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2 yr. ago

  • Did he mention that a lot of the real estate that people own in most post-Soviet countries is inherited when (grand)parents die, this being first if not the only step towards the market for most people?

    None of the people I know from Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and Belarus bought their first apartments on their own through hard work or anything: it's mostly apartments where your grandma died, apartments that you're either massively helped with or outright gifted by parents when yuu have a significant other to move in with (so both families join funds, most coming from selling some dead relative's apartment) or on a wedding day (a rarer occasion), or some mix of that.

    Without any help or gifts, you're lucky to be able to get a mortgage that you can pay off before you're 60 (at least).

    The real estate prices outside the US and the EU may seem nicer, but salaries and expenses sure don't.

    Everybody is screwed, everywhere.

  • Valve time; the phenomenon is often observed in software development, with some calling it the software development time.

    Jokes aside, reading this thread makes me appreciate the old junk for the washing machine I have around here much more - at least it's accurate with time!

  • Jeffrey Epstein.

    I didn't grow up in the western world, so I knew next to nothing about the guy, but one thing I know is that his death has spawned a lot of speculation and conspiracy. Not really sure what of it is a meme and what is really something that people believe.

  • Email is still functional and necessary so have to stick with that.

    I what way? Are you talking about email lists or something like that? Please share some wisdom so I can think of email as of something more than just annoying spambox that corportations and governments use to spy on me.

  • Spoken like a true oil and gas stakeholder. Or any other stakeholder, for that matter.

  • These meals don't cost the money to be microwaved again, it's just not that good. Better off ordering groceries in that case.

  • Car dependency and pedestrian facilities vary greatly between countries, have you thought about that?

    Many Americans simply don't have sidewalks or any other safe routes to navigate to many restaurants and other places, nor do they have sufficiently developed public transport in those same areas (if at all).

    Even in Russia, in cities built and/or amended by the Soviets to be walkable or at least accessible via public transport, there's a lot of day-to-day places you're not going to be able to reach without a car unless you have literal hours in your day outside work and other chores; not to mention some people not having the luxury of being able to walk as easily or at all.

  • The layout is what matters for vim and it's derivatives. I might be wrong here, but if you really need to be able to use the same keybindings as you would on a English qwerty one, you could try remapping things to their addresses or whatever that's called - basically the same key, physically, regardless of its layout mapping.

    That being said, it's vim, you can remap the command to get back to normal mode from terminal mode to whatever key or key sequence you like most.

    Using mouse to scroll up and down your terminal window inside vim also gets you back to normal mode.

    And, well, quitting the shell of your terminal in vim works just fine - either via command or hitting Ctrl+d.

  • Ctrl+\ Ctrl+n gets you back to normal mode.

  • One of the Russian politicians calls this whole tendency "acclamation" - Putin is basically doing it to make everyone nod in agreement, saying that they at least don't mind him being in power; long story short, it a mental gymnastics move to push lies about legitimacy and support around the country and outside so that everyone argues over nothing instead of acting.

    And then beatings on top of that.

  • Would you happen to know how that compares to saying "Fuck it" and going with a Java career for the relative predictability? I'm not asking for any particular reasons, just curious.

  • Given the predatory nature of our species, it's gonna be a tough call moving your head without having your eyes snap to various objects around.

    Can't even begin to imagine.

  • Right, 100%! They're just trying to see if you're going to be able to sustain yourself and their relationship. No harm there, I'm sure; actually seems like a sign of serious intentions.

  • You should check for sure and let us all now. For the boys.

  • That's 1318 items, according to that table, counting by seasons. Insane.

  • She's also definitely Russian, and we, Russians, believe that it's a guy.

    There's no women on the Internet.

  • I think we'll collectively figure it out with time and have more specific, yet popular instances, rather than instances trying to be the all-places with communities. Like an instance for memes where communities act as sub-categories or something.

    But I maybe wrong, I'm not on oracle or something.

  • I feel like it's unlikely to happen regardless of the userbase. Fediverse as a whole seems to have been built on different merits and it's curated by the large corporations, so they won't be coming here with their algorithms and ad-revenue and thirst for profits and engagement.

    The biggest difference between Fediverse and the old-school internet websites, like forums and blogs and such, is that Fediverse is relatively easily intertwined; it's an ecosystem that consists of autonomous small-ish communities that get to choose whether and what they share. If you want, you can basically make one account, subscribe to as much shit from the Fediverse as you like, and have it all come to your curated feed (defederation happens, though) - or you can treat it all as separate platforms and have one account for each, with occasional guests hopping by (like you're with d.gs and I'm with feddit.de).

    Even if there are platforms that later use the same protocols to try and get some profits, they'll most likely be out of everyone's memory much like Threads (remember that?) because it's just not the same as creating some kind of "everything platform" and have people walled off there to "engage" with rage-inducing content and have them (hopefully) generate ad revenue.

  • NOTE: I turned to a lot of ranting after 2nd paragraph, so don't read anything past that if you're only interested in learning what we, the anti-war Russians, think.

    I have only ever heard the former from - for the lack of a better word - the westerners; more specifically, I've only ever heard that from non-European westerners, as every German, French, Pole, etc. only ever had a different idea of why the war ever happened, but nothing about resources or any other nonsense like that. I'll try to respond as best as I can, and some things may look like I'm excusing myself or others, so please bear in mind that it's just my attempts to explain some of the most bizarre things that people may see coming from Russia in these times.

    The anti-war Russians either don't rationalize it all, mock the initial talking points ("No NATO expansion!"), or talk about Putin's ego and his long history with Ukraine. I'm in the latter camp: I believe that Putin wanted to have Ukraine in his pocket the same way he has Belarus right now, but he failed multiple times, which ultimately led to the Euromaidan protests; at that point he just got pissed I guess and tried to bruteforce some influence into Ukraine or something, first annexing Crimea (overtly), then sending various agents and actors to the Southeast of Ukraine (covertly at first), and eventually starting a full-blown campaign hoping for a quick win and patriotic points akin to Crimea... we all know it failed, and it's good, but I still doubt it ever could have an effect that is in any way similar to the Crimea annexation because Putin managed to sell it as the will of the people over there, having enough material to force the "not a shot" narrative of the peaceful annexation; I just think that even if Putin conquered and held the entirety of Ukraine in 3 days or less, the way things happened already was covered in blood, and that's not very popular, neither here, nor anywhere else; then there simply was more blood and more suffering that was much more prominent and noticeable to the people living in Russia because, well, it's Ukraine of all places, the amount of all kinds of relationships meant that none of the killings and pain could ever be hidden or downplayed. I really doubt Putin ever wanted it take any longer than a couple of weeks, but oh well, here's what 20+ years of rampant kleptocracy gets you, I guess.

    One could argue there's always been support for the war effort and the anti-Ukrainian sentiment, but all of that is artificial first and foremost, and then fueled by massive amounts of copium that a lot of people need to stay at least somewhat sane. I should know because following my ever-growing discontent with my country (both its people and the government), I've mentally emigrated years ago, mostly talking to people living outside Russia and solely in English, and developed very humanistic, leftist views over that time as well as gaining a massive base of various resources to get news from all around the world with the least amount of (one-sided) propaganda - so when the war started and I saw what my government was doing, I could not believe any of that shit. It honestly felt like a nightmare that was not surprising because I knew what kind of people made up my government on all of its levels, but still a gut-turning nightmare. And that was me, someone who had very little ties to the country despite living there and basically hoping to move out one day - I can't even begin to imagine what it would be like to happen to be more of a patriot on 24 February 2022 and later; that's way too rapid and insane and brutal to believe and properly accept, and so many people - a lot of which had vigorously complained about Russia and its government before the war, by the way - developed a coping mechanism that just happens to look very fucking wrong.

    Many fell victim to very powerful and long-running propaganda, which is a very serious and difficult problem to tackle on any level, be it individual or collective; the people who blame them are very lucky to not have witnessed this kind of shit first-hand, and they simply don't understand what it is - even Orwell would've shat himself had he had the chance to live with it side-by-side. It's a very complicated and difficult issue, and we're in deep.

    As for the anti-war Russians, I don't even think anybody rationalizes it anymore. Thankfully, we've seen many speakers talking about the real reasons for the war (2nd paragraph, it all basically being an ego trip and an attempt to gather some political points in lieu of having done anything worthwhile at all in over 20 years), so I guess that's the stance most of us take now. Funnily enough, I tried to be a bit more mentally present in Russia after the war started, like trying to find some Russian websites and communities online and stuff to stay more up-to-date and, well, try and make some influence, but recently I've come to the same conclusion again that I just can't stand many of my fellow countrypeople, especially online because they're either more likely to show some of their not-so-sociable faces or just hold some disgusting views in general; by the time I got capable of leaving, I realized that I can't because, despite all the shit, I now have people that I care about over here and can neither leave (because I highly doubt I'd be able to get them into crypto to financially help anyone if need be, or will face massive issues if I have to visit) nor take them with me (because they won't move).

    On top of all that, I just don't know what to expect from the future - not my future, but just the future in general. I'm going to try my best to aid the anti-Putin effort for the March 2024 elections, but I don't know if that's going to be any success. I'm not feeling too good about the right-wing sentiment gaining traction all over the world again. I'm certainly not happy about the climate situation and the big players just not caring about shit other than their profits. Real estate is not even worth talking about.

    It's all so tiresome and weird.