somewhiteguy

joined 2 years ago
[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Before the last few years, I was on a lot of torrenting sites. Really before a lot of software became what we now know as FOSS, it was the way we traded software. So, there was a potential much higher then than now. I've been doing this computer thing for closer to 30+ years, so my habits come from headaches and other learned lessons.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 16 points 1 day ago (2 children)

due to corporate IT policies

I think that answers your question right there. If you got the device outside of that realm, you'd probably have no issues. Talk to your security and IT people about why that is. There are huge security risks for people being admin over their systems.

For context, I run my home computer as a non-admin user most of the time, unless I need to make some deep changes, which is not often. Maybe once a month. This saves me from accidentally installing a rootkit or other software. I run my children and wife under the same context so they don't need to worry either. Yes, it takes me a bit of time to go through and approve some updates, but that's worth it to not need to worry as much about viruses and keeping data secure.

The amount of time it takes your IT department to do something is another complaint that should be directed at them. We get those kinds of complaints constantly, but it's the fact we have everyone asking the same things or completely meaningless ones. You're in the queue, please give us patience.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 74 points 1 week ago

"They were really bored and drugs and/or alcohol was most likely involved."

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

This is sad to see how far deep Duolingo has gone into the shittificatio hole. I really enjoyed doing the lessons with my whole family, but I guess we'll be searching out a new way to get our second-language skill up to date. The AI thing wasn't the absolute last nail for me, but this is.

The benefit of the previous system was that if you understood what was happening, you could practice for a long time, but if you kept failing, it would basically lock you out so you can put it down, recoup and come back later. This is now punishing people who are consistent and are understanding the language dynamics. Sad to see.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

When getting into a new project or hobby, I tend to go to HF for the tools first. The tools are inexpensive, and I'm probably going to be dropping the hobby or thing soon after my hyperfixation dies off. So, that means I didn't spend a lot of money on this thing that I'm not going to keep going on. If the tool dies, and I'm still into it, it's not just hyperfixation and I can get a better tool, but now I understand what I'm looking for. Sometimes, the tool from HF is just fine for the long term, and honestly this happens more than you'd think. I have some drills that aren't the best, but get things done for near a decade, and some yellow, teal, and reds that have died within 6 months.

My wife bought me a HF (Port Cable) pancake air compressor for a father's day. It wasn't the best, but it was from her and what she could buy without pinging the account in a way that alerted me. It's just now starting to die off and it's nearly 12 years old.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 10 points 3 weeks ago

I was feeling a lot older until I started a mental and physical health routine. Meeting up with other people that were trying their hardest to make this their best life and working on getting my physical health back in line has really changed how I feel.

Before I was feeling every ache and pain there was to feel. The world was dark and gray and I was just a rat on a wheel doing the same old thing.

Now, I'm feeling like there is hope. I'm taking more walks out in the nature preserves in our area. My wife has seen the difference in my wellbeing, and how the work has paid off for her as well. My kids are enjoying being out and having their dad back with them emotionally as well.

If you don't do it for yourself, find someone that you can do it for. Find a group of like-minded people that aren't 100% successful, but willing to put their flaws on the table and asking for support. We're all doing it together, and we're not the best at it. Keep it up, it's worth it to finish well.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 26 points 1 month ago (1 children)

They put the milk in before the tea, so the pot lit itself on fire.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Been a Christian for a long time (1989). I've consumed copious amounts of ancient mythology and folklore. People who don't understand that you can read something that challenges your faith and still follow through with better understanding afterwards is the issue. If you read something and it doesn't make you think deeper about yourself, faith, world, or whatever what's the point? Those in the church (Christian or not) that tell you that reading something is a "sin" are probably ones that teeter on the edge of losing their grasp as it is and don't want you doing the same. Most of them can't explain why it's so challenging, they just know it's there.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 5 points 2 months ago (8 children)

The same way we don't praise Hitler for the good paintings. We don't celebrate people that do evil consistently.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

DEDUCTIVE LOGICO CRACKS THE CASE OF THE LIBRA WITH THE PINEAPPLE Murdle for 2/19/2025

👤🔪🏡 🕰️ ✅✅✅ 4️⃣:0️⃣5️⃣

⚖️ 👤

https://murdle.com/

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

I have also had this dream.

[–] somewhiteguy@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago (2 children)

That's assuming they don't look at a sub and just say "you're now paid, congrats" and the mods just go along with it. I can see greedy mods seeing the ability to profit from that kind of forceful hand and then complaining about disengagement.

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