Comments

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to asklemmy in What kind of wearable device do you want? Assuming it will work and feel like you imagine it would

I won’t be satisfied until I have the full inspector gadget suite, from gadget copter all the way down to gadget rocket skates.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to asklemmy in If you could make any "simulator" game, what would it be?

I’d like a realistic ecosystem simulator where it isn’t from a human perspective. Like, maybe you start as a beaver and build a damn and it changes your river and has lots of effects on other species. Maybe then you switch to a bear and eat a salmon. Does a bear shit in the woods? It does! And it helps the trees.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to asklemmy in Why do you need RSS in modern times?

When Google Reader went down, I migrated to Feedly and all the 3rd party apps switched too. Basically every news site supports it (usually with per-topic feeds) and it’s great for keeping up with things like podcasts, software releases, and things like that. Anything that isn’t super urgent but you don’t want to miss an update about is ideal for RSS.

I used to use Twitter for breaking news before it went fash but Mastodon and BlueSky are fine for that (and getting better every day). And I’ve always hated algorithmic news tools; every time I try one, I just get topics I don’t care about from low quality sources that I’d never read. So, I just stuck with RSS.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to astronomy in Twin galaxy of the Milky Way discovered at the edge of the universe

It loaded for me but here’s the paper it’s referring to: www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06636-x

According to the article, a galaxy far far away looked like the Milky Way a long time ago. According to simulations, anyway. So, we can use it (along with other similar galaxies at different distances) to learn about the evolution of the Milky Way, the galaxy where all the coolest people live.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to astronomy in Should Astronauts Be Allowed to Eat Each Other If They’re Starving?

gastronauts.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to technology in LinkedIn user data leaked: Database shows emails, profile data, phones, full names, and more confidential info.

What private info is on LinkedIn? I thought the whole point was to make your resume public and get found by employers.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to technology in Auto execs are coming clean: EVs aren't working

Imagine working 40 hours a week and having to breathe gas fumes while you bike to work because your homeowners insurance doubled and now you can’t afford your ICE car.

No one thinks the transition to electric will be fun but it’s necessary because we waited 30 years to even acknowledge climate change. If you want to drive an ICE, you should have to pay for the destruction you’re causing so we can subsidize public transport. But failing that, EVs are the bare minimum.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to linux in Fedora 39 Released with GNOME 45, Linux 6.5 + More

I’m pretty sure Fedora Core 4 was my first Linux daily driver. I love distro hopping but I always end up back on Fedora when I have a big project to work on and I just want vanilla Gnome, my developer tools, and no surprises.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to technology in A new Silicon Valley manifesto reveals the bleak, dangerous philosophy driving the tech industry

The only thing scary about the manifesto is how much power people like Marc Andreeson have amassed despite seeming to have all the wisdom, awareness, and ability to compose an essay of a high school kid. He even says “elites” as if Silicon Valley billionaires aren’t included.

So, I’m not sure how people are reading parallels to history in it. It’s not really deep enough for all that. (If you want to do that, all you need is that Tweet where he said “Anti-colonialism has been economically catastrophic for the Indian people” when India chose net neutrality over Facebook‘s scheme to privilege its own traffic.)

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to technology in Everyone Is a Luddite Now

GPS is dope.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to technology in Everyone Is a Luddite Now

I love technological progress and am no Luddite but the technology that’s most visible to consumers rarely just makes everyone’s lives better. For every truly transformative tech like smartphones, there’s a dozen “disruptions” that just replace some previously functioning part of society with something shittier. (Like phone trees instead of a customer service agent. AirBnB causing rent to rise while breaking zoning laws. Generative A.I. has potential but so far, it’s mostly just automating content farms. Crypto wasn’t a real technological innovation but Silicon Valley VCs pretended it was.)

In a competitive market, even those shitty “innovations” would eventually translate into lower prices but we live in an age of weak enforcement of laws to create and foster competitive markets. Of course there’s a rise in pissed off consumers when all the upside goes to profits/shareholders.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to technology in Mozilla tells extension developers to get ready to go mobile • The Register

Safari does. I think they’re the same as desktop Safari but it seems like a different and smaller ecosystem from the Chrome/FF one and the good ones tend to cost a dollar or two (or six). Still, I have an ad-blocker, a dark mode one, a Userscripts one, one to get rid of AMP links, and a few others.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to technology in Amazon's drone delivery program is the joke it always sounded like.

As someone who frequently orders one can of soup, this is excellent news.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to nintendo in Inside Nvidia's new hardware for Switch 2: what is the T239 processor?

I went to reject cookies on that site and it had like 70. I’ve never had to swipe through so many cookies to get to a reject all button.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres, to linux in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

I prefer them. There’s trade-offs (like disk usage and occasional theme issues) but it’s worth it to me for the sandboxing and ability to easily run a newer version of an application than your distro has packaged up in their repos. It’s better for developers since they don’t have to support deb, rpm, etc. etc. And long term, it’ll allow immutable systems to become the default and that’ll be good for security and stability.

Between Snap, Flatpak, and AppImage, I default to Flatpak. It seems like the best supported even if they all have their strengths and weaknesses. AppImage is great for old versions of software you don’t want updated/integrated into menus. Snaps are basically the same and I happily use them if there’s no Flatpak but it’s so tied to Ubuntu/Canonical that some people have opinions about using it. I don’t know of any developer stubbornly refusing to support Flatpak on ideological grounds.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • uselessserver093
  • Food
  • aaaaaaacccccccce
  • test
  • CafeMeta
  • testmag
  • MUD
  • RhythmGameZone
  • RSS
  • dabs
  • KamenRider
  • Ask_kbincafe
  • TheResearchGuardian
  • KbinCafe
  • Socialism
  • oklahoma
  • SuperSentai
  • feritale
  • All magazines