grozzle

joined 1 year ago
[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 31 points 1 month ago (5 children)

also, the bats flapped, the fish bubbled, the sun smiled and the robot flailed its hooks wildly.

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

is that to avoid using liquid vinegar?

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 5 points 1 month ago

collective nouns are like "team" or "group", they're happy to be "a team" or "one group"

data doesn't work like that, people say "a data point", or "one piece/item of data". (because datum is almost a dead word)

it's more accurate to say data is a mass noun, a. k.a. an uncountable noun, like air, sand, rice.

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago (6 children)

to be fair, the Raspberry Pi has never been pitched as an idiot-proof consumer appliance.

it is supposed to be a cheap way for people to get into studying programming /computing / electronics.

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 1 points 1 month ago

the benefits of Bazzite are centred around it having good performance with nVidia / AMD / Intel GPUs.

RasPi doesnt work with those GPUs, so it makes sense Bazzite wouldn't support it.

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago

adding to abnorc's excellent answer - circuit diagrams are all drawn as if charge carriers are positive (this is called "conventional current"), but because electrons are negative, this can get very confusing when you're dealing with components where the flow of charge is one-way only (diodes, transistors, batteries, photometers...)

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 30 points 1 month ago (1 children)

that's not arbitrary - the hour hand of a clock mimics the shadow of a sundial.

it makes sense, in the northern hemisphere, where 90% of people live.

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 18 points 1 month ago (6 children)

Fun archaeo-dentistry fact -

for thousands of years, most humans in wheat agriculture societies had terrible teeth because of the stone dust from millstones like this persisting into the finished bread.

until the industrial era, when we could make steel grinders.

thanks, modern steel industry!

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

"never" was specifically about the need for a passport, not the existence of stops. Stops were rare after the mid-90s, intermittently put up when there was a local bomb scare.

i'm "skipping" points that aren't relevant to the original claim, that today NI would be "free" if only England wasn't in charge. My point was that the GFA's principle of consent is respected by both the UK and the Republic of Ireland, and so the ruling class of England is not today holding NI against their collective will. Derry Girls had the GFA referendum in the final episode - please remember that was 26 years ago already, society has changed massively since then.

The main issue for most nationalist-leaning people (btw, in Ireland, nationalist always means Irish nationalist. nobody says "british nationalist", you say unionist or loyalist instead) these days is waiting for the Republic's health-care system to match the NHS in terms of affordability and quality. Everyday issues like that - most people in the north have a distrust of "the flag" being the most important issue.

Getting into alternate-history "could have ..." ideas doesn't change the real today. Nobody here suggested that, (for example) Orange marches were dealt with well, or Ireland has been treated well in history.

I did ask you what you meant by "set em loose", and didn't get an answer. Also "Welsh and Scots would def let it go" - again, what means exactly do you believe England is using to not let it go, in 2024? The NI Secretary will hold a referendum as soon as public polling indicates the time is right. Your "de-colonization" plan sounds like ethnic cleansing of the Ulster-Scots population who have been there since before the Mayflower reached America.

I do agree wholeheartedly that action should be taken ASAP to undo what Russia and Israel have been doing to expand their territories, while we're still dealing with the actual settlers, not their great-great-great-etc grandchildren.

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago (3 children)

sure, anything's good to get mad about if you just make things up.

what specifically do you have in mind by "set em loose", if not the referendum i talked about?

would you rather the six counties be "handed over" without the consent of the people who live there? how is that less imperialist than the Good Friday Agreement which you seem to be angry about?

a passport is not required to cross the border. never was. you just drive straight through, no stops since the mid-90s. I can tell you've never been to Ireland.

please don't talk to me as if I'm british.

Derry Girls is a great show, I'm glad it's popular, but it isn't a substitute for reality.

[–] grozzle@lemm.ee 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (6 children)

While I normally don't give the Brits much credit, gotta say NI is not being held in the UK against its collective will. Your imagined cruel English oppressor holding on to land by force, opposing the will of the local population, is out of date in the 21st century.

Almost all Brit politicians would love to be the PM at the time of Irish unification.

Since 1998, the NI Secretary is obliged by treaty to carry out a referendum for unification as soon as polling indicates there's a reasonable chance it would get a yes majority.

It just hasn't happened yet. It probably will, within a few decades.

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