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2 yr. ago

  • Self bagging only pretty much where i live.
    The cashiers at lidl are so fast it's hard to keep up.
    I just stuff everything in fast as possible trying to maximise damage; this can also save on chewing time later.

    But I only have to carry it as far as my bicycle - and I do sometimes need to fish out and reorganize heavy stuff at that point to keep the pain-ears vaguely balanced.

    Though it is quite fun to try with 6-7 litres of liquids on one side and 2 carrots and a lettuce on the other.
    If it's not too windy I'd just do that - shopping is boring.

    If I was walking farther I'd take a big rucksack and yeah I'd probably pack it more systematically.

    I can understand car users not bothering to organise though.
    Unless you're driving 100km through the desert and think anything frozen wil melt.

  • I don't know if it was really worse, but magazines did cost money.

    Most magazines that I used to buy had coverdisks with demo versions.

    If the demo was no good it didn't matter what the review said. And they can't really get away with describing things that are proven false in the demo.

    Worst thing would be a great demo but very little more in the main game.

    But I wasn't going to pay a lot for a game if I'd not played the demo a lot.
    Frankly that also proved it'd run ok on my usually very old HW.

    As for getting lots of other peoples opinions - not as important if you have a decent demo.

  • If you do that / fall for that, then you’re part of the problem making such a future a reality…

    Lots of peoples' buying habits and trust-based attitudes were forged last century.
    It'll take a generation or two for new habits to form.

    In the meanwhile modern businesses will make hay by selling trojan-horses to old school customers , and using the profits to tie-in new users to new services to try to capture/brainwash the next gen into thinking there is no choice.

    I think you'll remain in the minority unless 'ignorant' consumers who 'fall for that' can become educated and learn about the options.

  • 1 for pure debian, it is a lot better out of the box / for newbs now that it enables non-free-firmware on install (v12 onwards).
    lots of choices too on desktop.

    My only bother is that i'm keen to try KDE 6, and don't know how long it'll be til that at least makes it to Debian testing.

  • 22 ft unsupported seems like a very long span to me, what's that nearly 7 metres?
    Sounds like it's getting into the realm of structural enginneering not diy for me.

    If you want to save costs you might think aout a "flitch beam", that's 2 wood beams with a steel plate sandwiched in between - the three components are bolted together every few feet. Easier to join to the timbers then.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWUNd559UQY

    I still think you might be more like 10"x2 or even 12"x2 timbers to cover that span if totally unsupported. But might still come in a little cheaper than the i-beam.
    Maybe the roof will be very lightweight and no snow weight is expected - but I'm no structural engineer so don't take my word for it.

    Other features like corner bracing or canti-leverage, or some other support structure or other feature (like is it the bottom side of a framed gable triangle) might also help.

    LVLmight not be suitable, but i think you can get treated "glulam" beams suitable for exterior (covered) use.
    https://en.k2-builders.com/what-type-of-glulam-can-be-used-for-exterior/

  • yeah also pretty lethal, they can take out fighter jets.
    Also mainly a Navy responsibility - those guys can't catch a break.

    AFAIK mega-sharks are only known to attack civilian aircraft so far . . .

  • on wayland vs Xorg.
    i've found a few things that demand it (e.g. Waydroid - an android emulator)

    So I've started using KDE plasma recently (previously I was XFCE due to speed and lightweightness).

    KDE plasma gives a choice of wayland or xorg on the gui login screen,

    Assuming the K in kinote stands for KDE plasma, becuase that's how these things go - then you should be abe to choose - so you don't need worry about wayland, just log back in and pick the one you need, or the one that works for the task at hand.

  • It's a donation so you're never going to have perfect pricing everything down to the nearest penny or remunerating each person-hour worked. I think It's about something rough and ready that is better than nothing. And it's all goverened by morality anyway . . .
    so doomed to failure on that side.

    Buy hypothetically a simple principle with reasonable administration cost, like each 3 months, each node shoud add up all donations, slice off 25-50% , split it equally among their top 5 or 10 most important dependencies - just guess, and maybe swap from quarter to quarter if if there's doubt. There's some wiggle room there for small projects to do less and large over funded projects to do more.

    Each node in the network could follow a simple rule like that, making a limited number of transactions each time period ,and you'd probably end up with quite a complex outcome after a few iterations (years).

    The real trick would be having enough nodes in the network that actually enact such a simple rule. (Apart from having enough donations flow in to the consumer level projects of course).
    But enough nodes and enough inflow and the fractal would work for you - roughly.

    THe speed is an issue, the more often you settle up then quicker people see money, but the more the admin cost.
    But even doing it quaterly is not slower than doing nothing.

    Such a model is not something anyone will be securing bank loans off though, so if that's the point then you probably need a paid licensing / service model of some sourt maybe Canonical and redhat.

  • When I buy a turnip from the grocery store I don't have to pay the farmer directly.

    If I donate to debian, that I depend on , then debian (morally) should disburse some of that donation to the linux kernel that debian depends on.