The softer approach to this I've implemented in the past is to ingest and link up org data (user accounts, groups, projects, etc) into one central DB and then provide an audit notifications or dashboards to authorized users. Examples:
- Slack user detected with full access that isn't associated with a staff-grouped LDAP account
- Group A in System X doesn't match the members of Group A in System Y)
- Service Z provisioned, but their associated customer account is deactivated
These kinds of violations _can_ be automatically synchronized in a variety of ways, but I've seen that result in politically embarrassing outcomes (e.g. Sensitive user X is fired, their Slack account is automatically deactivated, people notice before some kind of staff meeting can be held to talk about what's going on).
I run into this with melee attacks in a lot of first person games (Cyberpunk, Deep Rock Galactic). Often the camera is pinned to the character's head, the head which is animated during a melee attack. Both games above actually have screen shake accessibility sliders which critically do nothing to prevent this source of motion sickness.
I suspect it has to do with "camera movement I didn't control". I recall some research done by Valve during the VR development days that resulted in the "teleport" movement fix.
Is it any wonder then that the Liberals dragged their heels on the 2015 campaign promise of electoral reform?
As part of the process, the parliamentary committee released a survey asking questions like
* Independent candidates should be able to be elected to Parliament
* The current electoral system adequately reflects voters' intentions
* Seats should be allocated in proportion to the percentage of votes received by each political party
* Voters should elect local candidates to represent them in Parliament
* The current electoral system should be changed
* There should be parties in Parliament that represent the views of all Canadians, even if some are radical or extreme.
* Governments should have to negotiate their policy decisions with other parties in Parliament, even if it is less clear who is accountable for the resulting policy.
* It is better for several parties to have to govern together than for one party to make all the decisions in government, even if it takes longer for government to get things done.
"Interface evolves toward transparency. The one you have to devote the least conscious effort to, survives, prospers. This is true for interface hardware as well, so that the cranial jacks and brain inserts and bolts in the neck, all the transitional sci-fi hardware of the sci-fi cyborg, already looks slightly quaint. The real cyborg, the global organism, is so splendidly invasive that these things already seem medieval." -Gibson
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