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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/)HH
Posts
4
Comments
27
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • Best way to address this is to reword a bit:

    I probably would not use avoid using an instance that wasn't federated to Threads

    Using "not" twice in a single sentence is generally something worth avoiding IMO.

  • Anarchists develop structures and agreements that discourage concentration of power

    MLMs believe that they must use the state, capitalism, and by extension coercive control

    Are these not different words for the same fundamental concepts?

    I fail to see how "the state" and "capitalism" aren't just a more developed form of "structures" and "agreements". And if the community decides punishment is an appropriate response to breaking an "agreement", how is that any different from "coercive control"?

    And if you're community gets large enough (say even like a couple hundred people), how are any decisions gonna get made even remotely efficiently?

    Feel like you're a hop skip and a jump from a representative democracy. And as soon as bartering becomes too inconvenient, I'm sure a new "agreement" still be made to use some proxy as a form of current and boom now you've got capitalism too.

  • IMO there are big risks consuming news & opinion from any single source.

    Whether it's the CCP manipulating the TikTok algorithm, Russia buying ad space on Facebook, or American conglomerates pushing narratives on western mainstream media, there will be implicit biases everywhere.

    The only real answer is to get news from multiple sources with diverging perspectives, try to find where facts overlap, challenge your own implicit biases, and form a perspective in line w/ your values.

    Seeing America blame TikTok for pushing propaganda is the pot calling the kettle black -- and honestly more of a distraction than anything else.

    The real important issue is that people are dying, and the existing power structures are doing jack shit to stop it.

  • ADHD @lemmy.world
    h14h @midwest.social

    FYI -- "Medito" is a great guided mindfulness meditation app that is 100% free

    If you've heard of Headspace, Medito is more or less the same but run by a 501(c)(3) charity and is 100% free.

    For anyone who finds guided meditation helps to manage their symptoms, or is curious to explore meditation, I can't recommend it highly enough.

  • I'm really happy we secured the funding, but I really hope at least some of it goes towards building transit-oriented development around the new stations.

    Many of the renders CTA have put out depict stations in lifeless neighborhoods that are mostly 4-lanr stroads and parking lots, which would really sap much of the potential value this project could provide.

  • If someone makes a dangerous product, it is reasonable to expect them to include appropriate safety features to reduce the risk their product poses to society.

    The "victims" here aren't the automobile manufacturers, they're the people whose cars got stolen and those who were run over by a reckless joyrider or shot in a drive-by enabled by criminals having easy access to insecure, easy-to-steal vehicles. These are all people who wouldn't have befallen harm if these vehicles had standard anti-theft features.

    The reason nobody's talking about suing bike manufacturers is because nobody was stealing bikes and riding around shooting people or crashing through the sides of buildings.

    I think there is absolutely a legal argument that anti-theft features are critical safety features in cars, specifically. Not sure whether that argument will hold up in court, but it's not anywhere near as straightforward as "bike manufacturers don't have to care about theft, why should car manufacturers?"

  • Additionally...

    Uyghurs when they're detained sent to a concentration camp free job training program:

    Chuckles. I'm in danger immensely grateful to the glorious Chinese Communist party for graciously offering me this tremendous opportunity.

  • Why does a car manufacturer have to care about theft at all?

    This argument doesn't make any sense to me. Why bother with keys and locks then? Is it more practical to expect society to eliminate literally all crime?

    I'm sure there are good reasons to dislike this lawsuit, but this isn't one of them.

  • Completely agree on the notion of the community needing "good faith" over "kindness".

    A discussion forum loses much of its value when even a modest percentage of its userbase isn't participating in a free exchange of ideas, but rather evangelising their favorite ideas or beliefs by abusing the tools provided by the forum in bad faith to promote or suppress ideas that respectively support or contradict their ideology.

    It's one thing to present your contradictory/minority beliefs with supporting evidence to the forum in the hopes it stands on its own, and quite another to coordinate w/ others or create alt accounts to invade that forum and create an illusion of consensus through voting/commenting accordingly.

    It doesn't matter whether the ideology is white supremacy, communism, or even something apolitical like preferring Linux over Windows -- astroturfing and bad faith interactions of any allegiance are toxic to a discussion forum.

  • Sync for Lemmy @lemmy.world
    h14h @midwest.social

    How to use filters?

    I'm having trouble getting community/domain filters to work the way I expect.

    My goal is to be able to filter out certain domains/communities that tend to post spam and inside jokes when browsing "everything" (same way I used to filter out random communities from /r/all on Reddit) but adding domains or community names does not appear to work at all.

    Is this a bug or am I missing something?

  • I really hope stepping down as CEO leads to Linus surrounding himself with people he trusts to call him out when he's missing something.

    He strikes me as the kind of person who is susceptible to a few certain mental traps you kinda don't want to see in a leader of a large influential organization:

    1. Taking an "ends justifies the means" mindset (e.g. stepping on the "growth" gas pedal and accepting sloppiness because it will get better later with Labs)
    2. Letting "objective facts" justify big subjective decisions w/o much consideration (e.g. thinking the Billet Labs video didn't need to be re-shot because the "objectively" product rec conclusion wouldn't have been different)
    3. Substituting actual solutions to problems w/ commitments to solving them (e.g. implementing "Accuracy KPIs" instead of slowing the pace of video releases)

    None of these constitute outright malice, IMO, but boy can they lead to a problematic working environment.

    I'm sure there will be quite the flame war as a result of this, which I think is a bummer. Linus strikes me as someone who's acting in good faith, but has an unshakable habit of making rushed decisions without considering the full scope of their impact, and is (or has been) lacking the appropriate feedback structure to help him learn to either a) make more thoughtful decisions, or b) fully delegating those decisions to folks who are better equipped to make them.

    Here's hoping this leads to positive change.

  • I try to structure my commits in a way that minimizes their blast radius, which usually likes trying to reduce the number of files In touch per commit.

    For example, my commit history would look like this:

    • Add new method to service class
    • Use new service class method in worker

    And then as I continue working, all changes will be git commit --fixuped to one of those two commit's hashes depending on where they occur.

    And when it's time to rebase in full, I can do a git rebase master --interactive --autosquash.

  • I'm absolutely thrilled to have sync on the Fediverse, and will happily pay for a yearly subscription to help ensure LJD has sufficient compensation to keep the app up-to-date with whatever changes come to the Android/Lemmy APIs years down the road.

    The problem with (even excellent) free apps for platforms like this, is they require consistent maintenance to keep up with both the platform they run on (Android), and the platform they serve content for (Lemmy). That is not a trivial amount of work, and is absolutely deserving of continued, recurring compensation IMO.

    A one-time payment might make sense for a simple native game that gets produced once, has no web component, and never needs another update for its entire lifetime, but not for this. You aren't paying for a singular product, you're paying for a service. You wouldn't go to the barber and winged about needing to pay every time I get my hair cut.

  • This.

    I think of buses as the caterpillar to a tram's butterfly.

    You can start with a comprehensive bus network, and as a particular route stabilizes and the bus starts struggling to meet throughput needs, that is an indicator that a tram may be worthwhile.

    Starting w/ a tram line is a pretty big financial bet that it will be useful/needed, as once you build it, you're locked-in to that specific route.

  • Man I would love to see Chicago Amtrak get some much needed love.

    The way they structure the platforms to force passengers to sit in a waiting room and then line up and get funneled through a single door before they can board is so inefficient and backwards.

    Bad design and execution has made the Amtrak just as inconvenient as flying and slower than driving, when it should be the opposite.

  • Linux @lemmy.ml
    h14h @midwest.social

    Incorrect Quotation

    A quotation circulates on the Internet, attributed to me, but it wasn't written by me.

    Here's the text that is circulating. Most of it was copied from statements I have made, but the part italicized here is not from me. It makes points that are mistaken or confused.

    I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX. Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called “Linux,” and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these pe

    Chicago @midwest.social
    h14h @midwest.social

    The Blue Line’s West Side Branch Is Being Rebuilt Starting This Summer. Here’s When Stations Will Close