colonial

joined 1 year ago
[–] colonial@lemmy.world 33 points 5 months ago

> online gambling

Cry harder

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 6 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

It's hard to choose, but I would say the Haber-Bosch process for ammonia production. It's a miracle of chemistry that almost single-handedly vaporized the population doomers. As much as half of the nitrogen in your body comes from Haber-process-derived synthetic fertilizer!

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 25 points 6 months ago

I mean... you're surrounded by trillions of perfect nanotech devices. They're called MOSFETs, and they make literally the entire modern world go round.

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 3 points 6 months ago

We need better alternatives

We'd need a quantum leap in storage and bandwidth first - orders of magnitude better, if we want competing to be financially sane 😮‍💨

Maybe when Google is (hopefully eventually) shattered into a million pieces by some US judge, YouTube could be splintered into several smaller companies, each with some portion of the infrastructure and channels/videos - thus forcing competition. Vaguely similar to the Bell divestiture.

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 5 points 7 months ago

I suspect I get mild SAD in the winters. Not enough to feel truly depressed, just more of a constant low-level "damn, I wanna nap right now."

It's probably different from your case, but what helped me was a sunlight lamp (light therapy) and a grab bag of supplements - standard multivitamins as well as magnesium pills and vitamin D fortified milk.

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 38 points 7 months ago (8 children)

Oof. Looks like this affected some other languages as well - somebody at Microsoft needs to up their documentation game, methinks.

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 4 points 7 months ago

Snowball throwing was banned because a nephew of a friend of a friend of a teacher was supposedly blinded by one.

FWIW, this can actually happen, although I still think that's an overbearing rule. One of my younger siblings had a teacher who was blind in one eye - ice shards from a snowball when she was in elementary.

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 14 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (2 children)

Chevy Suburban. I volunteered to drive for a university course field trip and it's what I got stuck with.

  • Unresponsive fatass brick of a vehicle. I mean, come on, a minivan has more cargo space and the same passenger capacity without three light aircraft worth of inertia.
  • Dashboard sucked. It took me a solid three minutes to find the button shifts. (I know these can be done well - Honda does them right - but the PRNDL was fucking laid out in a thin row at the side of the dashboard. Huh?)
  • Overtaking damn near anything would redline the (very new, less than 10k miles) engine.
[–] colonial@lemmy.world 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I'm not well versed in the machinations of the Chinese government, but if a relatively "normie" VPN like Nord works in China... it's probably controlled opposition (i.e. they're logging everything to a government server.)

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 61 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

I understand the sentiment, but... HTML and some light CSS is just as fast and much more accessible. It just strikes me as something that defines itself in opposition to "thing everyone uses" for no good reason.

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 20 points 8 months ago (17 children)

set timers

This broke for me a few months ago. It just randomly... won't start, despite saying otherwise.

[–] colonial@lemmy.world 4 points 8 months ago (1 children)

That sounds like more effort than just... writing the code.

 

Inspired by the comments on this Ars article, I've decided to program my website to "poison the well" when it gets a request from GPTBot.

The intuitive approach is just to generate some HTML like this:

<p>
// Twenty pages of random words
</p>

(I also considered just hardcoding twenty megabytes of "FUCK YOU," but that's a little juvenile for my taste.)

Unfortunately, I'm not very familiar with ML beyond a few basic concepts, so I'm unsure if this would get me the most bang for my buck.

What do you smarter people on Lemmy think?

(I'm aware this won't do much, but I'm petty.)

 

I was 11 when I took this screenshot - Ubuntu 14.04 running on my very first (incredibly bad) PC. As I recall, I couldn't install Windows 7 without a DVD drive, and that was out of my budget :p

Pretty sure I had it riced out with the Compiz cube and everything.

 

Hey all,

I just hopped on the Lemmy train, and needless to say, I'm hooked. It's a breath of fresh air compared to the corporate hellhole that Reddit has become, and I'd like to at least pay a little bit for it.

Unfortunately, I'm a broke uni student with enough subscriptions as is, so I can really only justify a buck or two a month. This is where my indecision arises - should I donate to the instance that my account lives on, or to the LemmyNet project itself? I've been digging around, looking at operating costs and such, and I can't figure out which one needs it more (for want of a better term.)

So, what are your thoughts? Or am I just wildly overthinking this?

 

Copying over some of my posts from Reddit, since I'm probably gonna nuke my account.

Originally posted 10/01/2021.

view more: next ›