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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)CO
Posts
2
Comments
1,361
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • What. The. Fuck...

    Are we taking lessons from Samsung now? I mean are they serious? Adhesive for car parts?!

    Well gee, as long as car exteriors don't experience extreme heating/cooling cycles on a daily basis, then adhesive should work just fine. Oh wait.

    It's like they wanted this vehicle to fail.

  • Does jellyfin do any kind of library sharing? Because that's the killer feature that Plex has for me.

    I have three friends who have Plex servers and between the four of us, I think we have all the content anyone could want.

  • Also lacking a soul is a more flowery, poetic way of saying that they seem unable to have kind of compassion or joy and they treat situations as mathematic

    Ok, that word you're looking for is "empathy", but soul is definitely the wrong one. The words you use to describe people matter a lot, I'm not being pedantic.

    Like, I’m glad you’re looking out but I think you’re missing the nuance here.

    You think I'm missing the nuisance? Funny. Ironically, I think the language you're using just lacks empathy.

  • Absolutely! I mean you're acknowledging that they're people, and people have conflicts all the time, this is normal. Feel free to have all the opinions about that you want.

    But saying that as a group, they all lack basic intelligence or a soul, that's not helpful to discourse, and that's really my only point.

  • I accused you of dehumanizing people and you respond with...

    It’s not a binary

    What does that even mean in this context? Are you saying they're like part people?

    For the record you said earlier that they lacked intelligence and a soul, which is pretty literally dehumanizing, that's what I was responding to. Look, I'm not trying to shame you here, I get where you're coming from. I'm trying to remind you that you're being taken advantage of. That foreign and corporate powers are actively trying to influence public discourse and divisiveness is their most powerful tool, they're pitting us against each other for their own gain.

    So don't fall for it! Don't take the bait! As soon as you start treating the other side like they don't even matter, like they're some different species who aren't smart enough to think for themselves, then you're giving up the game, we lose.

    And you're right about one part for sure though, conservatives are lacking in communication skills, unfortunately, so are liberals; that's just a human problem. (And on that note, maybe some day I'll learn how to communicate all this in one sentence rather than having to write several paragraphs every time.)

  • Don't dehumanize people who disagree with you, this is the wrong path.

    Edit: ugh, it makes me sad for humanity that anyone would downvote that comment. It's such an obvious kindergarten level minimum for mature behavior...

    I hope for everyone's sake that most of those downvotes were from bots.

  • I understand that, it can't be. Because fusion power generation hasn't all been worked out yet. Unlike fission. That's my point.

    Also, once fusion does work, it will still be the most expensive way to generate energy man has ever devised, so there's that too.

  • Why not secede?

    Actually, if this rhetoric gets much worse, I'll be in favor of a succession "dead man's clause". We could put forward a referendum question on the next state ballot to explicitly ask the public, a question something like "In the event that the federal government were to declare war on Canada, or demand territory from Canada, or assume control of Canadian territory or engage in military action against Canadian forces or civilians, are you in favor of recognizing federal authority to make such actions, or conversely, are you in favor of denying that authority and refusing to participate in or support any such actions."

    I mean, that's just off the cuff, you would of course still need to get real specific with all the language and make it absolutely clear what a yes vote or no vote does. But if states ran referendums like that, it would make it exceedingly clear to our governors and sensors where the public's opinions fall, and what their duty should be. And so then if something that truly idiotic were to happen, we'd all be prepared.

  • I'm more interested in becoming a Canadian province.

    And I dare say, if the US did officially go to war with Canada, New England (and probably New York) would be likely to switch sides.

    And they would in all likelihood bring with them all military bases and forces within their territory.

  • So are people treating this as a generalized sign of inflation, or are people actually worried about eggs?

    Because if you're treating this as a gauge of inflation, it's a bad one, as there's a bird flu outbreak greatly affecting egg prices.

    And if it's just concern about eggs... I don't get it. I mean, I think our household eats a lot of eggs, but a lot is like 2-3 dozen a week. And if eggs cost $2 more than usual, well, that's $6 a week. Meh? I doubt this is breaking the bank for many people.

  • I also learned that PC's draw a lot of power lol. I used to sit on my PC all day, now I know how much it cost. Even the monitor turning off splits the power draw by half.

    My state has a green energy initiative that gives us free home energy audits, mostly it means we get a lot of free led lights. But it also got us these nice automated power strips, you plug one item (the pc) into a control socket, and when that device turns off, it cuts power to the other managed sockets (monitors, speakers, etc). A really simple solution that must save a bunch of power.

  • Yeah, I've actually been pretty disappointed as of late with the power consumption of my custom PCs. I actually can't remember the last time I had a PC with sleep states that actually work, maybe it was 8 years ago?

    On my last motherboard, whenever you woke the machine from sleep, some board modules wouldn't power up correctly, you had to restart to get full functionality again. I have a second PC as a home media server, that one never fully wakes up from any sleep state (luckily it's a server, so it's always on). My current gaming PC regularly crashes whenever the machine is (ironically) at low processor load. (That's the amd automatic energy saving features totally failing)

    I don't know whether to blame the motherboards, the processors, or the OS, but any way you slice it, my computers are only happy if they're consuming 300 watts all the time...

    And on the other hand, I gather chest freezers are actually decently efficient.

  • It took me an embarrassingly long time to figure out what this actually is.

    I followed your link, and read the "how it works" page and only then realized that this is for "scheduling" in a programmatic sense, not scheduling in a calendar events and appointments sense.

    But is this understanding correct? That this is a tool designed to aid for example, a social media coordinator for an organization, or a brand manager? Something to help send out updates or messages at pre planned times? Or perhaps to allow you to create one statement and post that to several different platforms?