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  • There are quite a few in the anime space. I have been meaning to put a list together for some time. There is an old post here put together by a user, but I don't think it is really that up to date. So, here are the communities that I directly know of and have interacted with:

  • The anime discussion index link has been updated. It should now point to https://lemmyverse.link/ani.social/post/11480352

    I tend to refresh that post every couple of months just so that stale comments aren't sitting around forever and confusing people.

    Some other updates that I see:

    • Dan Da Dan has finished airing, but a new season is coming in July, so your call whether you want to keep it up or not.
    • Dragon Ball Daima has finished airing, but the [email protected] is currently hosting a rewatch of the original series. Here is the link to the start of the rewatch. The most recent thread is pinned to the community.
    • Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX - We are hosting threads over on [email protected] (in addition to the main anime community)
  • Been a little while since I popped into one of these threads. Some notable events:

    • [email protected] is entering an exciting period as a new gundam show just started. The first episode discussion thread was lively, so I am hoping that continues through the season.
    • [email protected] is also quite active at the moment due to the start of the new anime season. There have been quite a number of names that I don't recognize from past seasons, so that is exciting.
    • [email protected] is similarly experiencing a bit of influx of new users posting and commenting. I haven't been as active as I would like in this community due to time, so it is a welcome development to have more, different people posting.
  • I am a big fan of content-specific instances. Some instances off the top of my head that fit this description:

    ...and I am sure there are many others. I just think that having a focus like that provides a more interesting local instance environment than a large, generalist instance, though both have a place.

  • It's all based on the median household income. I feel like that isn't the best representation if the median household is losing purchasing power over time due to wage stagnation, but it's the definition they went with. From the article:

    The report, which crunched the numbers for all 50 states, is based on Pew Research’s definition of middle class: two-thirds to double the median household income.

  • Edit: Reading is hard and I misunderstood that this post is about promoting lemmy on reddit. I don't have any experience to contribute with that, but I will leave the rest of my post for posterity.


    By self-promotion, do you mean creating content for youtube/a blog/etc. and then posting it to lemmy? If so, then I think that is fine within reason. In the communities I mod, I have allow self-promotion with these guidelines:

    • Be an active member of the community on other posts too, not just your own content
    • If you post your own content, at least be responsive to questions you might get in the comment section
    • Rate limit your self-promotion so that it doesn't feel spammy (no defined rate, more vibes-based)

    I have a couple posters that have posted article or projects that they have created and been fine. I also have a couple people I have ended up banning because they would just post links to their own content and vanish otherwise.

    All that said, there is a sizable portion of lemmy that seems to chafe against any kind of corporate-controlled social media. So, there is an inbuilt hostility that can exert an outsized influence in smaller communities.

  • Just for some background information on how most countries tend to rely on larger, more rigorous regulatory bodies...

    I am in the pharma industry (not in vaccines though). Typically the two main regulators that most other countries look to as a reference are either the FDA or the EMA (the EU organization). This usually means that if you can satisfy the requirements of one of these bodies, then it is satisfactory for the other country as well. However, it isn't universal as each other country will usually have some modifications here and there for whatever reason. The most annoyingly particular ones I have dealt with in the past are China and Japan.

  • subtitle playback

    This is still a little weird. I found that the web client (in a browser) handles this really well with default settings. However, if I try to use the desktop app or a mobile client, I have to force it to burn in the subtitles for them to show up reliably. Fortunately, there are per-client settings for this now:

  • It's been a while since I last used LaTeX since I am in industry now, but there is definitely a learning curve. If you are talking about undergrads, then it might be too steep a challenge for most to want to take on unless they plan on pursuing academia long-term. Like others have mentioned, LaTeX is a kind of standard that you see used a lot in academic circles. Some journals also like or support things that are created through tex and will have their own templates to use.

    Basically, LaTeX consists of writing in a markup language, like your screenshot, and then running that through a processor that interprets your .tex file and creates the formatted output (usually a pdf). Back in my day, TexnicCenter was the program of choice to write the actual .tex file, but some quick searching and it looks like VSCode with an appropriate extension is probably one of the best/easiest ways to do it now.

    The most annoying part of tex is references. I remember being utterly confused by BibTeX when I was trying to get it to work. I am way out of date on what best practices for today might be, but I hope they have improved that process somewhat.

  • Seconding LaTeX as the gold standard for formatting math/science in written form. Some of my peers in grad school (physics) wrote up their assignments in it (I opted instead for massive reams of handwritten work). However, I did write up my thesis in LaTeX. My university had a LaTeX template for a thesis that took care of the boilerplate formatting, I just had to focus on the content.

  • I own a Prius (not a PHEV though, just a hybrid) and can corroborate that my mileage goes down significantly in the winter months. It is a combination of a couple factors in my experience.

    • Needing to run the engine more to heat things up for defrosting and heating the cabin.
    • Related to the above, I tend to idle a lot more in the winter while cleaning ice/snow off the car, letting it warm up, or clearing the driveway.
    • Switching to winter tires (Blizzaks) negatively impacts rolling resistance compared to the LRR tires (Ecopias) I use the rest of the year.

    I tend to average ~45 mpg in the summer and ~37 mpg in the winter over the past two years.

  • Starting a new community is an uphill slog. Some tips and observations:

    • Make sure to subscribe to the community from several of the large instances so that it is federated there and people viewing the all feed can see it.
    • If you haven't yet, make sure to announce the community in [email protected] and/or [email protected]
    • If you can think of some kind of recurring post series, it is a good structure to provide a steady drip of content. For latin, maybe something like a weekly post about the etymology of a modern word with a latin root?
    • In general, posts with a lead image generate much more interaction than non-image, discussion posts. So, the meme-type posts can serve a role to help people discover the community.
  • I haven't been able to post as much this past week compared to normal, but things have been going ok:

    • [email protected] is actually kind of booming right now with the start of a new season of shows. I have seen lots of first-time commenters chiming in on episode threads. It actually hit ~300 users/day at one point over the weekend.
    • [email protected] has been calm but active. There are a handful of other fairly reliable posters that have been able to keep things going while I have been away.

    The not as active ones:

    • [email protected] - I inherited this community when the previous moderator had to step away for an extended period of time. The nokotan community in general is very meme-heavy, and I just don't really know how to engage with that very well. There is only so much non-meme content about the series. So, I am going to try to binge-read the manga and start posting chapter discussion threads when new chapters are released. I just need to find the time to do that.
    • [email protected] - This is another kind of special case. The current, most active Gundam community is [email protected]. However, that instance announced that they are shutting down later this month. The current users over there were interested in setting up a new community but there wasn't anybody that wanted to moderate. So, I offered my help in that respect. It just started this past week, so there isn't much there yet, but I am going to try to keep posting any Gundam-related content I find over there.
  • It also depends on the community a lot. The anime community on lemmy ([email protected], shameless plug) has been super chill overall. I think it's in large part due to the lemmy userbase skewing older than your average social media user.

  • Recently, in [email protected], I configured the episode discussion bot to create posts using the poster art of the show rather than just an empty discussion post as a bit of an experiment about the effect of images. I don't have hard analytics to dig into, but I have noticed that the episode discussion threads have garnered significantly more votes when they have images, and a small increase in comments. Though, the additional comments are usually just wandering folks instead of people that stick around and engage.

    I still don't let fanart in either the main anime nor manga community because it would too quickly spiral out of control. There is simply too much fanart in existence for these things. Instead, I limit it to official art only, which usually means teasers/posters/trailers. In the manga community, there is a bit of a special case in that I do allow fanart of a series if it was done by a different published author (not just some random pixiv user). This happens sometimes when a series ends and you get other authors drawing commemorative art for it.

  • Dungeons and Dragons @lemmy.world
    wjs018 @lemmy.world

    How "Record of Lodoss War" Started as a D&D Game and Influenced Anime and Tabletop Gaming - Anime Herald

    cross-posted from: https://ani.social/post/7586224

    Some excerpts:

    About Record of Lodoss War's origins:

    Record of Lodoss War originally started as a TTRPG Replay, a written transcript of a tabletop RPG (TTRPG), with the first Lodoss War stories being a Replay for a Dungeons & Dragons campaign.

    Reading the original Replays is oddly endearing. I expected the chit-chat, playful snipes at the DM, or even the reading of dice rolls to be cut out in order to make the players’ adventure read like an actual narrative and not a transcription. All of that stays in the Lodoss Replays, however. Everything from excitedly reading out dice results to the players’ reactions to twists in the narrative, to character creation itself, is kept in the text.

    About its influence on Japanese TTRPGs:

    Besides the good that Record of Lodoss War did for Group SNE as a company and the aesthetics of anime itself, it was also good for fostering a small but dedicated community of TTRP

  • I work in pharma, regularly writing and filing things with the FDA (and other agencies), and this has been a topic of conversation at work. The good news for people is that the EMA is still a thing in the EU. So, at least the large pharma companies (like the one I work for), are likely to not really change much about their quality control/processes/etc. because we will still need to conform to the EMA guidelines which are typically in line with the current FDA (sometimes more strict, sometimes less so). The real quality concern would be smaller companies that only file for products in the US. They would only need to meet whatever new FDA guidelines come into effect (if they even do, changing stuff like GMP guidance is extremely complicated and time consuming) since the US is their only market.

  • We celebrated a one year birthday for both [email protected] and [email protected]. Over the past year we have grown from nothing to being (in my biased opinion), the best place on the fediverse to discuss anime and manga. It has been a lot of work, but they are both active enough now that I can do something like go on vacation for a couple days and they will keep going in my absence (including other mods that will manage things).

    I made a series of birthday-themed anime clips to celebrate. If you are interested, here they are: