flatlined

joined 2 years ago
[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 1 month ago

Putting the fascist back in eco fascist? Honestly with Musk I'm not convinced about the eco part, EVs notwithstanding. Dude seems to just go for stuff he thinks it's cool, and while I agree on the coolness factor on some (space, electric stuff, videogames) I'm less on board with some of the other stuff (putting too much in space, trying to boringly reinvent the train, trans rights, governmental positions, fascism).

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 12 points 1 month ago

So, we're gonna tackle bot manipulation for research purposes at the same time we're gonna deal with bot manipulation for ads and political manipulation, right? Or is it just not okay to do for scientific ends but fine if it's to sell you shit or advance a political agenda?

To be clear, this is very much not okay, it's just weird to me that once the goal is to sell you shit people are much more accepting of it as business as usual.

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 2 months ago (7 children)

Ootl, but censorship? Are you referring to the removal of the anti pronoun mod, or is there something I missed?

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

One that's more than just anti authoritarian but has it as one of the many societal issues it deals with would be Transmetropolitan. The pitch: Hunter s. Thompson in a cyberpunk future. Kicks against many a shin that needs kicking. It's one of my favorite works, not just in comics but in general. Some of the political aspects are eerily prescient, it's got style in spades, it actually deals with issues rather than using it as set dressing. It's got character and (so long as you read the protagonist as a fuckhead that's mostly along the right lines, which you should) a good moral compass.

One strong counterrecommendation of it: the author (Warren Ellis) may have made many great works, but the guy is/was a sex pest. It's not something I could in good conscience leave unsaid. It's the reason I didn't buy a physical copy of anything but the first chapter, and the reason I recommend it to people way less these days.

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 51 points 8 months ago (1 children)

No but you see we at Google aren't locking down sideloading. It's the individual app developers. With the api we gave them for that express purpose. Totally not us locking stuff down though, so EU please ignore us trying to indirectly close doors in our walled garden?

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 10 months ago

Which (pr nightmare aside) I wouldn't be against. It's not gonna fly, people are accustomed to 'free' browsers to the point they'd balk at the idea. Even if they weren't most would take a free chromium based browser or Firefox fork over a paid alternative that doesn't give them anything extra. But browsers are massive pieces of tech, they need a lot of dev time, and the money needs to come from somewhere, just relying on volunteers won't cut it.

Mozilla has been looking for sources of funding for years, sometimes in ways that are their own type of pr nightmare and sometimes in ways I'm not thrilled by, but I get their predicament. I wish there would be (more) state funding. EU, US. Whatever. Much like governments should invest in public transit we should invest in critical software infra.

I also wish Google's other branches were divorced from their browser dev branch. The stranglehold on the web given to Google by chrome is a huge part of the problem.

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 10 months ago

On the one hand that's supposedly to do with competitive advantage. It makes sense to try to even the playing field, which should have nothing to do with objection on 'moral'grounds. I'd argue this is mostly a good thing given the iffiness of many groups' morals.

Case in point, your exact examples, which brings me to the other hand. Banning trans athletes on 'fairness' grounds is bullshit. In most sports there's no known competitive advantage. Where there's an imbalance they tend to show disadvantage. The rare cases with an advantage for trans athletes tend to disappear the moment you correct for size/weight, which is not something we'd exclude cis athletes for. None of your examples should have happened. They do not hold water on fairness grounds, and any moralistic reasons behind it are reprehensible.

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 10 months ago

The Dutch translation is great. One of the few books I prefer to read in Dutch over English.

Moers wrote many great books in his Zamonia setting, but bluebear is head and shoulders above the rest.

The books have great art too. Done by the author, as he's a cartoonist.

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

It's a variation on the old saw of "how much is the difference between a million and a billion? About a billion". Once numbers become so big, it's hard to grasp the relative sizes. That said, I'm also interested in a more comprehensive breakdown. Seeing who are impacted, how much and where.

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 10 months ago (2 children)

What combination would you recommend to replace most common GitHub functionality?

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 1 year ago

Moddb was mentioned. Another good one is thunderstore. It all depends on the game though. Valheim (and several other units based games) is very active on both Nexus and thunderstore, stalker games tend to be moddb, &c. Nexus tends to be the main one for most games though.

I mostly like Nexus (paid member), but I share the concern about it being the only game in town for most games. Nexus is heaps better as a site than both moddb and thunderstore ime, but the lack of real alternatives is putting way too many eggs in the same basket.

[–] flatlined@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 1 year ago (2 children)

These days ssds might actually have hdds beat on longevity. Still, affordable mass storage and ssds aren't close to hdd levels yet.

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