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roganartu commented on How we built Bluey’s world   itsnicethat.com/features/... · Posted by u/skrebbel
rmccue · a month ago
I'm afraid I don't have the specific episodes burned into my brain well enough to remember the names of them all. :)

That said, one that's burned into my brain is when they're walking along the South Bank riverside; the episode is apparently called "Ice Cream". The shot at ~0:48 in this video: https://youtu.be/cBti7aQBMk4?si=o3sWwfKJwQ-VEa8e&t=48 Is approximately from here: https://maps.app.goo.gl/Y1UmtCK5si8drVaD7 - It's not exactly the same as the show, but that's more a limitation of Google Maps; I bet you could recreate the shot. There's also usually an ice cream vendor just about there. :)

The bridge in the background is Victoria Bridge, the clock on the right is the Suncorp building (I think now demolished), the weird multi-part building next to it is Brisbane Square Library (now also a Suncorp building), and the arched building to the right of that is the Treasury Building (formerly the casino).

The rest of the shots in that episode are from various other parts in the parklands if you walk along it, including the lagoon beach, fountains, and walkway. The whole area (and the ibises) are an iconic part of Brisbane, as a legacy of Expo 88.

Aside from that, I think quite a lot of the shots in the city take place in real places, whether recognisable places like Mt Coot-Tha or random shops in the suburbs.

roganartu · a month ago
I haven’t watched any scenes from Bluey before (though I have a newborn now so I suspect that will soon change), but I lived in southbank for a few years during uni, basically right beside the cultural center bus stop.

I watched the clip and within a few seconds I knew exactly where in the parklands they were. Very cool, thanks for sharing. I had a similar feeling of under representation (for lack of a better term?) most of my life and while classic shows like Kath and Kim or either of the soaps show pretty quintessentially Aussie home interiors and outdoor areas, it still feels very Sydney/Melbourne.

The other show recently I’d say gave us that Brisbane feel (and a bit of homesickness, we live in NYC atm) was Love on the Spectrum: Australia. One of the guys is a bus driver in Brisbane and we’d often pause it to try and figure out if we could recognise which route.

roganartu commented on I do not remember my life and it's fine   aethermug.com/posts/i-do-... · Posted by u/mrcgnc
mkfs · 3 months ago
To some degree, mind's eye clarity is an illusion, with many overestimating the fidelity of their mental imagery. One of the better, more recent examples is the "draw a bicycle" experiment: https://road.cc/content/blog/90885-science-cycology-can-you-...

Granted, many can't draw at all, but people's inability to reproduce from memory an object of some complexity that they see (and likewise, use) every day is telling.

Also the well-documented inaccuracy of eye-witness testimony.

roganartu · 3 months ago
I don’t think this really has much to do with fidelity/clarity, so much as accuracy. One could have an extremely high fidelity visual of a bike that is incorrect and you wouldn’t say they had aphantasia as a result.

I have aphantasia, I have no voluntary visual component to my mind as far as I can tell. I also have quite a good memory. If I were to draw a bike from memory I suspect I would make similar mistakes as those.

One thing I have noticed in the threads that come up about aphantasia is comments either directly or indirectly calling into question its validity. I want to share a test I got from another HN comment, so I won’t take credit, that I have found to be the easiest way to explain to people how completely absent the visual component is for me.

Close your eyes and imagine a ball bouncing across a table. Imagine the sound it makes as it goes. Bounce. Bounce. Bounce. What colour is it?

Most people I ask answer this question without hesitation. It’s easy, because they were just looking at it, maybe still are. I have asked this question of various friends tens of times, and I still don’t know what colour the ball is for me because it doesn’t exist. I know what a bouncing ball looks like, I know the sound it makes. I know what colour it could be. But I’ve never seen it.

That is aphantasia. It’s not foggy, or blurry, or “low fidelity”, it’s just nothingness.

roganartu commented on Amazon Rules Out Displaying Tariff Impact After White House Attack   wsj.com/business/retail/a... · Posted by u/biscuit1v9
Uvix · 4 months ago
How do you show the final price to someone when dining in and carrying out food have different tax rates? You won’t know the price until they complete the purchase.

How do you put the final price on an ad that will be broadcast over a large area or distributed in a newspaper that goes to same, with different tax rates in different parts of the area? You won’t know the price until you know which location they’re shopping at.

roganartu · 4 months ago
You simplify the tax code so that, like the vast majority of other developed nations, these situations do not apply.

However that requires a centralization of power that is politically unpalatable in the US currently.

In practice, I think that this issue largely persists in the US because of tipping culture though. It perpetuates an acceptance of final cost uncertainty that makes the insanity of all the examples you describe seem somehow not so weird after all.

roganartu commented on Minimum effective dose   winnielim.org/journal/min... · Posted by u/surprisetalk
Mainsail · 7 months ago
You can be in and out of the gym in 30-40 minutes using a PPL.
roganartu · 7 months ago
Notoriously difficult to find one with a landing strip inside, however.
roganartu commented on I'm Peter Roberts, immigration attorney who does work for YC and startups. AMA    · Posted by u/proberts
elliotto · a year ago
Hi, I'm Australian and have applied a few times for us based tech roles and ticked 'require sponsorship'. I never really got far with my research - are you saying that the e3 is an automated process and I can get away with ticking 'do not need sponsorship'?

Thank you!

roganartu · a year ago
I’m Australian and have been living in the US for the last 7 years, working for the same employer the whole time. I was originally on an E3 which was renewed twice, before transferring to a H1b and finally a greencard.

The E3 is not “automated” in the sense that some interactions with CBP are. You have to attend an interview at a consulate outside the US (my first was in Sydney, renewals were all in London) and while it’s not really stressful or has a high rejection rate it’s not something I’d personally risk without a lawyer having prepared the paperwork.

As for how I communicated this when applying for jobs, I always selected that I needed sponsorship and then the first sentence in my cover letter explained that I’m eligible for an E3. I interviewed with probably 100 companies back then and only one of them that I got to a first phone screen with cared about the visa thing and it was because they wanted to fill the headcount asap. Once companies get to a certain size they are either ok with sponsorship for all roles or not ok for any, and it’s just something that gets handed off to legal after a hiring decision is made. I wouldn’t worry about the companies that automatically cull your application based on needing sponsorship.

roganartu commented on FDA approves first medication to reduce allergic reactions to multiple foods   fda.gov/news-events/press... · Posted by u/nimbleplum40
sundvor · 2 years ago
Move to Australia? On a script, cost is AUD $31.60 per syringe, a rather stark saving from $410 . I wonder how that latter price compares to the price in the US, I couldn't quite get the prices I read without insurance to compute in my head.

https://www.health.gov.au/ministers/the-hon-greg-hunt-mp/med...

https://m.pbs.gov.au/medicine/item/10109c-10110d-10118m-1012...

roganartu · 2 years ago
> I wonder how that latter price compares to the price in the US

My guess is not favourably for the US. My wife was diagnosed with MS about a year before we moved to America and, since I knew we were moving and was thinking about insurance, I asked the pharmacist once what they billed the govt per dose (monthly). We paid $40 out of pocket and the govt paid $1300 AUD.

Our insurance in the US pays nearly $10k USD/m for the same drug.

roganartu commented on Eclipse viewing at 30k feet: Delta to offer path-of-totality flight   news.delta.com/eclipse-vi... · Posted by u/gumby
zamfi · 2 years ago
I suspect they didn't say "you're SOL", they probably said "file a warranty claim".

Retail stores aren't usually on the hook for items that arrive non-functioning from the manufacturer -- the manufacturer is.

roganartu · 2 years ago
Which is bad, from a consumer protection perspective.

The retailer should absolutely be on the hook. They are the ones with a working relationship with the manufacturer, and hence are best positioned to be able to hold the manufacturer accountable.

As an Australian who lives in the US atm, they are right to be grateful for the ACCC (consumer protection watchdog). I certainly am now. In the US you have to rely on retailers who treat good consumer protection as a competitive advantage like Costco, REI, Best Buy, sometimes Amazon, etc. In Australia you can easily hold any retailer accountable (and they’re all just generally better behaved with this stuff anyway, so you rarely have to force them).

roganartu commented on What's Gone Wrong at Boeing   theatlantic.com/ideas/arc... · Posted by u/kqr2
robertlagrant · 2 years ago
Ceasing competition for mutual benefit is generally illegal.
roganartu · 2 years ago
Not everything is zero sum. The important element is not whether or not it is mutually beneficial to the companies, but whether it is detrimental to some other party.

Price fixing, wage suppression, monopolizing etc are all detrimental to the customer, employees, or other businesses, but it is possible to collaborate or “cease competition” in certain areas for mutual benefit in ways that are not detrimental (and in fact, are also beneficial) to others.

roganartu commented on 22-year-old builds chips in his parents' garage (2022)   wired.com/story/22-year-o... · Posted by u/pabs3
kiwih · 2 years ago
How about the following list of 10 cities/towns in Australia with property around 100-300k AUD?

https://www.mpamag.com/au/mortgage-industry/guides/what-are-...

roganartu · 2 years ago
The first town on the list is a place famous for building houses underground due to the heat on the surface being too extreme. It’s also in the middle of nowhere.

The rest are country towns, not suburban ones. Where you need to drive hours to get to anything approaching what you might think of as “downtown”, and even then there’s not gonna be a lot there.

The reality in Australia is that the vast majority of the population lives within 100km of the east coast. It’s not like America where there are literally thousands of decent-sized small towns (tens of thousands of people), there just isn’t enough population for that. Almost half the population lives in two cities (Melbourne and Sydney) and neither of these are affordable places no matter how far out into the suburbs you go.

roganartu commented on Surging stockmarkets are powered by artificial intelligence   economist.com/finance-and... · Posted by u/axiomdata316
ajsnigrutin · 2 years ago
So.... I'm guessing if the AI messes up spectacularly, or if some reddit group manages to trick it to overinflate some penny stock, the stock markets will undo all the trades, so that billionaires don't lose a few million?
roganartu · 2 years ago
Unlikely. The trades that caused KCG to collapse [1] were not reversed (~$400m in losses).

Any firm worth their salt has risk systems in place to prevent runaway trading too, and those aren’t black boxes like AI/ML. They’re limits set for specific strategies or teams etc, and typically require approval from firm partners to increase past certain levels.

Collapses of firms are far more often caused by lapses in proper risk management than bugs in code. The KCG collapse looks like a bug on the surface but was ultimately a misuse of accounts that sidestepped these risk systems, so they couldn’t stop the runaway caused by the bug.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knight_Capital_Group

u/roganartu

KarmaCake day691April 2, 2014
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Infrastructure Engineer at Hudson River Trading

Place where I write about reliability, programming, and other things: https://www.tonylykke.com/

[ my public key: https://keybase.io/roganartu; my proof: https://keybase.io/roganartu/sigs/LyULghKURMpLPigIRAq_rQZWO_NjjkZESA4Mr_TKXYI ]

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