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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: April 13th, 2024

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  • You have no idea who you’re talking to.

    I do hope your small-mindedness does work out for you, though history has shown being actively hostile to innovation is not a great way to survive rapidly changing environments.

    Edit: it seems that I accidentally used a phrase that triggers people. “You have no idea who you’re talking to” doesn’t mean I am some important hotshot, I just meant it literally. This dude is personally attacking me and my thoughts and he doesn’t know who I am at all. It is mean and I am not here to be treated like that.



  • Right. It is a bad mechanism if used for that purpose.

    The correct way to do what they actually want is to have a global, anonymous nationality verification. There are all kinds of ways to do this that aren’t dystopian. Then, if desired, there can be attestation to nationality without disclosure of personal information.

    That would allow us to appropriately measure the national origins of content, and I could see the use of that.

    Instead, people are supporting a deeply flawed mechanism as “good enough,” as they always do. It is lazy, sloppy, and dangerous.

    To that end, if it continues to go that way, there are countless ways to undermine it. That’s also what makes it so stupid. Dishonest actors will easily circumvent it, and honest actors will once again be left suffering.







  • There are a lot of problems with that stance and I do not have the energy to point them all out, but here is the main one I see.

    If you say something in private is illegal, how do you enforce it? Many harmful drugs are illegal, for example, so we justify invasions of privacy with searches of a suspect because the harm of the drugs is so great we are okay with violating people like that.

    When you say digital content is illegal in private it justifies searching digital content for enforcement. But the trouble with this is it is digital content and programs can be used to search it…continuously. This sort of search needs to scan EVERYTHING of yours in private. Once you have that, they can add more search criteria and you won’t even know it’s happening.

    You have no idea how bad this can get. I hope that you don’t find out.


  • Brazil has a LOT of electrical issues.

    It is also pretty expensive to import appropriate gear, and it shows.

    Between a sort of disregard for electrical safety, hordes of animals chewing on wires, and the difficulty of importing modern electrical equipment, it is an electrical nightmare.

    It doesn’t help that a lot of electrical generation is modern, there is a lot of electricity available, but the actual application of it in last mile is atrocious.

    All this to say it is of no surprise an electrical fire occurred, if that is the cause.




  • Soy farming is destructive to natural ecosystems. A shame for the farmers in the US, but the nature will be glad and that is more valuable. It does depend on the replacement crop.

    I am worried about Brazilian’s nature with the increasing soy farming. Soy needs terrain that competes with beautiful native plants, and with increasing production, more land will be lost, and more water consumed.

    The good news is that soy farming makes more sense in Brazil. Higher rainfall means less diverted water. It is actually more ecologically cost effective. Hopefully there will not be much more forest displacement.



  • It will open PC gaming to people who couldn’t access it before. It isn’t for people who know how to build their own PCs, although even people who are tech experts would still want this sort of device.

    This makes it easy for tech and tech adjacent people to recommend PC gaming to people with no tech ability.

    That’s why it will be a blowout success. The Steam ecosystem is superior to every console gaming platform. Now we will have hardware that competes and exceeds current gen consoles with no maintenance or tech-nerd complications.

    The steam deck was great but its specs made it a difficult sell when recommending it to people. You have to tweak a lot of settings and mess with stuff that most people don’t want to do.

    This will change all of that.

    Remind yourself in two years, and let’s see where it goes. I should still be here. Let’s touch base in 2 years.


  • A third of games? What are you smoking?

    Over 95% of games in my experience work on Linux, and perform better than windows.

    What kind of people are still using Windows, anyway? That supports one of the most terrible companies on the planet, invades your privacy, worms into your brain, and takes over your hardware…all for your 1 or 2 games you want to play?

    This Steam Machine is going to be a blowout success. Linux gaming is superior in nearly every way. It’s cheaper, it’s more ethical, and it gives you back control.



  • The creator didn’t have a good answer, so there may not be a good one for this project. But the value proposition is actually there.

    These self-hosted solutions are riddled with configuration options, often obscure requirements, and countless maintenance pitfalls.

    For a disciplined tech person, it is no problem to install and maintain.

    For people less disciplined or non-tech, self hosting is ill-advised and can be dangerous.

    But even for a tech person, when you have enough docker-compose services laying around, it can start to get a bit overwhelming to keep it all up to date, online, and functional. If you change your router etc you have to recall how things were set up, what port-forwards you need, what reverse lookups, etc etc.

    There actually is a gap in usability and configuration management. I could see a product that has sensible defaults that unifies config across these self-hosted services without needing to access the command line.