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2 yr. ago

  • Related: every time you shuffle a deck of cards you get a sequence that has never happened before. The chance of getting a sequence that has occurred is stupidly small.

  • Thanks! I guess I'll wait a little bit then before giving it a try.

  • Has anyone played it on the Deck yet? What's the experience like?

  • Soy and quinoa both have all essential amino acids. And you can also combine different grains to get all essential amino acids.

    If everything went vegan we'd need only 25% of the farms we currently have. So we can do fine without meat, and the planet will thank us.

  • Whiskey on the rocks.

    I can suck the ice cubes during the day, and drink the whiskey at night.

  • Twist and Shout is not by the Beatles.

  • In Brazil (Portuguese speaking) we also use Fulano de tal. I didn't know it was used in other countries!

    We also "José Ninguém" and "Maria Ninguém" to mean someone who's a nobody. It literally means Joseph/Mary (very common names in Brazil) Nobody.

  • We'll go down in history as the first society that wouldn't save itself because it wasn't cost effective." — Kurt Vonnegut

  • They did, many years ago with the PayPal merge. Musk wanted x.com, all the research said people saw it negatively, and Musk still pushed for it, until eventually he was ousted as CEO.

  • My favorite comment about this from Mastodon: "X is just a sans serif swastika".

  • You realize most atrocities in history were done "just following the law", right?

  • Let's say you have a cow. The cow had a baby, and it's producing milk, but more than the calf or your family need. So you start selling the excess milk.

    It's good money! Soon you buy another cow, and another. Eventually you can't take care of them all, so you hire people to help you. Yay!

    After a while you realize that waiting for the cows to be impregnated by your bull means they are not producing milk as much as they can. So you start forcefully impregnating the cows so they are always pregnant or producing milk.

    The calves are drinking a lot of your milk, so you decide to kill them as soon as possible. You don't know what to do with the dead calves, so you start marketing them as "veal", a delicacy!

    A lot of your process is still manual, so you buy machinery that increases your productivity by 100x. You're still paying your workers the same amount, even though they're now responsible for producing 100x more.

    One day you realize there's too much milk in the market. If you sell it all, the price will drop too much. So you dump thousands of gallons of milk in the river, to keep the prices stable. You couldn't give them away to people in need, that would still affect the market!

    You're still not selling enough (though you have more money that you could spend in your lifetime). So you buy some politicians so the government says that milk is essential, the only way to absorb calcium, and it should be in every school. People are convinced they need milk, even though it's from another species and even though humans don't need milk after a couple years of age.

    That's why I hate capitalism.

  • Capitalism is a tool. Being pro-capitalism is like being pro-nuclear weapons.

    FTFY.

  • Test

    Jump
  • Yep!

  • Fun fact: if you search for copyrighted material in Google and they show that a link was removed due to a DMCA takedown, you can click on the DMCA link to see the original request, which includes the original URL, which is usually still up.

  • know about it? We even added your secret directories to our tape backup.

    That's the hacker ethos right there! Love it! ❤️

  • Love this!

    I also have a MUD story... back in 1993 I lived in Brazil, and there were no commercial ISPs, so you couldn't have internet even if you wanted to pay for it. Only universities were connected to the internet.

    A friend of mine was in college studying computer science, and he had a "special number" that he could dial to get access from home. The number was unlike any other I've seen before. He shared the login ("students") and password ("students93") with me, and told me I could use it sparingly.

    I was 15 at the time, and I started playing a MUD. The first day I played for 30 minutes. The second day, for a couple hours. Soon I was spending 8 hours a day playing MUD, and I started dreading the phone bill. Long distance calls where super expensive back then in Brazil, and even a landline would cost as much as a car!

    After a month, no bill came. I waited another couple weeks, and I finally decided to call the phone company and ask how much it would cost to call the "special number".

    "Sir, this number doesn't exist", was the answer.

    Well, it worked for me! I kept using it, playing that MUD for 8-12 hours every day. Eventually, when 1994 arrived, my password stopped working. I tried "students94" and I was in. I only had telnet and ftp access, but that was enough to play MUDs and discover a whole new world.

    Eventually in 1995 the password stop working again, and trying "students95" didn't work. I started using BBSs, and eventually ran my own for a few months. In 1996 I went to college, and the first commercial ISP opened in the city where I was. I was one of their first clients.

  • My day to day rice is pretty simple. Half a cup of organic which jasmine rice, 1.5 cups of water, a heavy drizzle (a tablespoon?) of olive oil and some salt (a teaspoon?). Bring to a boil, cover, cook for 15 minutes, leave it aside covered for 10 minutes, fluff with a fork.

    When I'm feeling fancy I do a different version. I dice half an onion, fry it, add 3-4 cloves of chopped garlic, fry it, add the rice and salt, fry it for a minute, then add the water already boiling. Cook for 15 minutes as well, wait 10, fluff.

    Every time I move to a new house I need to adjust the water to rice ratio to keep the cooking at 15 minutes. I'd rather add less water than cook for longer.

  • To demonstrate the OS's capability and relatively small size, in the late 1990s QNX released a demo image that included the POSIX-compliant QNX 4 OS, a full graphical user interface, graphical text editor, TCP/IP networking, web browser and web server that all fit on a bootable 1.44 MB floppy disk for the 386 PC. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/QNX

  • I run lemmy.studio on a VPS with 1GB of ram and 1 VCPU, so a raspi4 should suffice, at least initially. Bandwidth is around 7.5 Mbps.