UniversalMonk

joined 4 months ago
[–] UniversalMonk@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

Affinity is an excellent replacement for Photoshop, Illustrator, and Publisher.

I may have to finally make the switch. I've been using photoshop/illustrator for over 20 years now though...

It's gonna be damn hard to make the switch...

EDIT: Just now uninstalled all my Adobe software, canceled my Adobe subscriptions. Replaced with Affinity. :)

Thank you for this!

I didn’t know you could get shadowbanned on Lemmy.

I've def had the feeling that I've been shadowbanned from some places, but I don't know if it's something that's done on Lemmy or not.

I never really cared enough to look into it too deeply though.

[–] UniversalMonk@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

The problem is that it only takes one person on Lemmy to say something is associated with Russia, and all of Lemmy pounces on it and will just keep saying it over and over. So now that this site has been associated with Russia, you're never going to win your argument--even if you're right. Lemmy's will just make shit up about it from now on.

I know, because someone decided to make up something and said I'm Russian, and that I get paid in "russian bitcoinz," (because I didn't vote for Harris or Trump) and to this day, people still say it. (I'm born, raised, live in USA by the way).

[–] UniversalMonk@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Thank you! (EDIT: No thank you)

EDIT:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Bias/Fact_Check

Nevermind. MediaBiasFactCheck bot and website aren't scientific at all.

You guys rock. Like always.

Yeah, I grew up on those days, and missed most of the computer revolution simply because my family couldn't afford any of it. I did have a rich friend that dabbled, so I got so see the edges of it, but I didn't get to dive in deep like a lot of people did in those days. I'm making up for it now, though!

Here is an ad for the school in a newspaper from the time period:

[–] UniversalMonk@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Sacrilege! May your data streams be corrupted and your access to shared knowledge be denied!

I'm bound by honor to copy your statement and use it as my own, whenever and wherever I please! :)

Here's what the beauty looked like:

 

This is an article on sci-hub, but I'd be happy to put it somewhere else more fediverse-ish if you all have any ideas where to do that.

Kopimism is a modern parody-religion Piracy Movement that treats information as sacred and believes copying and sharing it is a duty.

It began in Sweden and blends digital rights activism with a unique moral system built around creativity, collaboration, and freedom.

Kopimists don’t worship a "god" but follow principles like respecting privacy and remixing knowledge to improve the world.

 

In the early 2000s, the concept of “One Laptop Per Child” (OLPC) captured the imagination of the world. The ambitious project aimed to provide every child in the world with a low-cost, rugged, and connected laptop, revolutionizing education and bridging the digital divide. It didn't happen.

 

The initial Locksmith advertisement that started the trouble. Published in MICRO: The 6502 Journal, January 1981, 80.

 

From teenage civil rights organizer to hero of the historic 1963 March on Washington

 

Gov. Jared Polis made good Friday on his threat to veto a pro-union bill backed by every legislative Democrat and the state’s labor organizations, a move that’s likely to deepen the governor’s rift with key parts of the party’s coalition and set up a 2026 ballot fight.

Polis’ office announced his rejection of Senate Bill 5 on Friday afternoon, 10 days after it cleared the legislature. In his veto letter, the governor said he was open to changing the state’s Labor Peace Act, “if agreed to by both labor and business.”

SB-5 would’ve eliminated the second election in union formation, which is a unique provision of Colorado law that requires organized workers to pass another vote, with a 75% threshold, before they can negotiate the collection of union dues with their employer. It was sponsored by Democratic Sens. Robert Rodriguez and Jessie Danielson and Reps. Javier Mabrey and Jennifer Bacon.

Polis wrote that he felt SB-5 “does not satisfy” the high threshold he believes is necessary before workers can negotiate dues deduction.

“Unfortunately, while both sides moved their positions, labor and business missed an opportunity this year to modernize this outdated law while providing lasting certainty to Colorado workers and businesses,” Polis wrote. His office previously defended the Labor Peace Act as a law that “serves the state and workers so well.”

In a joint statement Friday, leaders of Colorado labor unions blasted the governor’s veto as a “slap in the face.”

“Governor Polis has chosen to protect an 80-year-old, anti-union law over the rights of working Coloradans,” Stephanie Felix-Sowy, the president of SEIU Local 105, said in the statement. “He is now the only Democratic governor in the country defending a ‘right to work’ policy that undermines worker freedom and shields corporate power. Nurses, janitors, caregivers, and service workers across Colorado won’t forget, and we’re just getting started.”

Polis’ veto comes as no surprise: He’d privately told SB-5 supporters for months that he would reject the proposal unless the business community signed off on it, and he reiterated that position to reporters last week, after the bill passed.

In an interview with the Colorado Sun on Thursday, Polis said it would be “politically, suicide if I were to sign the bill,” given his earlier threats to veto it.

Talks to reconcile the differences between labor groups, business leaders and Polis’ office broke down in the final days of the session earlier this month. Business groups rejected Polis’ final compromise, and labor leaders — who’d accepted that deal — then rejected Polis’ attempt to inject his own priorities, like cuts to restaurant workers’ pay and expansion of charter schools, into the talks.

Loren Furman, the president and CEO of the Colorado Chamber of Commerce, praised Polis for the veto in a statement Friday, and she said business leaders had negotiated in good faith.

“SB-5 would have also threatened our statewide business climate at a time when we should be fostering a competitive economy,” Furman wrote. “We want Colorado to be a top state where business leaders choose to invest and create jobs, and vetoing SB-5 preserves the unique labor laws that set us apart from other states.”

For months, Democratic lawmakers and labor unions mounted a public pressure campaign on Polis to sway him, which included a letter signed by five former U.S. Labor secretaries urging him to sign the bill.

On Tuesday, with the bill passed and a veto imminent, supporters held a rally behind the governor’s mansion in Denver. It included a Polis impersonator in enormous basketball shoes — a nod to the governor’s casual footwear — who introduced himself as “Jerry Polis, Jared Polis’ cooler cousin who cares about workers.”

Unions have long opposed the second election as unnecessary government interference that effectively makes Colorado a diet version of a “right-to-work” state, referring to states that prohibit requirements that workers join a union or pay dues. They have argued that workers should be able to more easily negotiate their contracts.

But in the second election, Colorado’s free market-friendly governor found a business regulation that he would defend. He and business groups argued that the state’s labor laws have worked effectively for decades and that workers should have maximum say in the collection of union dues from their paychecks.

Though Polis stressed in his letter that he support unions, his rejection of SB-5 puts him at odds with the Democratic lawmakers who control the legislature, and it will worsen his relationship with labor groups, who have accused Polis of going back on his promise to champion organized workers during his 2018 gubernatorial campaign. A year ago, Polis rejected other pro-union bills, sparking a rally outside his office attended by a number of elected Democratic leaders.

Legal advocate for workers, renters announces run for Colorado attorney general Polis’ SB-5 veto is not the end of the debate. Labor unions are likely to bring the bill back in Polis’ final year in office and then again, if necessary, when his successor takes office in 2027.

They’ve also begun gathering signatures for a 2026 ballot measure that would enshrine “just cause” protections in state law, which would require employers to have a valid reason before they can fire someone.

That may be the first of multiple labor-backed ballot measures in 2026. Labor officials are eying the potential: Not only is 2026 a midterm year during a Republican presidency, but April data released by the bipartisan Colorado Polling Institute found that labor unions had the highest total favorability ratings of any person or group in the state included in the survey — including Polis, who placed second.

Business groups, meanwhile, have not publicly indicated if they’ll respond. A libertarian activist, Jon Caldara of the Independence Institute, has proposed a right-to-work ballot initiative, which is also approved for signature-gathering.

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