pankuleczkapl

joined 2 years ago
[–] pankuleczkapl 33 points 3 weeks ago (5 children)

This is so fucking stupid, you cannot stop VPNs, because things like ShadowSocks exist. When will they learn that the only way to stop VPNs is to disable the internet completely. As long as the internet exists, VPNs will too. Ask your friend Xi Jinping about that.

[–] pankuleczkapl 8 points 1 month ago (2 children)

It actually tastes much better than it looks (at least in Poland)

[–] pankuleczkapl 2 points 1 month ago

I am a catatonic breakdown fan

[–] pankuleczkapl 2 points 1 month ago

Bad piggies aah motorcycle 💀💀💀

[–] pankuleczkapl 60 points 1 month ago (1 children)

This diagram is way way way too conservative with the "see you on the other side" classification. To name a few: fluorine will literally make you catch fire instantly (if there's more of it, you will basically get burned to a crisp before you can even blink), caesium will violently react with water in your mouth and produce so much hydrogen and heat, the whole mixture will instantly explode (in fact, this will not only be a usual, fire-like explosion, it will in addition to that be a so-called Coulomb explosion, which makes the situation even worse)

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

Not in this way, I mean the graphs are corresponding, but what is presented is also a flipped logarithmic function, so calling it a logarithmic function does not simplify anything

[–] pankuleczkapl 15 points 2 months ago (3 children)

The initial part is a flipped exponential function, which is characteristic of a finite population that wants to vote yes, and each day a fixed part of them finds out about the petition. This makes sense, because the more people there are yet to find out, the more people vote each day. Sadly, it also shows that the number of people who care was too small for the petition to pass (the horizontal value the graph converges on). HOWEVER, afterwards the graph started rising again which strongly suggests more and more new (previously consciously uncaring) people are being convinced to vote, which means there is still hope.

[–] pankuleczkapl 20 points 3 months ago

How did we end up in this timeline? The politicians are seriously saying things that were once considered satire

[–] pankuleczkapl 11 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Well, nothing is that simple, in fact one of the biggest problems in society is that each of us has their own biological clock, with preferred activity and sleep hours, yet we are forced to align our schedules to the same universal standard. Of course, it is absolutely vital for the way our current society functions (because we, as a society, work together, take classes together, commute together, socialise together, celebrate together, and so on), but it definitely has been hurting billions of people for the past thousands of years and we should look for a way to eliminate this system as soon as possible.

[–] pankuleczkapl 17 points 4 months ago

This is absolutely true and sad, though I get a lot of free electronics to dismantle by rummaging through trash. People have no appreciation of the value of "used" items that either work perfectly fine or have a minor issue that prevents them from working but is easily fixable, e.g. a broken cable (I have many working devices that were thrown away because the cable is severed, which I could easily fix). I think only proper education in this regard will improve things long term.

[–] pankuleczkapl 4 points 5 months ago

Literally Look Outside plot

 
179
Folding Rule (lemmy.dbzer0.com)
 
200
Rule (lemmy.dbzer0.com)
 
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