subjects (in IT it takes 3-5 years and is not really worth it money-wise if you go in the industry afterwards, while in medicine it can be done in a year or even less and is basically necessary). Also while you do your PhD you are usually employed by the government (since universities are public institutions) and paid well. A PhD earns you social prestige and prestige in the industry since - besides in medicine - nearly no one has one.

circuitfarmer , (edited )
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Yes. A very different story in the US. I was consistently jealous of some colleagues’ experiences in Europe.

I should edit my original comment to specify specifically I am talking about the US.

frobeniusnorm ,

I guess everyone understands that you are talking about US phds, so no worries :)

But yeah, doing your PhD in europe may not be simpler (we have to give lectures, organize seminars etc.) but considering that you get a good pay for your research as well, it is definitely a good alternative to going directly in the industry. However, doing your phd during your masters thesis or even starting without a masters degree is very uncommon, so you usually need more time to get it.

The_v ,

I spent most of a decade in industry doing what is generally thought of as a PhD’s job. In order to fill in some gaps, I took a ton of graduate classes on the companies dime and looked at doing a fully funded PhD. I didn’t end up doing it.

Why?

  1. The industry paid better than academia. So the brain drain was real. The informal training I had from PhD’s in the company was vastly superior to the graduate level training at the university. Anyone who was any good at the applied side was not in academia. The ones left in academia were a very odd group with zero applied knowledge.
  2. Most PhD hires failed miserably in the field. 9 out of 10 of them could not make the transition to the practical application of knowledge.
  3. I saw a trend where smaller companies where hiring mostly industry experienced people for the positions (like I was).

So for me the time and investment was not worth it.

One of my friends made it halfway through his PhD. He then got sick of the politics and drama and noped out.

circuitfarmer , (edited )
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Interesting observations. Intent here is not to offer disagreements but just comparisons to my experience:

  1. Yes, industry pays much better. The wage gap in academia is a huge deal and one which will not get attention until the general issue with low wages in the US is handled. That said, I make about twice as much in industry as I would have as a tenured professor in my field had I started at the same time.
  2. This resonates with me in that I have heard it a lot. I think every person is different, but academia has a habit of supporting a kind of pretentiousness that is not conducive to pragmatic work. I would suggest this is highly field dependent, though.
  3. Industry experience trumps academic, 100% of the time.

I came at it from a different path than you. I wanted to be a professor, through and through. The tenured professorship is generally unattainable, since the number of positions is nothing compared to minted PhDs. For that reason, I explored switching to industry. I ended up in a good space, but I am not at all suggesting that someone should get a PhD to go into industry.

Edit: there’s also an epistemological argument to be made about #2 (the readiness of academics for industry). A lot of industry is about very specific solutioning and methods which may even be company dependent. In that sense, it is a skill you can only get from industry.

The_v ,

First paragraph had me laughing. Somebody has spent a lot of time in private industry and has gotten burned a few times.

As for #2 it depends on the age of the industry. Here is the life cycle of research driven industries as I see it.

Historically in research driven industries the foundations have been started in academia. Private companies start up relying on the universities research.

Money flows into the university systems from private companies and they start producing a lot PhD’s in the field.

Next the private companies decide they can make more money doing the research in-house. They offer large sums of money to the established professors and get fresh grads at bargain prices.

Pretty soon most of the best and brightest are drained to private industry. The funding from private industry slows to a trickle and all that is left in academia is those with more social connections than ability.

For the next 30 years, private industry has great talent. Then the first first wave of PhD’s retire. The new PhD’s grads are trained by the social connections crowd.

That’s when you start to see fun job descriptions posted like:

PhD + 2 years of experience, Masters + 5 years experience, Bachelor’s + 8 years experience.

circuitfarmer ,
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

First paragraph had me laughing. Somebody has spent a lot of time in private industry and has gotten burned a few times.

Without regard for anything else you said, do you think your experience is more representative than mine?

The_v ,

No - you missed my direction.

The paragraph is an overly polite way of writing to avoid any semblance of disparaging the other person. As mine was clearly written as a personal anecdote there is no need to qualify your remarks as non-derogatory.

Generally I see people develop those types of phrasing habits when they have negative experiences with misunderstanding in the past. Very common with many PhD’s communicating with MBA’s, sales or production teams. A little overly verbose but carefullly respectful to avoid conflict. It’s a very good habit to have professionally but quite funny when out of context.

circuitfarmer ,
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

The paragraph

Which?

Septimaeus ,

I think he meant ‘first’ as in top-most, the one with the preemptive disclaimer.

BaroqueInMind ,

Fuck yes. This is the kind of informative wisdom I missed about reddit. Thank you for sharing your knowledge here!

circuitfarmer ,
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

And: fuck spez. Thanks!

ChickenLadyLovesLife ,

I’m a retired programmer and the only time I faced a situation where a PhD (or Master’s) would have made any difference was when I worked for a company that was involved with defense contractors. In this situation we had a pay scale where the hourly rate at which we were billable to the client was based on our degree, something like $110/hr for a bachelor’s, $140/hr for a Master’s and $185/hr for a PhD. The fun part was that it didn’t matter at all what field the advanced degree was in, so if I’d finished my Anthropology PhD way back when it would have meant I was billable at a much higher rate and correspondingly worth a much higher salary to my employer, despite its complete irrelevance to the actual tasks I faced.

We had a number of absolutely useless employees with PhDs who nevertheless brought in a lot more revenue than I did. It turned out later that some of the PhDs were made up - they had just put it on their resumes and nobody ever checks that shit. FWIW we also had a bunch of retired Air Force colonels on staff and nobody expected them to even show up to work on a regular basis. The corruption in that sector of the economy is just massive.

Kolanaki , to askscience in Can you safely heat people with microwaves?
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Yes. Kinda? There are microwave guns designed for crowd control. I don’t know how commonly they’re used if they are even out of an experimental stage though. They’re not gonna kill you, but they will make you uncomfortable.

10_0 , to memes in the Germ-ans

Buherfly

Cattypat , to linux in Noob Question Thread: Ask Any Questions About Linux!
@Cattypat@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Alright, absolute noob here, I’m not particularly interested in computer science or an OS I have to obsessively research. First, how is gaming on Linux nowadays? I play a lot of games, most of which are not triple-A, so I wonder how accessible this is. Second, what distributions are accessible and still customizable? I have all kinds of peripherals I’d like to be able to use, speaker systems, midi controllers, etc.

DesolateMood ,

Fellow Linux noob, just started using it earlier this year so if someone with more experience wants to weigh in, please do.

That said, gaming on Linux is pretty good. Steam’s proton makes most games playable out of the box, although it’s still a good idea to check Proton DB to see if any particular game you want to play is playable.

As for your other question, I’m not totally sure what you mean by accessible and customizable, but I don’t think any of your peripherals are going to be distro locked. The Arch Wiki is a pretty good resource for, well, everything, but most relevant to you for your peripherals (it also usually gives good information for any distro, not just arch)

comma_egomaniac , (edited )
@comma_egomaniac@midwest.social avatar

Q1: Pretty good! Use ProtonDB to check what games work, and if you need to apply any fixes.

Q2: Linux Mint is the most popular choice for beginners, and it’s extremely easy to use. Other people choose Pop!_OS because it’s apparently better for gaming (I haven’t tried it). However, I think the best distro for gaming, while still being extremely stable, is Nobara (a distro based on Fedora Linux).

Also, practically all Linux distros are customizable, don’t worry about which one’s the best.

P.S: You can browse through the most popular distros here: DistroWatch

(Background: I’ve been obsessively using Linux for four years.)

LucidBoi ,

I can also recommend Zorin OS for a semi-familiar look with a very polished design. Switched to it as my first distro after ditching Windows for good.

Auster ,

About gaming, from my personal experience, it’s overall pretty straight forward. When issues happen, you just got to have patience to read through logs and search up on Google or similar any suspicious parts of the log. Worst part is usually DRM/anticheat, but from what I can gather, usually pretty isolated cases are problematic due to compatibility, usually requiring the devs to go out of their ways to make the DRM incompatible.

As for the distros question, perhaps Linux Mint? It trades off bleeding edge updates for the sake of stability. Just avoid the Debian-based variant of Mint for now as it’s still in beta.

konalt , to nostupidquestions in Is the Video Download Helper companion app safe on Firefox?
@konalt@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve used it for years on Windows and had no problems.

10_0 , to asklemmy in If the whole world went by, it takes a village to raise a child theorem and not the individual but the world as a whole. What would the world look like?

Better than it is now

zarlin , to selfhosted in Does anybody know an open source self hosted application to create diagrams? Like draw.io or something like that
@zarlin@lemmy.world avatar

Maybe mermaid fits your use case?

mermaid.js.org

Deebster ,
@Deebster@programming.dev avatar

There’s kroki as well, which includes Mermaid, Excalidraw, GraphViz, PlantUML, etc.

Hawk ,

See also Inkscape.

Doesn’t quite fit OPs want of self hosted, but still very good.

There is also Asymptote and tikz for more technical stuff.

Wav_function , to linux in Noob Question Thread: Ask Any Questions About Linux!

Will it blend?

ClanOfTheOcho ,

Depends on the hardware, but generally, yeah.

(It’s a joke)

Sunny , to linuxmemes in type the distro you use and is and let your keyboard finish it

Bazzite is the only one that I have the right one to go with.

Bazzite I can do it on the porch and floor.

Bazzite to be a good time for me and the boys.


Godammit these gave me a good laugh!

Fizz ,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

Bazzite to be a good time for me and they boys.

Every bazzite gamer has to crack this joke once in their life.

geneva_convenience , to memes in Vote!

As a lifelong Baal voter I am now voting for Moloch. How can anyone with a conscience still vote for Baal after he was convicted of sacrificing adults?

Schlemmy , to lemmyshitpost in giving her 🧀

Search for Pink and Brie.

OpenStars , to nostupidquestions in Why is there so much hype around artificial intelligence?
@OpenStars@discuss.online avatar

Money. If you paid to use those services, they got what they wanted.

homesweethomeMrL ,

Money.

That’s the entirety of the reason.

Boozilla ,
@Boozilla@lemmy.world avatar

“Line must go up.”

iconic_admin ,

Summed up an MBA in four words.

OpenStars ,
@OpenStars@discuss.online avatar

“Be greedy” => there, did it in two:-P

It is so sad that it works too - no room for nuance, responsibility, even long-term stability (even for the entire human species, + all other mammals on Earth & many others too that we seem ready to take down with us on our way to extinction).

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