cerement

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 9 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

blood sucking leeches versus privacy sucking websites …

[–] [email protected] 39 points 20 hours ago

 

“Okinawa in Japan is one of these [blue] zones. There was a Japanese government review in 2010, which found that 82% of the people aged over 100 in Japan turned out to be dead. The secret to living to 110 was, don’t register your death.”

“Regions where people most often reach 100-110 years old are the ones where there’s the most pressure to commit pension fraud, and they also have the worst records.”

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago (2 children)

the group buy for a 173% keyboard is still open …

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago

haven’t watched too much, but I’ve heard really good things about the famous Mexican grandma cooking channel

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 days ago

don’t really have a favorite – started with Thunderbird a long time ago but switched over to webmail fairly early on

now that I’ve started to build a new system, I started to look around at the various options (and maybe getting off webmail or at least having local storage “backup”) – the standard GUI clients (Thunderbird, Evolution, KMail, BlueMail, Mailspring) seem to be … fine – but none of them really stand out

recently stumbled across some nice screenshots of aerc and the idea sounds really appealing, but I’ve never had any contact with terminal email programs and found out they’ve followed a completely different evolutionary path than GUI apps (even terminology has diverged between the two) – GUI apps keep trying to be an all-in-one (email, contacts, calendar, tasks, …) whereas terminal programs almost seem to to favor a “balkanization” of effort – aerc looks like it’s grabbed a middle-ground, you can run it as standalone or go all in with a fully customized setup – problem I’m running into is I can find lots of “how” guides, but very little in the “what” or “why” side of things …

[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 days ago

oh, look, the entire California coast where one-percenters like to build McMansions on top of sand cliffs showing visible cracks …

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 days ago

(minor nitpick: change ‘x’ and ‘y’ to what the axes actually are)

[–] [email protected] 23 points 5 days ago (5 children)

and both of them are judging you

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

(completely in line with Hillary being a disciple of Kissinger)

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

hopefully we’ve already switched to a perennial calendar (preferably something like an ISO week date calendar (a variation of a leap week calendar)) by that point which would make things a lot easier to adapt to a new situation …

 

https://social.hails.org/@hailey/113081760374774478

from the replies:

 

Piped / Invidious

Arresting Paul Watson: “Wanted for the crime of being a fucking legend.”

🐋 Free Paul Watson: https://www.freepaulwatson.org

 

(I have now spent more time scrolling through fonts than I have on the new system that the final choice will be used on … )

81
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

slowly putting together a new system – I didn’t plan on it being a lightweight system, it’s just kinda ended up that way (and probably won’t be by the time I finish) – actually finding it kinda fun building up piece-by-piece

 

Media coverage largely sucked

When I just looked at my phone, the headlines were about an unfolding Microsoft global IT outage. My first thought, ransomware. So I logged in and started looking around at what was happening — I’m a CrowdStrike customer — and quickly realised two different, separate things had happened:

  • Microsoft Azure had an outage earlier in the day. This was resolved before I got up. Azure has frequent outages (don’t kill me, Microsoft) — this isn’t abnormal.
  • CrowdStrike had made a boo-boo and pushed out a channel update that had borked a decent percentage of customers.

The media connected these two events together and conflated them. They weren’t connected.

 

“One thing Myspace had going for it: it was exuberantly ugly. The decision to let users with no design training loose on a highly customizable user-interface led to a proliferation of Myspace pages that vibrated with personality.”

“The most febrile, deeply weird and authentic prompts of the most excluded outsiders produce images that feel the same as the corporate AI illustrations that project the illusion of personality from the immortal, transhuman colony organism that is the limited liability corporation.”

 

https://todon.eu/@CrimethInc/112782702007709408

The Trump campaign aims to use today's shooting as a sort of Reichstag fire to incite his supporters to step up street violence while calling for more state repression targeting his enemies of choice.

The Biden campaign has already paused all outbound communications and withdrawn their television advertisements, ceding the entire field of narrative to Donald Trump, who will have no compunction about using his status as a victim to advance his efforts to victimize others.

One of the classic mechanics of totalitarianism is that protecting the safety of the leader becomes a justification for violence against large swathes of the population.

As centrists join the far right in paving the way for totalitarian rule under Trump, we have to organize to defend our communities. If you have been in denial about the challenges ahead of us, this should be a wake-up call to find each other and prepare for them.

 

Piped / Invidious

originally broadcast in 2009: Bergensbanen – minutt for minutt was a full recording of the 7 hour train trip from Bergen to Oslo and became the showpiece for slow television

 

Bullshitters, as philosopher Harry Frankfurt wrote in his 1986 essay “On Bullshit,” don’t care whether what they are saying is factually correct or not. Instead, bullshit is characterized by a “lack of connection to a concern with truth [and] indifference to how things really are.” Frankfurt explains that a bullshitter “does not care whether the things he says describe reality correctly. He just picks them out, or makes them up, to suit his purpose.”

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