Or the flipside of that: the foreigners in “Squid Game” whose English dialogue sounded like it was written by someone who’d taken a couple years of English in high school and never had an adult conversation.
Probably true for most languages. The one that bugs me is when they hire a Chinese-American actor to speak Mandarin but the actor doesn’t actually speak Mandarin fluently or speaks it with such a thick accent that I stop being able to believe the character is from China.
This does feel like a real improvement. Nicely done! In the unlikely event I'm introducing someone new to Star Wars in the future, I'll be sure to point them at this edit instead of the whole series.
One thing that's probably unavoidable given the source material but bugged me a bit is that because each of the original episodes had a climax, the edit doesn't have a story structure where the tension builds up steadily to a peak; it kind of alternates between hitting the gas and hitting the brakes.
Also, minor nitpick: the miniseries was 6 episodes, but some of them were short so the runtime was more like 4.5 hours.
For me it’s kind of both. If a book has flat, boring characters, I can still enjoy it if it has interesting fake science and/or worldbuilding. And a book with iffy worldbuilding can still be a gripping read if the characters are done well. The best books have both. But they do need to have one or the other.
You'll start to get hints of it later in Heavensward, but I'd say the second expansion (Stormblood) is where you start to really get a strong sense that the story has a destination in mind, and especially that the recurring villains have a more specific motivation than "serve the dark god."
The next expansion (Shadowbringers) starts off feeling like an unrelated side story, but then you realize that it's actually tying together some of the seemingly unrelated plot threads from earlier in the game by showing you a different perspective on the lore and some of the characters.
The last current expansion (Endwalker) is where you have to address the reason the villains have been doing what they've been doing, and it ties a lot of things together including the part of the story you're on right now. Without spoiling any details, suffice to say that Ishgard isn't the only nation that has a history with dragons.
There's always going to be a certain amount of anime craziness, but the big picture does come together much more than is apparent from where you are in the story right now.
This is a pretty good analogy. You could start watching "Stranger Things" from season 3, and you'd figure everything out well enough to follow the story, but the character interactions would be much less meaningful and you'd miss out on a lot of background details that make the setting richer.
Playing the game, it was clear to me that they didn't have the whole story mapped out in detail from day one. Minor plot threads get dropped and some of the lore isn't 100% consistent. But that's also true of a lot of TV shows with continuing storylines. On the whole, the game does an impressive job tying a decade's worth of expansions together into a single coherent storyline where each part builds on what came before. It's definitely too much of a slow burn in the beginning, but the setup eventually pays off and it's one of my favorite stories in all of gaming. Skipping to the last chapter would rob it of a lot of its impact.
Their track record isn't that bad, is it? Castlevania and Edgerunners were pretty good adaptations. Dragon Age was all right. And Arcane was amazing, though Netflix wasn't involved in that one early on. So there's reason to be at least cautiously optimistic, IMO.
When I first heard AC/DC’s “Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap” as a kid, I thought they were singing, “Dirty Deeds and The Thunder Chief” and assumed it was the street names of a pair of Native American hit men. I didn’t learn the actual lyrics until a decade or so later, but I choose to continue hearing it the other way.
US here, and yes, easily. I have WhatsApp installed on my phone but it's probably been over a year since I used it last. SMS, email, and Facebook Messenger are the media of choice in my social circle. Work communication is over Slack and email.
But if someone wanted to use WhatsApp to talk to me, I'd use it without being bothered much.
Saw this at the Comic-Con screening and it works better than I expected, especially the physical comedy. The exaggerated cartoon antics are still there, but toned down just enough to not seem out of place in live action.
The current system of job seeking often requires to lie on resume.
This has not been my experience at all, but maybe it depends on what kinds of jobs you’re seeking.
In my line of work, detecting lies on resumes is one of the reasons we spend time interviewing candidates. If you are caught out in a lie, you can kiss any chance of an offer goodbye. As an interviewer I have never knowingly given a “hire” vote to a lying candidate and if I did, I wouldn’t have my job much longer.
I find that setup an obnoxious user experience. Instead of one hotkey that tells my password manager to fill out the login form, now I have to switch to my mail app, wait for the login email to arrive (if my mail provider or the site’s mail provider is having trouble, no login for me!) then back to my browser where I need to close the original tab because clicking the email link opened a new one.
If I am on a shared computer, now I need to either manually copy a long URL from my phone or read my email on that computer, a much bigger security risk than just entering a password and 2FA code.
Commander Reid Wiseman and his crewmates—pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen—were named to the Artemis II crew on April 3.
"Hello, crewmate! What are you doing on this mission?"
What metric did they use to determine what “top 10%” means? Because that’s the part of this that seems most ridiculous to me given how situation-dependent most engineering decisions are. To illustrate with an extreme example: is “daily+ deployment frequency” a sign of an amazing engineering org if the thing being deployed is updates to your heart monitor firmware?
SEO is an industry devoted to undermining search engines' ability to organically surface good content. Good content will still be surfaced on its own, just maybe not quite as quickly.
The "developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity" condition is part of why people are up in arms about this. If I'm at work and I run into a bug and submit a patch, my patch was developed in the course of a commercial activity, and thus the project as a whole was partially developed in the course of a commercial activity.
How many major open-source projects have zero contributions from companies?
It also acts as a huge disincentive for companies to open their code at all. If I package up a useful library I wrote at work, and I release it, and some other person downloads it and exposes a vulnerability that is only exploitable if you use the library in a way that I wasn't originally using it, boom, my company is penalized.
Or the flipside of that: the foreigners in “Squid Game” whose English dialogue sounded like it was written by someone who’d taken a couple years of English in high school and never had an adult conversation.