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2 yr. ago
  • No, they covered something horrible with frosting

  • During sunsets you can see it easily

  • Carter wasn't exactly great as a president... But he was dignified at least. His legacy isn't as bright as his post presidential years.... But it is light years better than that we have now

  • Civilized countries don't let people die because they can't afford to live

    There's not many of those, are there?

    We're all living in a distopia, no one is safe from the sickness... It spreads across borders

  • Absolutely not. Sometimes you say something stupid, and people make you feel bad about it. That's healthy, that's good.

    Sometimes you say something unpopular but correct... You need to recognize that it's unpopular, and learn to package the idea in a more palatable way or approach the topic less directly.

    You should feel bad for rage baiting... Even if you're unambigiously right, you need to read the room and meet people where they are if you want to change minds. You don't need to change your views, but you need to adapt your framing or you're just rilling people up

    Negative social responses are a good thing, it's required for a community. Social rejection hurts so bad because we so rarely feel it, and that's sickness. Most people can have few or no negative interactions, because when money is involved, people will smile and take your money

    It's such a little thing, but it's a very gentle form of rejection... Avoiding it is not good, and so from a public health perspective we should default to showing it

  • Overhang? More real estate terms...I should start keeping a list

    Dude is regressing so fast it's crazy

  • Weird.

  • Every accusation is a confession... So I assume they're looking for children and women to assault

  • Because things oscillate. There is progress in response to cruelty, then you have regression that grows to resist the change

    This has happened for all of recorded of human history.

    The difference now is our power. Humanity always polluted, but we never could poison the whole world. Humanity always had ethnic cleansing, but it was once dozens instead of millions. Humanity always exploited the powerless, but now the powerful have more power while the rest have even less

    If we weather this storm, things will become so much better in reaction. If. Extinction is a real possibility for the first time since our genetic bottleneck... We have the ability to extinct our species in multiple ways

    But if we manage to hold on, the pendulum will turn. The dawn will be brighter than the darkness, if we can hold on

  • I think it's funny that I get the best results when I prompt break the AI to have amusing habits

    Llms are truly a reflection of the user, but ultimately the less you try to shoehorn them into behaviors the more capable they are.

    Fine tuning reduces their capabilities to make them more corpo, and now they're further fine tuning to make them unchallenging to people

  • Liberalism in a nutshell.

    We just want an insurance policy, not for anything to change. We want to protect what we've built, write off the horrors of the world as isolated events like a collapsing building or asteroid impact. They stop the villains from rocking the boat, even when the villains have a morally superior position because "you have to do it the right way"

    But the heroes aren't too morally superior... They can't make us feel bad. They do something about problems in front of them, and then go back to their job. They don't use their power to actually address root issues, they don't try to lead, they just defend the status quo

    But, then heroes started to get more complex. Batman is a billionaire who fights crime, despite having the ability to actually fix the crime problem in Gotham, he just fights. He suffered a random act of violence as a child, and so that instilled a sense of justice. He works with the police and uses his wealth... In any way except actually changing things

    Spiderman learned the hard way noblesse oblige, that his power gives him the responsibility to use it well. And he does, he saves people around him while also actively working to make the world better at his day job - inside the system. He's basically an activist

    Then you have captain America, who puts his sense of justice above the system... But he mostly works inside it, but sometimes it's infiltrated and he fights or it's wrong and he stands against it

    But when you get to more recent heroes, they start to get dark. The system is broken, so they work outside it as best they can. They don't have day jobs anymore. They kill sometimes. They make sacrifices, they fail. They question themselves.

    People scream at them "where were you when we needed you?" And they explain the answer to that question to the readers through character development, even though there's nothing they can say to the victims

    The heroes aren't infallible, they aren't strong or wise enough, they constantly struggle, and they fail. This isn't a hobby for them, they don't go back to work. But they keep trying, especially at great personal cost

    And they carry every failure with them as penance for not being good enough to have saved us when we needed them

  • Rules don't matter at all compared what they aim to achieve

    If you're driving with a significant speed difference from the cars around you, you are making yourself and all other cars in the area less safe. You're also creating traffic behind you

  • I always think back to this one quote, something like

    You can tell the morals of a society by the myths they tell themselves. We tell stories of heroes who save the world then quietly go back to their day job until they're needed again

  • I like the idea. I've even experimented with some on device algorithms by basically weaving together feeds, even something simple like makes a noticeable improvement

  • Well, Republicans all completely fell in line with Trump after Elon said he'd primary anyone who didn't

    Then, Elon outspent the other candidate in the Wyoming supreme court election like 10:1 and still lost. There's talk his involvement hurt more than helped. The very next day Trump said Elon has to go back to his businesses soon

    No member of Congress can go out in public without being screamed at to do something. Historically conservative districts are flipping in special elections. Musk's money is useless, Trump's endorsement means less by the day, and even the oligarchs are getting nervous about Trump

    Very few politicians are actually loyal to Trump, most are in it for themselves. There's reason for some hope... The pressure is already high. Imagine how bad it'll be in a few weeks, when people start seeing supply chain shortages on the shelves...

  • I don't know what you mean exactly, but walking away at the right moment, while projecting the right feeling, is the best way to win most unwinnable arguments

  • Well, theoretically they're just paying Amazon's cut and taxes... Which isn't nothing, but if their markup is high enough it could still math out

  • Ok, looking at that page I understand now. That is not what it means to us. This is the English page

    In the anglosphere (UK included, from what I've seen on tv), deportation doesn't have positive connotations, but it has ambiguous connotations. It's a normal word used on the news everyday, and has been for decades. If anything, it has similar connotations to getting a prison sentence - there's even an implication of some kind of wrongdoing on the deportee

    With the context of what you linked, it seems like in the Netherlands the word has appropriate weight. But if you say the Nazis deported Jews, people in the US will interpret that to mean you're downplaying or denying the Holocaust. It's the terminology used by neo-Nazis

    The terms we would use are forced migration or ethic cleansing, we don't really have a specific word for it until it evolves into full blown genocide

  • Protests don't do much except show dissatisfaction. Protesting in a game only works in that game

    If you want to help without leaving your house, donate to a group doing good things so that more of them can give up their jobs and do it full time

  • Linux @lemmy.ml
    theneverfox @pawb.social

    Looking for distro recommendations

    Between wanting to do more with local LLMs, wsl annoyances, and the direction tech companies have been going lately, I think it's time I start exploring a full Linux migration

    I'm a software dev, I'm comfortable in the command line, and I used to write the node configuration piece of something similar to chef (flavor/version agnostic setup of cloud environments)

    So for me, Linux has always been a "modify the script and rebuild fresh" kind of deal... Even my dev VMs involved a lot of scripts and snapshots. I don't enjoy configuration and I really hate debugging it, but I can muddle through when I have to

    Web searches have pushed me towards Ubuntu for LLM work, but I've never been a big fan of the window Managers. I like little flourishes like animation and lots of options I can set graphically, I use multiple desktop multiple monitors

    I've tried the one it comes standard with, gnome, and kde (although it's been about 5 years since I've last given them a real shot).

    I'm mostly