Yingwu

joined 11 months ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] Yingwu 3 points 2 months ago

Unfortunately there are no books on local plants that I can find.. thanks though! I did find some nature walks.

[–] Yingwu 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Thanks, I found some actually!

[–] Yingwu 2 points 2 months ago

I strive to do this too but alas it's easy to get distracted...

[–] Yingwu 2 points 2 months ago

I reason the same regarding emergencies!

[–] Yingwu 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Tbh I don't really have any emergencies I can imagine necessitates me responding in the middle of the night. But I guess it depends on one's life.

[–] Yingwu 3 points 2 months ago

Glad there's at least 2 of us hah

[–] Yingwu 4 points 2 months ago (5 children)

It's probably just my brain, but I'm thinking about how everything's still received even though you can hide the notifications

 

(not in the US)

[–] Yingwu 1 points 2 months ago

Academia with its inherent soul-sucking hierarchies must be a bad place to thrive for an anarchist

[–] Yingwu 2 points 2 months ago

Will check out the YouTubers, thanks a lot!

[–] Yingwu 10 points 2 months ago

Thanks, but I do like reading theory either way.

[–] Yingwu 2 points 2 months ago

Awesome, thanks for the rec!

[–] Yingwu 1 points 2 months ago

I don't think I really recommend Praat at this point tbh.

46
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by Yingwu to c/[email protected]
 

EDIT: I decided on Mailbox.org!

Cross-posted from "Looking for a good e-mail provider that's not Tuta/Proton" by @[email protected] in [email protected]


I'd like to use a third-party client like Thunderbird to handle my e-mails, which rules out both Tuta and Proton (I know Proton has their bridge, but I don't want to rely on it). I'm willing to compromise on my e-mails not being encrypted, as long as the e-mail provider has a reputation of caring about the customer's privacy. If I truly want to encrypt a message, I'll encrypt it myself. I've been looking at Mailbox.org, and while I've been hearing good things, people have also been complaining about their lack of support, outdated interface as well as that they don't enforce DKIM/DMARC which enables spoofing.

I would like to be able to use my own custom domain, but also to use their own domain for my e-mail aliases. EU-based only.

Any thoughts?

38
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by Yingwu to c/privacy
 

EDIT: I decided on Mailbox.org!

I'd like to use a third-party client like Thunderbird to handle my e-mails, which rules out both Tuta and Proton (I know Proton has their bridge, but I don't want to rely on it). I'm willing to compromise on my e-mails not being encrypted, as long as the e-mail provider has a reputation of caring about the customer's privacy. If I truly want to encrypt a message, I'll encrypt it myself. I've been looking at Mailbox.org, and while I've been hearing good things, people have also been complaining about their lack of support, outdated interface as well as that they don't enforce DKIM/DMARC which enables spoofing.

I would like to be able to use my own custom domain, but also to use their own domain for my e-mail aliases. EU-based only.

Any thoughts?

19
submitted 3 months ago by Yingwu to c/anarchism
 

I found https://lausancollective.com/ (HK-based) and https://chuangcn.org/ which both seem to be quite libertarian, writing from the perspective of the Sinosphere. I'm really interested in exploring more contemporary Chinese Anarchist circles though. Anyone that knows anything? I'm able to read in Chinese (or at least work myself through texts) so Chinese sources are also welcome. I just find it hard to find online sources for this, I guess it's all quite a bit underground still and not really organized to a large degree taking the the oppressive state of the mainland into account.

 

I've been maintaining my weight for a while now but lately it's been rising so I've adjusted calories accordingly, but I'm curious what you see as an acceptable "fluctuation" when you're maintaining?

 

Most people learn a new language in order to make headway in their career, be able to move abroad or just to speak with people of that country or consume their media. For people who learn for these reasons, will advances in AI and LLMs make learning a language more obsolete? Are there actually less people picking up a foreign language since LLMs opened to the public? What about the "human connection" which translators won't be able to replicate?

I guess we're still far off from real-time translation without delay in every kind of situation, especially since making sense of a sentence in many languages is very dependant on context or some word at the end of the sentence that changes the meaning of the first few words spoken.

I see learning a language as a way not only to communicate with different people, but to also learn a different way of seeing the world. That's also kind of why I'm against a global language replacing all others: in a language, the culture of the people speaking it is intrinsically linked. Wiping out a language means wiping out the culture. People don't think the same in English as they do in Mongolian. Even the concept of "time" can be different, depending on how it's expressed in another language. Translators at the moment aren't able to capture all these nuances and differences, even if they sometimes succeed.

 

Like, we live on so much space but require furniture to be able to use it. I started sitting on the floor for large parts of the day last year and it's been really nice. Also helps with general mobility!

 

I'd want to split them up so I can let the mails that go to @mailbox.org, be received by a different inbox than my custom domain email. Is this possible?

I'm currently paying for two different email providers, 1 for my custom domain and 1 for the rest (KolabNow). I'd like to reduce my costs and streamline this a bit. Didn't really know where to post though so I'm trying here.

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