Yeah, reading the article paints a more complex story than I had been reading on here since his death. The police had come out to their house "four dozen times" before, barbequing in the living room on the day of the house fire, allegedly showing up at his neighbor's house with a crossbow before the police removed it from the home.
It's a tragic situation, regardless of whatever details ultimately come out, but I think it's probably best to let the investigation and courts sort out this mess.
If anyone wasn't aware, Google has apparently learned that because they are so dominant, they can intentionally tank the quality of search without losing users, forcing people to remain on their site longer and view more ads.
Yeah, there has to be a point when they're going to realize that they're hosting bots to advertise to bots, and nobody is going to want to pay for that.
I listen to lots of music on youtube, just random playlists in the background. Unfortunately, there is a TON of AI music on there now, and it's really hard to tell the difference these days.
Rest assured, I'm very much a normie with tech stuff too. It wasn't bad to set up. It's been a few months, but I'm sure I just downloaded it from the link on their site and followed the installation prompts.
You would just go to "add feed" in the RSS reader, and paste the URL, and you're done! You can customize how often you want it to check your feeds for new updates (I have mine check every couple of hours), and when they show up, you can view them within your reader similar to email.
RSS Guard. I tried a few, then decided that what I really wanted was just a simple app that would run locally, doesn't run in browser, doesn't rely on me creating an account to sync with some external server, and doesn't have limits to the number of feeds I can add.
It was pretty painless to set up. The only downside is that if I ever want to transfer my feed list to a reader on my phone or another PC, I would have to export the list and then import it, but that's not hard.
I recently started collecting feeds for my RSS reader, and it is so refreshing. I haven't added any Lemmy feeds to it yet, since I'm on here a lot anyway, but it's nice for blogs and websites that I'm not going to remember to check regularly otherwise.
Oh totally, but I was thinking less about edgy trolls and more like, rage-bait headlines and rants intended to keep you engaged with a platform because you're mad. Or, for example, floods of political posts with all the nuance of a negative daytime TV campaign ad (you know, with the deep voice, storm clouds, and spooky music).
I remember in the early days of the internet, that type of content was around, but still largely relegated to talk radio or email forwards. Now it's mainstream and some of the most popular content on every major social media site. It's disappointing and feels inauthentic, like your favorite hang-out spots have slowly filled up with solicitors handing out flyers.
Seriously, lol. Whenever you hear interviews by actors talking about their heavily costumed roles, they talk about it like it's war trauma. I bet this dude was having a bad day.
Also, I always laugh when I see costumes that can't bend at the neck and have to turn like this. Reminds me of Batman.
They famously took it off the air years ago because of the Michael Jackson stuff, but I don't know if that has changed.