cecilkorik

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

The browser is still great, and the community is great, and that's why I use a fork that disables most of Firefox's stupid irresponsible decisions (Librewolf). Unfortunately that doesn't help things like Pocket. I agree that Firefox/Mozilla is evidently being run by the wrong people with the wrong motivations and ultimately sabotaging itself and I too fear for its future if this continues.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago

It's not Peertube, but as at least a step away from Youtube I've found a lot of my favourite creators immediately cross-post all their videos to Odysee (including electronics guys like Louis, Bigclive, GreatScott, etc) and I've also found some new channels to watch there. It's not a great site, it's marginally better than Youtube, which is not a high bar. For obvious reasons, I'm looking forward to finding recommendations in Peertube too though so I'll be watching this thread.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago (1 children)

"remove any thing that they might be able to do" is a hilariously broad brush to apply to three letter agencies in this day and age that were doing things like this 50 years ago.

I'm not saying it's realistic that OP is being targeted for such surveillance. But if they are, good fucking luck! Flashing your firmware ain't going to do shit when they've just gone ahead and replaced the chips on your board with their own that act exactly like a normal chip but have extra code that doesn't get flashed when they don't want it to.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

Yeah but the sun burns probably millions of people every day and causes cancer, besides it's big enough to take care of itself.

And I've already explained before, that "face" is just conveniently aligned shadows that make it look like a face. There's no actual face there. Further analysis clearly showed that it was in fact a pyramid, just like the ones aliens built here in ancient Egypt. /s

[–] [email protected] 49 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (15 children)

I am incapable of the kind of black and white thinking that would allow me to believe that literally ACAB, but an awful lot of them clearly are, and maybe even an overwhelming majority. And I appreciate finding and documenting as much evidence as we can find of that, so that we can have an honest and accurate accounting of how many cops are actually, indeed, "bad".

[–] [email protected] 6 points 6 days ago (2 children)

What did Mars ever do to deserve any of this? It's just out there minding its own business not bothering anybody. Into the sun where at least they can be used as fuel, that would be a better use for them.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

It sounds like you're talking about the experience that France has in designing and building them being a massive advantage, which I agree with, which is why they're going to be an important part of the group. The hardest things to do are the things that are the most worth doing. Laziness and efficiency are the same thing, and our relentless pursuit of efficiency in every possible thing has made us unfathomably lazy. It's time to invest in some thoughtful inefficiency. The fact that these things are difficult is how you learn important albeit maybe expensive lessons and become an expert and a leader. To paraphrase JFK, we have to do these things not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Only a fool would think learning is a waste of time.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 6 days ago (5 children)

Sounds like it's time for France, Germany, Norway, South Korea, UK, Australia, Canada, and anyone else who wants in to join forces and build our own modern nuclear sub class. We are not helpless subsistence farmers, we are some of the largest economies in the world, I will not be gaslit into believing we are not capable of matching or exceeding, if not US technology itself, then at least the level of technology that the US would be willing to sell to us. Where there is a collective will, there is a way. We must put as much collective effort into this as we put into the industrial revolution itself, or WW2's economic transformations. If we did it in a matter of years under fire from Germany's bombs and guns and U-boats we can do it under fire from Trump's tariffs. Let's get to work.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

Fascism has always been the great enemy. Not a leader, not a country, not a people, not a religion. Fascism is part of being human, approximately 30% of the population has been found in studies to have fascist tendencies. They are not the majority, but they are common, they are powerful, they are malicious, and they always will be. And right now, a lot of them are also very, very rich.

As long as fascism is part of being human, it will always be the responsibility of the other 70% to fight it. And it is a terrible responsibility, but it will never go away. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. Only when we all get lazy and apathetic and divided and decadent and distracted can the fascist 30% actually take control. So that's what they aim to make happen. Consider that only around 25% of the US population (not registered voters -- the actual human beings who live in the country) actually voted for Trump. Voter apathy, disinformation, disillusionment, disenfranchisement, demographics, gerrymandering and more have been weaponized against the actual majority to turn 25% into a slim margin of absolute victory. Trump does not have majority support, and he never did, and he never will. Remember that.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 6 days ago

Correct, it is also a sign that it is winning that it keeps attracting (and largely still beating) direct competitors. The Switch 2 can't have any realistic competitors because the ecosystem is so closed off and exclusive, it's a monopoly in its space.

Despite countless attempts by numerous companies to monopolize various parts of the PC experience, it continues to foster relentless competition, and rather than attempting to lock in their little bit of monopolization, Steam Deck is too busy breaking other, much more realistic attempts at complete monopolization of the PC ecosystem (Looking at you, Microsoft Windows). Even Steam's own game distribution dominance is a far cry from Microsoft's near-complete control of much of the desktop OS stack. It is a genuine pleasure to see Steam Deck and the hard work done by things like Proton (and to a lesser extent, improving support from hardware vendors most notably AMD) finally actually moving the needle on that.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 days ago

We'll have to call it the ROUS garden, especially if Muskrat keeps lurking around.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 6 days ago

If the educational system is not working, if AI has destroyed our educational system, and I think it's fair to say it has, if teachers feel there's nothing they can do to fix it, then throw it away and don't waste our tears on it. We must find other ways to educate. This is imperative, education is non-negotiable. I am not giving up in defeat, I am saying we must retreat from battles that are simply not viable anymore. Use them as a delaying action if you can, but if kids are learning from LLMs and Video games and Netflix and Youtube and Tiktok now, we need to find ways to get as much good educational content as we can onto those platforms. We need to find ways to manipulate their algorithms. We need alternative platforms that aren't corporate-controlled cesspools, where we can make the rules. Governments and institutions will be too slow to react. The only advantage we have is that we can act and react fast, even faster than the corporate interests that are burning down the Internet of Alexandria and blowing up the world into the next dark age. We can, and should, and must organize an educational resistance.

Literally nobody wants their kids to grow up like this. Not even the billionaires exploiting and profiting from this garbage. We have the advantage that everybody in the world will soon understand the scale of this problem as they are confronted with it themselves. Will it be too late? Maybe, but we have to assume it will be better if we at least try. Even if we have to rescue people one mind at a time, every effort is worthwhile and every victory is worth celebrating.

 

I'm just curious if anyone knows of an effort to build a federated version of something like Thingiverse, Printables, Thangs, etc. I'm not really a fan of the centralized control, commercial tie-ins and profit motivations of those and similar sites, but the community of collaboration and remixing designs means they are basically indispensable for time efficient 3d printing, they're basically like the Github of 3d printing.

For me the ideal would be to have a federated alternative where users can host and share their own creations and collections, as well as rate and comment each other's designs to help improve discoverability of the best models in the community. This seems like something that would be a good fit for the ActivityPub protocol but I'm not sure if there is something like this already out there. All I could find is this old reddit post that seems to have gotten a lot of support (and good suggestions for features) in the comments but has gone nowhere as far as I can tell.

 

Got an older Hyundai Santa Fe that needs the power steering system looked at. So depending on what work needs to be done it may need an alignment afterwards too. Anyone know a trustworthy place, ideally one with an alignment rack?

 

I don't like the weight or fragility of huge tempered glass side panels which seems to be the default for any case that is over $100... plexiglass/acrylic and some RGB are acceptable although honestly the aesthetics are pretty much irrelevant and I don't need them. I don't want a "cheap" case either. I've cut enough fingers on poorly finished steel rattle-trap boxes and I really can't stand them.

Enough about what I don't want though. What I DO want is a case that's focused on practical features, good airflow, quiet, well-made, easy to build in, roomy without being absurdly enormous, not too unconventionally laid out so that wires will reach while allowing good cable management -- basically, something that was designed thoughtfully.

My current case is a Corsair 900D and other than the fact that it's way bigger than I'd like, I'm generally pretty happy with it, but I'm not sure what else is out there that would even be comparable, Corsair seems to have gone to tempered glass in all their larger cases and I'm not very familiar with all the other manufacturers out there nowadays.

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