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The Doctor
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944
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Generally speaking, if the oligarchs don't think you'll be useful to them, you don't make it far enough up in the food chain to be considered a candidate. They don't play the game of "Maybe this person will do what I tell them once they're in office," they play of the game of "Only people I know will do what I say will get onto the ballot."

  • The political machine does terrible things to people who are at least somewhat fundamentally good.

  • I lived and worked inside the DC beltway for ten years. They don't care. The stuff they worry about is so far removed from our everyday lives it doesn't even register.

    We care about stuff like getting to work on time, covering rent, and not yelling "This is all bullshit!" during daily standup. They care about getting a position paper from a lobbyist summarized to read in the car on their way to a meeting (they tend to be one or two hundred papers in length and can serve as general anesthetic) and making sure that some other person on the same committee will vote the way they agreed ("You back my $foo, I'll back your $bar").

    As a rule, if you have Money you can hire folks that do all of the drudgework for you. For example, a secretary fields all of the requests for meetings, looks at your calendar, comes up with a couple of possible time slots, and negotiates the time and place.

  • We're cleaning up our living room as crash space again for folks leaving red states.

  • Hardware in cars, like hardware in computers drifts in configuration over manufacturing time. Some cars from a manufacturer might have some granularity of tracking that earlier units off the line didn't. Toyota does this with their Camry hybrids, for example.

  • I've had this happen before on some weird systems. Unplugging and replugging the keyboard woke the keyboard back up.

  • Trying to kill the Internet Archive would set just the precedent publishers want to kill community libraries.

    I'd be surprised if the big publishers didn't try setting up their own pay-for-access libraries in a few years.

  • If it won't do more harm than good, nobody would try to do it.

  • I don't know about "good" but it works once in a while.

  • I've been saying, Microsoft hired Poettering to thank him for fucking up Linux so much with systemd.

  • I was going to mention Bookstack also.

  • Check out Slackware. There is still a 32-bit version that is said to work on older Pentium-class machines.

  • Companies are trying to go back to the time when they got popped and told nobody.

  • That's one of the reasons why uploads to the Archive have torrents.

    Now if they'd just fix the damn tracker..

  • Change up the kinds of malware they write.