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cacarr commented on Create personal illustrated storybooks in the Gemini app   blog.google/products/gemi... · Posted by u/xnx
nosioptar · 19 days ago
According to Gemini, there us no Gemini desktop app...
cacarr · 18 days ago
They mean the web app.
cacarr commented on Create personal illustrated storybooks in the Gemini app   blog.google/products/gemi... · Posted by u/xnx
serial_dev · 19 days ago
It works surprisingly well, I’d say it gives better results than Google Translate. I can say that German, Spanish, and even Hungarian results are all consistently good. I often say “answer in English, German, and Hungarian” when I want to make sure I practice all these languages and I can discuss some topics in any language. I usually write in English, and add if it should answer in other languages.
cacarr · 18 days ago
At least in the major Indo-European languages, I think Gemini 2.5 Pro is _much_ better at translation than Google Translate.
cacarr commented on FaceTime is coming to Android and Windows via the web   theverge.com/2021/6/7/225... · Posted by u/jbredeche
cargo8 · 4 years ago
Duo and WhatsApp have significantly better video quality (especially off of Wi-Fi) than FaceTime
cacarr · 4 years ago
That's certainly true of Duo in experience.
cacarr commented on FaceTime is coming to Android and Windows via the web   theverge.com/2021/6/7/225... · Posted by u/jbredeche
josephg · 4 years ago
I’m sure it does - the technical aspects of Google’s products are fantastic. But I’ve been burned enough times now and I just assume anything interesting and new that Google makes will be rebranded / deleted / shunted into a new department in a few years for no reason. Google duo? What about Allo? Is that gchat? Is it related to hangouts? Or was that just a Google plus thing? Does that even still exist? Is duo it related to Meet? It’s all such a mess.

When Inbox came out I thought “huh this is great. I’d better not get used to it or I’ll be sad when it inevitably gets shut down in a few years”. And sure enough. I dread the family conversations in a few years of “wait where did the icon go?”

cacarr · 4 years ago
One can understand scepticism, but Duo isn't going anywhere. If you need a FaceTime replacement, just use Duo and put all the rest of that mess out of your mind.
cacarr commented on FaceTime is coming to Android and Windows via the web   theverge.com/2021/6/7/225... · Posted by u/jbredeche
yhoneycomb · 4 years ago
Seriously why are Google video calls SO confusing and why do they change every year?
cacarr · 4 years ago
Duo is solid, extremely simple, and not going anywhere. But, yeah, it's been a mess.
cacarr commented on FaceTime is coming to Android and Windows via the web   theverge.com/2021/6/7/225... · Posted by u/jbredeche
lotsofpulp · 4 years ago
In my family, it was the best video calling option back in 2010-2012 or so, and there was no competition. So all the older people only know how to use Facetime, and no one is going to go through the trouble of teaching them anything else.

I also have been embarrassed trying to teach Google's solutions and then Google messing with them over and over, so I won't ever try to introduce a Google service again.

cacarr · 4 years ago
Duo is pretty easy for the old folks on i-devices, in my experience. It's pretty much Google's FaceTime, and isn't going anywhere anytime soon.

I think it's actually a bit nicer than FaceTime.

cacarr commented on Why Russians do not smile (2002)   chicagomaroon.com/2002/04... · Posted by u/1experience
skohan · 4 years ago
Just to add another perspective, as an American living in Germany, I often find that the German criticism of American optimism/interpersonal warmth is extremely paranoid. I have heard so many Germans describe American "niceness" as "fake", but I don't think the American approach is rooted in dishonesty as it's sometimes assumed by outsiders. For instance, Germans will be shocked if they go to the US, and a stranger starts a conversation with them waiting in line at the convenience store with a lot of warmth and curiosity. As I understand, to them this reads as the approach of someone who wants to con them or trick them, putting on the guise of un-earned closeness. But Americans in my experience just give interpersonal warmth a bit more freely, and are more willing to have friendlier interactions with someone they don't know, with no expectation that the relationship will last longer than the time both of you are standing in line, while that type of warmth and friendliness will be reserved for close friends and family in other cultures. As someone who grew up in American culture, it's not "fake" or forced when I smile to a stranger, or congratulate them on the new grandchild they just told me about in our first meeting. It's just part of the culture, and it's something which I enjoy to give and receive in these random, short interactions throughout the week.

And when it comes to work criticism, I agree that there is some value in what would be considered "blunt feedback" by American standards, and that Americans are sometimes too hesitant to give it. At the same time, I think this also comes from a different cultural approach which is also valid. Americans have deeply rooted ideals for independence and self determination, and a general sense of optimism. I think the default position when someone is showing you a piece of work is often to assume that they have it under control, and that it would be presumptuous to tear down a piece of work someone else owns and that you are seeing for the first time. By focusing on praising the best elements of the work, you are giving your colleague feedback on what they should focus and expand on, and you are leaving it up to them to discover the flaws in their work and resolve them in their own way. So you would reserve direct criticism for times when you think there is a critical misunderstanding in the basic direction of the work which will prevent the correct result from being reached.

And you can cliticise the American approach all you want, and I will be the first to admit that it does lead to a lot of problems and blind-spots. But as someone who has worked in the US and in Germany, my experience is that American companies move and innovate a lot quicker than German ones by focusing on potential rather than flaws, and that trend seems to have been borne out if you look at the major innovations which have come out of each country in the last 30 years.

cacarr · 4 years ago
There is quite a lot of regional variation in the States. I imagine Germans would prefer New Yorkers to West Coast Americans.

Multiple times, while on a train coming into the city from Portland, OR's airport, I've observed Portlanders strike up a grinning, friendly conversation with a New Yorker, noting their accent and inquiring as to what brings them to Portland -- and invariably the New Yorker has a pained look on their face like "why the fuck are you talking to me?"

cacarr commented on Why Russians do not smile (2002)   chicagomaroon.com/2002/04... · Posted by u/1experience
cacarr · 4 years ago
Many years ago I lived in a sort of dormitory in Tokyo. The Americans and Japanese residents understood each other's personal space preferences just fine, but it was amusing to note the look on some of the Japanese people's faces when the Italians greeted them with hugs and kisses.
cacarr commented on Why Russians do not smile (2002)   chicagomaroon.com/2002/04... · Posted by u/1experience
Gene_Parmesan · 4 years ago
This is exactly how "How are you?" is meant in American culture. It's not fake; greetings are culturally determined and especially the most common greeting phrases in any culture should not be treated literally but instead as part of a ritual exchange.

"How are you?"

"I'm well, and you?"

"Great, thanks."

It's just a ritualistic exchange.

cacarr · 4 years ago
The Japanese say something like "nice weather, eh?" (ii otenki desu ne? - to which one replies "sure is! - "so desu ne!") -- which is mostly just a semantically little-analyzed pragmatic sequence functioning as a casual greeting.
cacarr commented on Why Russians do not smile (2002)   chicagomaroon.com/2002/04... · Posted by u/1experience
cacarr · 4 years ago
"In the animal world bare teeth are considered to be a threat. Hence I think there is some instinctive fear of bare teeth built into our social perception system."

Except a human smile is more akin to a canine's greeting/appeasement grin. And much more so like a Chimp's play grin. There are toothy displays in mammals that are not threatening.

u/cacarr

KarmaCake day61April 20, 2017View Original