Skip Navigation

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/)KR
Posts
1
Comments
228
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • You have a point. It felt different when I signed up but now all the most upvoted content here seems to be screenshots from Twitter, regurgitated memes and similar low-effort dopamine triggers. And when I left reddit it was mostly reposted TikTok reels anyway. Cognitive fast food that's easy to lose yourself in but unhealthy and unfulfilling as a habit. Lemmy doesn't really have many niche communities to outweigh the slop either. Consequently, I spend less time here as well. Which is probably a good thing.

  • There are some great use cases, for instance transcribing handwritten records and making them searchable is really exciting to me personally. They can also be a great tool if you learn to work with them (perhaps most importantly, know when not to use them - which in my line of work is most of the time).

    That being said, none of these cases, or any of the cases in this thread, is going to return the large amounts of money now being invested in AI.

  • Brad Pitt was one of the first people to try the time travel machine invented in 2030; however when attempting to make a career by introducing 21st century technology in the early 1900s, the only thing he could manage to reproduce was ink blots and folding paper.

  • "Spotify managers defended PFC to staff by claiming that the tracks were being used only for background music, so listeners wouldn’t know the difference [...]"

    https://harpers.org/archive/2025/01/the-ghosts-in-the-machine-liz-pelly-spotify-musicians/

    (PFC = "Perfect Fit Content", i. e. Fake Artists)

    I have a feeling this quote exemplifies the attitude the management of these platforms have towards their end users, though it's seldom this explicitly formulated.

  • So the obvious solution is they should read more books, more varied stuff, not less. Popular, niche, basic, normative, weird, etc.

    Of course, your assumption that all teens hate Kafka just because you do is demonstrably false. The assumption that books sell simply because they are actually better and more enjoyable to read is also false, there are a lot of other factors at play.

    The kids that enjoy reading will find what is pushed in the book shops anyway, but kids from working class homes will never be exposed to anything else - and therefore have no chance to decide if they like it or not.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • In the hall of the mountain king is part of the work Peer Gynt. The whole thing is about 2 hours, but there's a shorter version consisting of two suites which is about 30 minutes long. Here's a version with some extra incidental music included at the end - here's a performance of just the first suite.

  • Well, lead a horse to water etc, doesn't mean we should stop making teens read books in school they wouldn't be exposed to otherwise. At least now you have both read and formed an opinion on two of the most influential and well regarded works of world literature. (And hopefully they also made you read a lot of other literature in diverse styles and genres.)

  • Only boring kids would find Wuthering Heights & Jane Eyre boring. Both books would be excellent choices in any curriculum. If you wanna talk boring early 19th century authors, Jane Austen is the name you're looking for.

  • Just because it was wasted on you doesn't mean it's a bad idea, Kafka's short stories especially (Die Verwandlung, Ein Landarzt etc) are accessible for teenagers and a good gateway drug to get interested in other things. Which is really important for kids that don't have natural access to literature at home.

  • Thank you for replying. Robertson screws are not common in Scandinavia - at least I've never seen one IRL. I use torx for everything, never had an issue with hand screwing them, which is why I asked. But I'm not an expert or professional, just a home owner that tries to DIY as much as I can.

    Not having to deal with stripped screws is the biggest plus for me, I hate having to remove a Philips or flathead screw that someone else put in some hard-to-reach location that can't be turned without breaking. (Which happens surprisingly often, actually.)