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44
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2 yr. ago
  • Traditional distros have decades of guides, forum posts, and StackExchange answers. Atomic systems? Not nearly as much. When something breaks at 2am, knowing there's a million Google results for your error message is comforting.

    This is my reason. I've been using Arch exclusively for a few years, but have used it on and off since 2008. I still don't consider myself an expert by any means, and I frequently pull the docs and old forum threads to solve issues I run into.

    Documentation is the most important deciding factor for me. I didn't use more fully featured distributions, even if they were "easier" becuase if I can't look up the answer, and I have to live with something because I don't know what button to press... I mean you may as well just give me a windows box again.

  • Permanently Deleted

  • I'm sure the more cultural anthropologist types will have a more eloquent way of stating it, but the US has a hard time escaping it's religious background, which views nudity as a gateway to sexuality, so people "must remained covered".

    And in the same way, if men are naked around each other, people are afraid of it being seen as a sexual thing. I mean non sexual nudity doesn't really exist in "standard spaces" in my part of the country anyway.

    And man, if an adult and young person were naked near each other, someone would call the cops!

    I think Hollywood sexuality is exactly that, escapist fiction. The US is actually a pretty sexually repressed place.

    You can sit around any bar and say "oh that girl is hot, I'd love to fuck her!" But you would get looks you'd get if you said "oh that girl is hot, I'd love if she pegged me!"

    Maybe it's changing, but it doesn't really feel like it to me.

  • The technical term for this is called a collective noun in English. I did some quick googling, which unfortunately returned a ton of AI slop that I won't repost here. But it did return tons of answers.

    My thought is, your school probably did teach you it was called a Whisper, but who's to say what's the authority on collective nouns.

  • I believe truly having no empathy would make it impossible to form anything other than surface level friendships.

    The only precious resource I own is my time, and who I spend it with. The thing in life that makes the hard times seem not so bad, and the good times twice as good, is spending with people I care about, and people that I know care about me.

    To be pathological about it... My asking questions about you IS a means to an end. It gives a few useful things:

    • I learn about you
    • I learn about your worldview, I learn what motivates you
    • and I learn where you tend to sell yourself short so I know how to encourage you

    Talking about yourself is "giving" when only you share vulnerability. 1 word answers is keeping your guard up. Asking about them is "giving" because you get opportunities to learn about/support/uplift them. People like getting questions. It can make them feel cared for.

    And I'm not saying anything is wrong with you. Just sharing my perspective.

    And I'm a guy, so I guess you'd really be puzzled if we met IRL!

  • I was just in a group setting where 3 people who all had a tendency for "same sex attraction" described themselves differently.

    One individual strongly preferred the term queer.

    The second identified as pan because they liked the flag more than the bi flag, but admitted that bi might be a better fit for them.

    The third indentified as bi.

    The discussion of accurate terminology could be helpful in some settings, but... In casual settings, or even when negotiating intimacy with other people, what YOU mean by the term means more than the term itself, and you are not out of place by feeling "generally fuzzy" on usage.

  • This is challenging to read as a human. And I know I'm not the only one. So if we can't work out all the letters... no way a computer could either. I liken it to the idea that if I type out "detialed", spell check can suggest "detailed", but if I write "ditaled" it's not going to know.

  • This is a phenomenal resource! In all my years, I haven't actually heard anyone say "once removed" in story telling. I would almost feel weird saying it, despite it being technically correct. It's like saying "whom" out loud, you might be right, but people start mocking you.

    Yes I need better coworkers, what are you gonna do...

  • If you don't want to attempt cleaning it, you could just bury them outside?

    Edit: Everyone didn't like that.

    Keep it on your shelf forever Wrap it in layers of newspaper and toss it out Just clean it. It's glass. Use an ultrasonic

  • I have a guideline I like to follow when putting together my pizzas, I like something spicy, something savory, and something sweet

    Spice: banana peppers, jalepenos, or yes, hot sauce if that's what I've got

    Savory: bacon,chicken, pulled pork, sausage, pepperoni, mushrooms,

    Sweet: onions, picked red onions, roasted corn, pineapple

    You can blend stuff (put tandoori chicken on the pizza) for even more interesting combos!

    I feel like one of each gives a great result.

  • I'll be slightly contrarian to others and give a different perspective: you may find yourself hitting some roadblocks, I'll try to explain.

    I set up Linux Mint for my elderly parents. The key thing is, I set it up for them, functioning as the administrator for that machine, making sure they had a non admin account and configured their desktop to only show the shortcuts they cared about (firefox).

    It worked fine, and I only got calls once every few months. They got scared if some popup occured, or if they accidentally saved something to their desktop that they wanted to get rid of. I don't know if that really meets the definition of seamless, and I don't know if you'd even consider those problems.

    The other thing that can happen, is hardware interfaces. I know that you've listed out your use case. I'm just saying that if your birthday rolls around and someone buys you a 3d printer where you "just plug it in", you're going to be in for a long troubleshooting day, if it isn't natively supported.

    With Steam games, you can often get away with enabling proton, but... Small issues like being able to select multiple drive folders have sent me down long troubleshooting avenues as well. And when I use the word troubleshoot, I'm inevitably referring to the command line.

    Lots of people are encouraging you to try, and you can make that decision. I just want to toss out that it might not be seamless. But I don't think Windows is seamless either. It's just what most people are used to.

  • Programming @beehaw.org
    t_378 @lemmy.one

    "Bot resistant" voting systems?

    A friend of mine is interested in the "sovereign artist" model, which basically means that you self publish and self release your own work on your own website, as opposed to using a publishing house or art gallery.

    It's powerful because it gives everyone a platform to share "niche" art, but as a consumer, it can be difficult to find and "curate" high quality, interesting works of art. Is there a rating/voting system that exists that is resitant to internet vote tampering?

    I'm talking about how 10 years ago, Amazon reviews were pretty helpful. But now they've been swarmed with paid and bot written reviews. Same with Slickdeals and many others.

    I'd want a voting system that incorporates some ideas:

    • it would prevent one person from making multiple fake accounts
    • reviews wouldn't be suppressed or promoted by paid algorithims
    • the algorithm WOULD help connect people to items they are interested in. But maybe the workings of it would be open source, so it can be audited for bad acting