I’m just an internet explorer.

日本語 OK • 中文 OK • tiếng việt OK

@linguistics@cats@dogs@learnjapanese@japanese@residentevil@genshin_impact@genshinimpact@classicalmusic@persona@finalfantasy

#linguistics #nlp #compling #linux #foss

  • 2 Posts
  • 41 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • It’s not one week of inactivity, is has been going on for months

    Looks at 2 months straight of kbin devlogs since October, when the man was having pretty significant personal issues

    Not to mention he was: recently sick; tended to financial issues, and personal matters; formalities relating to the project. This isn’t even mentioning that he communicated this in the devlog magazine. Or the fact that he has implemented suggestions multiple times at the request of the community to enhance QoL, and allowed users to have agency in making mod contributions.

    You might want to take your own advice. This has also allowed me to revise my earlier statement. You people are actually insane.













  • You mentioned a lot of things that I generally really enjoy about #kbin as well.

    ⭐ The admin @ernest is an incredibly hardworking, kind, supportive, and an all-around good person. This is my tip top most favorite thing because good leadership and communication is essential to a good and thriving community. Ernest is a star!

    Same, he also gets bonus points for listening to, and implementing suggestions. Some of them have come quite quickly as well. These factors when combined have made me feel like I’m really a part of the community.

    ⭐ I enjoy making scripts/styles for kbin. kbin is the reason I began learning JS, HTML, and CSS. I am so happy I started learning, and it’s all thanks to kbin.

    Cheers to that, I actually use one of yours – specifically the one that changes the layout of profile pages.

    ⭐ No malicious, tricky, over-calculated algorithm. It’s very straight-forward and honest here. I love seeing a mix of upvoted/downvoted comments in comment sections too, rather than just top upvoted, because it makes me feel more apart of the conversation with everyone. Your contributions and thoughts won’t get drowned out by upvoted witty remarks, that is truly unique to kbin (and maybe elsewhere on the fediverse?).

    Agreed – I think Mastodon also functions similarly. It makes #discoverability a bit challenging at times, but I’m open to experimenting with it.

    ⭐ kbin gives me the urge to contribute, interact, and create because our contributions have actual impact. Can’t say the same for other sites. Everywhere else is lurk only.

    Hard agree – though it wears on me at times when I’m unable to get some engagement going after keeping at it for so long. I’ve changed my mindset about it a little while ago, so it’s not too bad.

    ⭐ Tightknit but welcoming. kbin is small enough that I run into familiar people all the time, and I recognize usernames everywhere.

    Agreed, and to add onto this – profile pictures are pretty easily recognizable as well.

    ⭐ Authenticity. kbin is authentic and real. It’s not pushing a product, not manipulating what you see, not building an ad profile. It is what a forum should be.

    Yeah, adding on one of your points again – it’s very reminiscent of what #forums used to feel like. However, at the same time, it feels like something more due to the addition of #microblogging. #Microblogs may not be super popular on /kbin, but I think they’re a stellar addition to the forum experience. I’ve had some nice back-and-forths with #Mastodon users from the comfort of /kbin’s UI. I think there’s more potential in what you can do with them, too.




  • To add further context–I’d like to emphasize that an understanding of written Chinese would help with Kanji, but like you said, to a limited extent. When reading Kanji, there are cases where you’d have to be cognizant of Onyomi and Kunyomi (Basically pronunciations rooted in Chinese vs. Japanese). Not as important if you are strictly “reading”, I suppose. However, this would also not provide insight when reading Hiragana nor Katakana, how particles are used, rules for conjugation (polite vs. casual, past vs. non-past tense, etc.), further reducing mutual intelligibility. In some cases, Chinese characters may be visually identical to Japanese Kanji, yet have different meanings or applications. Traditional Chinese vs. Simplified Chinese is also a whole other topic.

    Examples where there is some similarity:
    JP: 走る
    EN: Run (verb)

    CN: 走路
    EN: Walk (verb)

    Matching characters, unrelated meaning and application:
    JP: 勉強
    EN: Study (noun)

    CN: 勉強
    EN: Reluctantly (adverb)

    Furthermore, Chinese uses Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) word order, whereas Japanese uses Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) word order. Japanese also regularly uses subject omission, so it’s important to consider these things if you’re moving from one language to the other. Missing an understanding of these differences could lead to pretty different interpretations of a sentence.

    That being said, having a background in Chinese would be more beneficial when picking up Japanese than the other way around, IMO.


  • To further add onto this, they can be public or private. Public Collections are able to be followed by other users. This would be helpful for increasing discoverability for fellow users and communities/magazines. You can create Private Collections for personalized feeds that you may not want to share, negating the need to create a new account for feeds with a different theme or purpose.