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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/)FO
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3
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1,121
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • My PC isn't compatible with Windows 11.

    I cobbled it together from spare parts as my wife has upgraded over the years. It was a pretty beefy computer when she first built it, and it's gotten a couple upgrades along the way, but the CPU and MoBo are probably about 10 years old if not older (it's an AMD FX-something, I'm unsure of the exact specs, it's whatever parts were in her bin of cast-offs stuck with a new case and hard drive)

    And I'm happily gaming on it. I may not be maxing out the latest AAA titles in glorious 8k epic quality 120hz HDR VR yadda yadda yadda, but I can still run pretty much any game out there on some acceptable mid-to-high quality settings and decent performance.

    I'm probably going to have to either upgrade the MoBo and processor come October, or make the jump to Linux (which I'm not exactly opposed to, but I do like not having to fuck with wine and proton to run my games)

    It's a perfectly serviceable board, still doing just fine by me, and there's no reason it can't give someone at least a few more good years of use, even as a gaming computer if you're not a graphics snob.

    But if I decide to upgrade, unless I find someone who wants to run Linux on it, or understands the risk of running win10 with no security updates, it's probably going to become e waste.

  • One small data point I'm able to offer

    My family is polish, were a few generations removed from the old country, no one really speaks more than a handful of words of polish. There's a pretty decent amount of people with polish ancestry around us in the Philly area, and one thing that kind of sticks out to me is "kielbasa"

    The pronunciation around here has been sort of twisted into something like "ku-bah-see" and it's pretty universal around these parts, not sure how widespread that is in the rest of the country.

    I think "kielbasy" is the actual Polish plural for kielbasa, so I suppose that's part of how the pronunciation got twisted.

    Bonus fun fact- there is/was a Polish organized crime group active in parts of Philly that was sometimes known as the "kielbasa posse" which rhymes when pronounced that way.

    I'm also pretty sure the pronunciations of "babcia" and "dziadek" (grandmother and grandfather) in my family are more than a bit off from standard polish too, though I think that comes down to more to just us trying to say polish words with an American accent.

  • Philadelphia English

    I root for the iggles, phils, flyers, and sixers. I eat beggles with cream cheese, and in the summer I'll get some wooder ice. I go fishing in the crick. If I fall in I'll dry myself off with a tal, and maybe I'll hang it on the ratty-ator to dry afterwards. I'll warsh the mud off my boots at the spicket outside. On vacation I'll go down the shore. If I need cash I'll tap mac, perhaps so I can order a cheesesteak (wiz wit) or hoagie. Maybe I'll see if my friends want to join me, and I'll ask them "jeet? And they'll answer "no, jew?" And at the end of the night, after a few citywides, I'll tell them "I'll see youse guys later"

    You can also replace most of those nouns with "jawn"

  • I work a weird shift, so my "morning" begins at about noon

    • Alarm goes off, hit snooze a couple times
    • Scroll Lemmy, news, check my messages, etc
    • Shower, brush my teeth, shave my head if needed, get dressed
    • Walk the dog
    • Breakfast, make coffee, pack lunch, feed the dog her lunch (wife gives her breakfast at normal human wakeup times)
    • If it's a work day, I'm out the door by about 1:45, at work by about 2:15, start at 2:30

    Then at the end of the day

    • Leave work at 2:30, home by about 3:00AM
    • Walk the dog
    • Maybe eat dinner if I'm hungry
    • More scrolling or some video games until about 5, sometimes as early as 4, sometimes as late as 6
    • Brush teeth
    • Undress
    • Feel around in the dark for whatever boobytraps my wife has left in the bed for me- laptop, phone, glasses, Kindle, charging cables, etc. and put them wherever they go
    • Crawl into bed, contort myself around the dog, hug the wife
    • Sleep

    On days I don't work, the overall sequence of events stays mostly the same except I usually don't usually drink coffee or pack a lunch on my days off, but the times may shift a few hours in any direction. Breakfast gets more elaborate on my days off, and I'm less likely to have a "dinner" since I probably had a big meal for lunch/my wife's dinner instead of the usual sandwich I pack for work.

  • Try looking for "cold brew concentrate" it's not really syrupy because there's usually no sugar, but it's meant to be diluted.

    I don't think I've seen 2L containers specifically, I think I normally see it in 1qt bottles (which is roughly the same as a liter) but since you're diluting it it works out to about the same or even more (some brands are stronger than others, and personal preference of course comes into play, but usually I think I've seen them call for a 1:1 ratio of concentrate to water/milk, others might be 1:3 and maybe even higher, so that 1qt might be roughly equivalent to a 2l bottle, or even a gallon (roughly 4l) jug.

    And if you add hot water, most of them make for a pretty decent cup of Joe, you don't have to drink it cold.

    I remember one time I bought some, and my wife didn't realize it was meant to be diluted and had been drinking it straight and was wondering why she was so jittery until I caught her pouring a full glass of it. Also solved the mystery of why we were going through it so fast.

    Chameleon cold brew is a pretty common (and I think pretty decent, though I'm no coffee snob) brand at least in my part of the states.

  • That while I'm driving I'll have to sneeze while driving across a bridge and during that split second while my eyes are closed and I'm distracted by the sneeze I'm going to drive off the edge.

  • Yeah, I don't think it's ever exactly been a widespread movement among the general world population, but there have been a few interesting examples of groups that have adopted it, and at times it's been big enough to draw the notice of some fairly influential people, both positive and negative, and you can kind of imagine that maybe if things had gone just a little differently at a couple different points that it might have been able to gain some traction.

  • I think your first sentence got a little butchered by autocorrect, I assume it's supposed to say "so many people"

    But I agree that America (and honestly many other primarily English speaking countries) would be a big holdout if anything but English was to be adopted as the auxiliary language. Many other countries would probably be somewhat more open to it, but it has been tried before and never seems to gain traction (esperanto almost had a moment in the early 20th century where an esperanto-speaking county was almost established and where it almost became a working language for the League of Nations- the latter never came to pass basically because the French threw a hissy fit over it.)

  • I agree to a point, different languages and experiences can help to shape your mind in different ways which is overall a strength

    However, if you're not able to effectively communicate those thoughts to the people who need to hear them, it's not doing anyone any good

    I like the idea of an international auxiliary language, not to replace anyone's primary language, but basically to be everyone's second language.

    Day-to-day I want everyone to keep using their native tongues, and where possible I'd like them to learn each other's languages too. But there are some 7000+ languages in use around the world, no one can learn them all, and having a common language to fall back on could be incredibly useful for facilitating communications between different people

    There have been a few attempts to come up with one over the years, either by selecting an existing language, or coming up with a constructed language, probably the most famous example of the latter is Esperanto, though that didn't exactly take off the way its creator might've hoped.

    Full disclosure - I'm teaching myself Esperanto. I am under no delusion that it's ever going to fill that role as an international auxiliary language, and I'm not sure I'd want it to be, there's plenty of valid criticism of it, and I think there could be better options

  • Yes, it's not all black and white, but the MAGA agenda is a big bucket of black paint with a couple tiny drops of white mixed in. You can split hairs about how that technically makes it a very dark shade of charcoal grey, but for all practical purposes it's fucking black.

  • I have a few friends who used to go to game jams, events where you get a bunch of people together, split them up into groups, and give them a set amount of time (usually a day or a weekend) to make a video game.

    Most of the people who went to these were programmers of course, and there were a couple in my friend group who were techy people as well, but mostly they were writers, artists, and musicians.

    And the groups they ended up in usually handed up doing pretty well. Having the whole team there and involved from the get-go helped them make a pretty polished game, where a lot of the groups that didn't have that ended up with music, writing, or visuals that felt kind of tacked-on as an afterthought.

  • I believe they're owned by Diageo, which is a UK company, and I don't think that Diageo has an American subsidiary like Suntory does, but otherwise pretty much everything I said applies.

    This really is a situation where you have to do a little research and make your own value judgement on these things. I'm honestly not too sure where I land on it, I want to support Canada in this but I also want to give as little money to the US government as possible, and they're somewhat at odds so I need to make the call which is more important for me with every item I might buy that has to cross the border.

  • Black market just makes it even harder to figure out where your money's going.

    Are the people smuggling liquor across the border only smuggling liquor, or are they involved in other crimes that you're supporting from buying from them?

    When is the liquor being diverted from legitimate channels into the black market? Has it already crossed the border and the tariffs been paid? Kind of defeats the purpose then, doesn't it? Is it happening before it crosses the border and possibly fucking over the Canadians you're trying to support?

    Unless you're traveling to Canada and buying it legitimately to smuggle back you're probably not accomplishing what you hope to.

    Or I suppose you could start moonshining.

  • If you got 2 doses of the MMR vaccine as a child, you're probably fine. The vaccine is like 97% effective at preventing measles, and if you're part of that 3% your symptoms will probably be milder that if you weren't vaccinated. It's a damn good vaccine. Even if you got only 1 dose that's still considered to be 90-something percent effective.

    Talk to your doctor, people with certain autoimmune conditions, the elderly, people born when they were only giving 1 dose of the vaccine or who received older vaccine formulas may need a booster. The rest of us who are vaccinated are almost certain to be fine.

    The real risk is to children who haven't been vaccinated yet because they're too young, people who can't receive the vaccine for health reasons like allergies or other unvaccinated adults, and people with compromised immune systems.

    I can't really find good numbers of what percent of the US overall is vaccinated, but if the current rates of children being vaccinated are anything to go by, it's most of them. Even with all of the anti vax talk, it seems like somewhere north of 80% of children in the US are still getting their recommended vaccines from what I can find. This is mostly going to hit that 10-20-ish percent who aren't vaccinated.

    And the real tragedy that a good amount of the anti vax parents were actually vaccinated themselves as children and so get to enjoy that 97% immunity. They won't be in much danger of catching measles but their children will be.

    Otherwise, all of the usual advice applies, wash your hands, disinfect shared surfaces and equipment, cover your mouth when you cough, maybe wear a mask in public, do what you can to encourage your friends and family to get vaccinated if they aren't.

  • Meant to reply a couple days ago but forgot

    Yeah, unfortunately he's a trump supporting, union busting asshole.

    I've heard, but have been unable to verify, that his daughters who are set to take the company over someday, may have their heads on straight. I hope so. There are absolutely far better beers in and around Philly (I'm happy to give a long list of recommendations,) and Yuengling isn't anything too special as a beer. But it's special for being America's oldest brewery, and it's certainly carved out a special place for itself in this area. Like I said, I've drank a lot of Yuengling in my life, odds are I have a few cans in my beer fridge right now because there's a good chance that it's what my friends grab out of habit whenever they bring beer over for a party, I've been to more than a few bars with "Yuengs and Wings" specials (which rhymes for those who aren't familiar with it) and it does it's job adequately of being a beer that tastes like beer for when you just want to have a beer, so I do hope that when Dick retires or dies his daughters make up for some of his bullshit. I'd like to have my old standby cheap beer option back in the rotation someday.

  • I think this recommendation is a good segue into how important it is to think about where your money is going.

    First of all, it seems obvious to buy Canadian whisky to support Canada. However we're slapping big tariffs on them. That means that when you buy them that's giving that tariff money to the US government, which I think we want to avoid.

    Further, we're in a very global economy. Damn-near every brand you've ever heard of is owned by the subsidiary of a subsidiary or some other company.

    Canadian club is now owned by Suntory Global Spirits (Formerly Beam-Suntory, as in Jim Beam, they actually consider it to be a part of the Jim Beam brand portfolio) an American company, that is itself a subsidiary of Suntory, a Japanese company.

    So an American company is getting a good slice of the profits from Canadian club.

    And of course Suntory owns a lot of American brands (like Jim Beam since I already mentioned them) and they might well decide to take some of that Canadian Club money they take in and use it to prop up one of their Kentucky Bourbon brands which ends up funneling money towards whatever crazy right wing nut jobs there stand to profit from that.

    So yes, Canadian Club is in fact made in Canada, presumably by Canadian employees, and contributing to the Canadian economy, paying Canadian taxes, etc. but a lot of it is also going to other places, and not necessarily places you want it to go, so it would be wise to weigh that into your decision-making here.

    And I'm not trying to badmouth Suntory in particular, in the scheme of terrible megacorps I don't think they're the worst by a longshot (not that they're necessarily at all good either) that's just where I found a jumping off point. I enjoy a lot of their brands, and at least the handful of them that I make some effort to follow still seem to at least be paying lip service to some half decent ideas about things like DEI and sustainability, where some other companies have totally bent the knee to Krasnov.

    EDIT: Out of curiosity I just spent a little time researching a few different Canadian whisky brands to see if any of the names I recognize are actually wholly Canadian-owned. It doesn't look like it, it's all huge multinational corporations based in other countries when you dig into them. The only thing I could personally come up with is Glen Breton, which is a Canadian single malt, not a Rye, so it fits the bill as a whisky made in Canada, but it's a totally different style than what most people think of as a "Canadian Whisky." I'm certain there are some smaller craft distillers that are fully owned by Canadians, but I couldn't come up with any big brands that fit the bill. Do what you will with that information. I'm not trying to suggest that anyone should or should not buy Canadian whisky, just that if they want to be mindful about which companies and countries are getting their money, it's a complicated web.

  • I think there's a few factors at play here

    Yes, depression is a big one

    There's also a lack of places to go and things to do for young people. Some parents are weird about their kids going anywhere these days, and no one really wants to bring their boyfriend/girlfriend over to hang out with their parents.

    And even if you don't have obnoxious helicopter parents, where do you go? Malls are dying, restaurants and movies are expensive, and if you go hang out in a park some Karen will call the police on you.

    Neighborhoods aren't walkable, public transit is broken, and cars are unaffordable so even if you find somewhere to go on a date, how do you get there?

    And at least in heterosexual dating, we've also had a bit of a cultural shift that might throw things off. A lot of things that used to be accepted we now rightly understand are problematic, I think a lot of men and boys are hesitant to make the first move now because we don't want to be seen as creeps, but at the same time I think most girls still kind of expect the guys to make the first move, and while a lot of us are a bit more enlightened and could be cool with that (my wife of 5 years made the first move, she'd probably still be waiting if she left it to me) there's still plenty of guys with toxic fragile masculinity out there who could react poorly to a girl making the first move and I don't blame girls for not wanting to take on that risk (for the record, I also choose the bear)

    So the dynamics have shifted a bit, and I don't think we've really figured out how things are supposed to work yet, and honestly things probably need to shift a whole hell of a lot more before things can normalize there and people can just feel comfortable asking other people out on dates without worrying about it being weird.

    And in a similar vein, it's also I think become a lot more normal to just have platonic friends of the opposite gender. Personally some of my best friends are women who have no desire to date or fuck.

    And people are also a lot more willing to have some sort of casual sex, friends with benefits, hookup culture, etc.

    So there's probably a lot of physical and emotional needs that are now being met outside of the context of a romantic relationship when in the past that was pretty much the only way to meet them.