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activ8r , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

This is exactly why we didn’t want you to have independence. You clearly weren’t ready. I mean the whole Trump issue was one thing, but this… This is just monstrous.

mindbleach ,

Don’t throw that stone too hard, after BoJo.

Maeve ,

Bojo was no where near djt levels of messed up. Bad but not as bad.

ech ,

What’s worse? A smart guy pretending to be dumb while tearing apart a country? Or a dumb guy pretending to be smart while tearing apart a country? Silver lining on the latter is at least you see all the stuff they’re too dumb to hide.

ElBarto ,
@ElBarto@sh.itjust.works avatar

The smart one, at least their shit will be calculated and not like a bull in a China shop on amphetamines after being taxed in the balls.

ech ,

I see your point, though I don’t necessarily see it as a good thing. “Calculated” can be much more damaging depending on what the goal of the calculation is.

Maeve ,

Tbf you did have King George.

smeg ,

Can’t believe you didn’t want to be governed by a guy called “Mad King George”

MadBob ,

Let’s not be pointing fingers now.

SatansMaggotyCumFart ,

They’ve had three new prime ministers since you made this comment.

FringeTheory999 ,

You people drink instant coffee. We are not the monsters here.

deeply_moving_queef ,

I’m genuinely unsure if drip coffee is better than instant.

Threeme2189 ,

Narrator: “It wasn’t”

smeg , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

Excellent work you horrible person

scarilog ,

I’m ngl I have tea semi regularly, and I put the teabag in with the water to the microwave. The method works, I don’t see the problem.

smeg ,

Firstly, does the water not go all weird and frothy? Secondly, burn the heretic!

scarilog ,

I don’t think I’ve ever had this issue. Here’s the full method.

Put teabag and spoonful of sugar into mug, pour maybe 2cm of water into mug. Nuke for about a minute. Let sit for a bit. Agitate the teabag a bit to get more of the delicious leaf juice out. Chuck out the tea bag. Pour in milk. Nuke for 20 secs. Done.

smeg ,

I think I’m going to be sick.

Seriously though, that sounds like a very different method to just pouring boiling water on the bag and then adding milk and sugar. Have you done both and compared?

scarilog ,

I have not, I’ll give this method a try when I get a chance.

smeg ,

Did you enjoy your new cup of tea?

scarilog ,

It’s been 3 weeks, haha, but yeah I got around to giving it a try. The verdict is… It’s basically the same. I will be continuing to do it the way that I did before since it’s easier, but I have enjoyed this experience of having my horizons broadened :D

smeg ,

I am a bit surprised, but I suppose for science I should really try following your method and seeing how it compares. I’ll report back if I survive the ordeal.

morriscox , (edited ) to technology in How do i stop this kind of pop up from ever appearing again? Win10

Why does it seem like any issue with Windows is met by “INSTALL LINUX!!!”. If the check engine light on my car comes on I am not going to buy a truck.

Gregers ,

Yeah you could probably just install Linux on your car and bypass that light instead of buying a truck.

morriscox ,

Why spend a lot of time installing and configuring and learning a bunch of stuff when I just want the error code cleared?

ImpossibleRubiksCube ,

Because you can do it in two minutes.

Buddahriffic ,

Because in this case, the error is “we’ve detected you’re not drinking Ford branded tea, click here to subscribe to our tea service!” along with many other codes that aren’t that hard to individually clear but gives a clear indication of how MS sees its userbase.

gentooer ,

While I wouldn’t comment something like that myself, as I think it’s not productive, it’s quite strange as a Linux user to see these posts like “The makers of the OS I use on the computer I paid money for and now own are trying to screw me over in a new way today. How can I fix it?”

hai ,
@hai@lemmy.ml avatar

own

I think the real problem is that OP doesn’t own Windows, “the software is licensed, not sold.”

jack ,

The fundament of GNU/Linux and Windows are totally different. The annoying things with Windows are just symptoms of the underlying principle, which is to milk you as much as possible. It’s like switching from smoking to not smoking

Blackmist ,

To be fair, the chance of that not being the default response on Lemmy was pretty slim.

jayrodtheoldbod ,

The thing I am now curious about is if this is, quite predictably, Lemmy’s existing culture, OR if they were having a perfectly good time in their clubhouse until all the most insufferable Redditors came charging in here.

Gestrid ,

I’m kinda wondering the same thing, minus the “insufferable” part. (Then again, maybe the original Lemmy users do consider us “insufferable” for messing up Lemmy’s culture? Who knows?)

kspatlas ,
@kspatlas@artemis.camp avatar

There were a lot of linux users before too, c/linux was one of the most active communities, about the culture it could be better but at least all the tankies have been drowned out

null_recurrent ,

Yeah but if the truck is free and better than your current car…

cmhe ,

It this case, also more environmental friendly, repairable and improves self-determination, independence and the local economy.

null_recurrent ,

And it has a cool penguin bumper sticker

morriscox ,

My car serves my needs more than a truck does. Not only is it easier for a wheelchair user to get in, I can load/unload easier and it’s more comfortable for me to drive.

HiggsBroson ,

Better is debatable. For the average dev, Linux is an obvious improvement for most development tasks. For the casual user? Not even Ubuntu is 100% out of the box yet. I’m currently working through the migration to Ubuntu as my main OS and there have been things where I 100% had to open up a terminal for (or something similarly manual or confusing), which is typically not an option for non-developers or the technologically disinclined. Most Linux diehards seem to forget that not everyone is technologically literate, especially when they push the latest fork of a fork of a branch of arch with barely any UI or support for familiar applications.

qyron ,

You got me curious.

What exactly had you going for the terminal? Although not a fan of that distro in particular, I must admit they were the ones who made a significant push to make Linux more accessible to every one.

I’d risk 97% of end user machines nowadays are ready to go after going through a standard install of Ubuntu.

kalipike ,

I wish. Both at home and in the office, we rely on too many Windows-dependent applications that do not work on Linux.

I run Ubuntu as my main OS since I can kinda do what I want with my laptop at work and obviously control my personal laptop as well, but everything production-wise at work is Windows on the client side, and I still have a Windows PC for gaming for games that require anti cheat that isn’t supported on Linux.

I vastly prefer Linux but Windows is a far lower friction/barrier to entry for most.

qyron ,

People resist change because of familiarity or, even worse, it’s the crap that comes preloaded with every computer and some idiot told them they void warranty if it is removed (this is illegal nowadays but many shops still float this idea).

I can understand specialized applications but the bulk of office work does not require it. And industrial applications even prefer linux as it means they can tailor the software to their specific uses.

I was writing this and what came to mind was a conversation on a podcast where journalists were at some point debating they could not live without their Apple computers, while complaining how expensive they were.

They write text! Any freaking OS can provide support for at least two dozens of text processors.

It’s mostly about perception, in my view.

HiggsBroson ,

I think the first thing was Windows’ fault (and also the fault of my dual boot setup, which i imagine most casual users won’t be going for) - apparently “Fast Startup” means doing some hardware shenanigans that prevents Ubuntu from hooking into the motherboard’s network adapter.

After disabling that, I had to install a specific version of the nvidia graphics driver (535) from a PPA to get all 4 of my monitors working. Before that, I couldn’t configure display settings at all because my screens would flash for too long and prevent me from clicking the “Keep Settings” button. And before that, only one monitor worked and the other three were black screens that I could move the mouse to, but couldn’t move applications to.

And finally I had to figure out how to set a “default” audio device because apparently this isn’t a configurable thing (that I could find). I noticed I would have to manually set my audio device after every reboot - after enough reboots I found that there is a command to list audio devices by ID and to set the active output device by ID, so I added it to the list of startup commands. Honestly this one is the most perplexing because I would think setting a default audio device from a list of multiple would be some pretty basic functionality. I’m guessing that I probably just missed it, or gnome hides it.

After that is mostly gaming setup stuff. I would consider it to be common knowledge that most games aren’t intended to be run on Linux, so I don’t mind some difficulty there.

Slightly unrelated, I have learned that apt purging openssl is a huge no-no and am now reinstalling Ubuntu again entirely :)

Macros ,

I can’t speak for the Nvidia issue. (Only that it is widely know that Nvidia actively works against Open source and only just has begun changing their stance, so Nvidia support is still poor on Linux. Their proprietary drivers aren’t great either. I stick to AMD since using Linux, they work great out of the box)

But the audio issue baffles me. Under Kubuntu with KDE I just klick on the Loudspeaker in the systray and choose the device. It even remembers it over unplugging and replugging devices.

Image of mentioned audio selection popup with radio button before the devices

Rgarding openssl: Thats the price you pay for freedom, you can change the system how you want, even into non working states ^^ BTW: You can repair such mistakes with a LiveCD even major ones like this.

qyron ,

I had a dual boot where windows would from time to time rewrite the boot and the system would just load into it.

Because it was an older motherboard it still had IDE and SATA; after some research, I found someone saying it was a BIOS “feature” where the default master HDD was alway on the IDE channel. The solution: get rid of the IDE disk (and windows along with it).

The rest of what you describe remembers my own misadventures when I started. But back then at 2006 and with Debian.

I’ve read articles where people were saying that even running the NVidia Quadro boards was very much anti-climatic, with the biggest hurdle being installing the proprietary drivers.

And when it comes to games, WINE is going very far to make many things works where they were never intended to. And many titles are already being shipped with penguin in mind

Have fun!

null_recurrent ,

PopOS Nvidia version for Nvidia machines - much better experience.

Doorknob ,

Switching to Linux isn’t free. There are significant time, opportunity and switching costs involved.

BCat70 ,

But if your car has flat tires every 3000 miles, the engine explodes occasionally for no reason, the dash display keeps telling you about accessories you don’t want instead of your speed, and the factory door locks are coat hangers twisted into an O ring, then shopping around seems like a good idea.

Matombo ,

Normally it happens the other way around but here on lemmy the popolation of LMR is just big enough to for once turn tables.

piranhaphish ,

What about “INSTALL A DIFFERENT OS!!!”? Is that better? There are reasonably two others to choose from, and one of those doesn’t require the purchase of expensive equipment and arguably a path into an even more controlled ecosystem.

And your analogy is way off. This isn’t a malfunction of Windows that a technician is going to fix, never to be seen again. This is more like a rep from the car manufacturer meeting you at your car every morning to ask if you want to install their factory upgrade. You tell them that you never want to see them again, so next week they start sending a different representative. You have no other options.

Well, except getting a free car that doesn’t send a rep.

eee ,

Yeah but the free car requires an hour of troubleshooting every time you get in

ComradeKhoumrag ,
@ComradeKhoumrag@infosec.pub avatar

Because we’re nerds.

LMR should have been more helpful in this thread, but, more people installing Linux will solve more issues with Windows beyond a pop-up. Maybe Microsoft will actually improve their OS instead of putting FUCKING ADVERTISEMENTS IN WINDOWS 11

Pulptastic ,

Geeks. Nerds would troubleshoot the problem or at least evaluate the situation a bit.

Skepticpunk , to memes in agile is far left too. I will die on this hill

Hmm. Self-organizing projects whose workers work on them entirely based on their need to be done, and the results freely distributed to anyone who wants a copy?

Literal fascism, obviously.

wizardbeard ,

whose workers work on them entirely based on their need to be done

You mean there’s projects out there where it’s not a bunch of individual devs all working on their personal pet features and ignoring all else?

TrickDacy ,
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

Can’t tell if this is a joke of some kind

linja ,

I think it is not. Certainly most projects aren’t solely personal utilities, but devs working for fun rather than profit will almost inevitably produce something skewed towards their own tastes and skills. See: the presentation of any FOSS graphical app vs a paid equivalent.

BoxOfFeet ,

Things like FOSS stuff makes you think people can organize and work together freely to achieve a common goal, and maybe anarchy could work. But then, you see a busy intersection when the traffic lights go out and you realize the general public are idiots and everything devolves into selfish chaos as you’re stuck a half mile back, as cars shoot through in no particular order and you inch closer to the madness terrified to make your left turn. I have zero trust in society without some form of rule and order.

Zehzin ,
@Zehzin@lemmy.world avatar

Decentralization doesn’t necessarily mean disorganization. You can create a Lemmy instance with no moderation and rely purely on the community itself to self moderate, much like someone can create an instance with rules, and if someone disagrees with the rules they can create their own. Both are part of a decentralized system, so no one is actually coerced into participating in any system by regulation, just social pressure.

Jakeroxs ,

Think about a roundabout though in comparison, no lights or specific order, and there is a learning curve, but overall they reduce traffic better then stoplights under many conditions.

I guess my point is sort of extrapolating that a structure/presentation also heavily influences how users perceive or use a product/idea

Mongostein ,

There is a specific order though.

First two exits use the outside lane, second exit or anything further uses the inside lane. Always yield to the inside lane.

futatorius ,

Anarchism isn’t zero organization. It’s organization for legitimate and accountable purposes.

linja ,

That’s a pretty weak definition. “Legitimate” especially is a vacuous term, and every form of democracy ever proposed is (theoretically) “accountable”.

zbyte64 ,

Sure, but is that how we talk about our institutions? Things I hear that buck anarchism while supporting American democracy:

  • The Constitution should be interpreted with “originalism” or at the very least venerated
  • Police sacrifice X, therefore it’s okay if they do extralegal Y

I’m not saying there aren’t systems of accountability that legitimize various institutions. It’s that the stories we tell to legitimize an institution comes in many different flavors, and those based on authority from power/position (ie “our founding fathers were smart people”) are not accepted by anarchists. Edit: Imagine how different our legal framework would be if it reflected that mentality?

linja ,

I think I almost understand what you’re getting at. If I do, it’s uncodifiable. You can’t draft an organisational system with a clause that no one is allowed to use logical fallacies to defend it.

zbyte64 ,

If I do, it’s uncodifiable

Things can still be codified and justified without an appeal to power. Lots of software is written that way today.

a clause that no one is allowed to use logical fallacies to defend it.

I don’t understand why that would be a necessity or desired.

zbyte64 ,

I find it a bit ironic that cars and traffic lights are being used as a metaphor for why anarchy won’t work. Let’s put aside that the example is of poor collective planning to build urban environments. Go to Vietnam and see how people drive without traffic lights, it’s complete madness. But it works, and in some ways it works better than what we have because the accidents are fewer and less severe while also serving more diverse modes of traffic.

JayDee ,

The same is true when attempting to merge in the US. See Japan traffic as a counter argument.

frezik , to programmerhumor in Just getting into JS

Clearly, the solution is to write another layer of abstraction to unite them all.

tiefling ,

xkcd_927.jpg

harry315 ,

Is this the one with the competing standards? Are we having a meta meme now?

tiefling ,

Yup you know the one

Console_Modder , to memes in My reaction to "Unity plan pricing and packaging updates"
@Console_Modder@sh.itjust.works avatar

Is that a fucking Godot meme? Hell ya

mefitis ,

My thoughts exactly

danwardvs ,

Gives a pretty good idea of Lemmy’s demographics when Godot memes are in the generic meme pages

RightHandOfIkaros ,

Not really surprising since so many are also Arch Linux users. They don’t exactly like to hide.

HRDS_654 ,

Have I told you I use Linux for the 10th time today? Just in case, I use Linux.

merthyr1831 , to technology in How do i stop this kind of pop up from ever appearing again? Win10

start using linux lmao

pyromaniac_donkey ,

You woke up and chose truth

Mdotaut801 ,

Ugh Linux people. Not everyone wants to deal with it and want to play whatever games they want without feeling like they’re hacking the pentagon just to play their favorite game. Not everyone has the knowledge to do it nor do they particularly want that knowledge. They want things that work out of the box, they came here to ask about a windows specific annoyance, not what OS to switch to. Shut the fuck up about Linux for two seconds.

parsiuk ,

Clicking “Play” in Steam or Epic launcher is hacking the Pentagon for you?

ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling ,
@ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Devil’s Advocate: I have been unable to play the sims ever since EA moved it to the EA games launcher. Origin was poorly written, but the new launcher barely works on windows, let alone on Wine.

martinb ,

Check protondb. It sometimes has workarounds for launcher issues.

ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling ,
@ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Thanks, ill look into that

HardNut ,

There’s been multiple times that I had an issue with a game launcher on windows bugging out and not being able to play my game, but then seeing it work just fine under linux with proton. There’s still some issues the devs need to work out, but we’re getting to the point that linux is more reliable

ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling ,
@ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Honestly I do agree with Linux being more reliable overall. That being said, I do think the biggest benefit Linux has given me is reinforcing a habit of backing up all my stuff constantly, since I never know when I’m going to try something stupid on an impulse.

HardNut ,

Haha, true! I’ve learned the hard way to try the really whacky shit in a virtual machine first, they’re quite handy for that. After lots of trial and error though, and learning what will break things and what won’t, I’ve been on the same install for several years now actually. But yes, back ups are still smart lol

UID_Zero ,
@UID_Zero@infosec.pub avatar

I hear your annoyance, and I get it, because the “real” question is “How do I stop this from ever happening again on Windows?”

But the bottom line is, no matter what workaround or registry fix is found, nothing stops MS from making changes and popping this crap up yet again in some other obnoxious and shitty way.

If you run Windows, you have to accept some level of this bullshittery.

merthyr1831 ,

I’m right though.

No amount of registry editing and weird app installing will permanently remove the obnoxious ads from Windows. And Linux is the only OS that can feel like Windows. (Zorin, Mint, any old KDE distro etc)

And honestly? Linux isn’t that hard anymore. Like, installing stuff can be done through graphical app stores that are easier than using Windows. Gaming on Linux works out of the box and has done for 5 years now.

This post is more like an apple user asking why their phone screen can’t be replaced without buying a new device, or a ford f150 owner asking how to get more than 5mpg in fuel economy: you tell them to (consider) a different choice of product

Lauchs , to pics in The whole island of Sicily covered by wildfires tonight. It's a catastrophe. Here is a satellite image.

I was informed by conservative relatives that climate change was a Chinese hoax, which fair, that’s a pretty funny joke. But burning down Sicily seems like taking things a bit too far.

journey01 ,

Clearly it is a Sicilian hoax…

Chais ,
@Chais@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yup. This has to be the most elaborate hoax since the moon landing.

linearchaos ,
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

oh god, the false flag conspiracy theorists are going to have a field day.

ThePantser ,
@ThePantser@lemmy.world avatar

“Never go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line!”

Zehzin , to memes in agile is far left too. I will die on this hill
@Zehzin@lemmy.world avatar

Lemmy’s biggest mistake was not calling federations “communes” or “syndicates”

cr1cket ,

Well, who said the c in c/something is NOT commune? ;-)

merthyr1831 , to programmerhumor in Just getting into JS

The trick to writing a JavaScript web app is that first you consider literally any other technology to solve your problem and only then consider using javascript.

NuclearDolphin ,

The 15+ electron apps on my devices would like a word with you. I think I dislike JS more as a user than a dev because at least Typescript exists now.

MajorHavoc ,

Exactly.

I’ve followed that guidance faithfully, for decades, and…now I’m a JavaScript expert.

mypasswordis1234 , to technology in How do i stop this kind of pop up from ever appearing again? Win10
@mypasswordis1234@lemmy.world avatar

Step one – install Linux

Step two – install Firefox

Oh, I almost forgot that most Linux distos come with Firefox pre-installed!

Jahuffine ,

This is the way

cash ,
Shanedino ,

Think this should just become the default response to people circle jerking linux.

QuazarOmega ,

I wanted to agree, but then they just had to add a load of bullshit invalidating everything else.

You can’t tell me that Linux isn’t easy in this day when the biggest hurdle is just the installation; that Windows is well designed (better than Linux, which isn’t really an apples to apples comparison, there’s so many distros, many of which are surely better than it anyway) when it very clearly isn’t, not only by being hostile to the user, but the layers of paint they have to stack on top of each other every major release because, god forbid, their enterprise users are gonna freak out if you rewrite the core apps from scratch and give them a coherent experience. Microsoft is a monopoly and acts like it, if you have the occasion to move away from it, then it’s the best decision you can make.

All that said, telling people to move to Linux when they ask a specific OS related question is stupid and doesn’t help the person in need. Give them the answer they’re looking for and let them figure out for themselves if the whole OS they’re using is bad and if they should switch out.

Draedron ,

How about providing actual help instead of jerking of to your favourite OS?

rkk ,
@rkk@lemmy.world avatar

I think this is the biggest help they can get. We are selflessly sharing what is free and works the best for you. You have to admit that we have no bad intentions.

piranhaphish ,

I get that the comment is almost surely circlejerk, but it is also honestly the only real answer to OP’s question, isn’t it? To switch OS?

So it’s kind of hard to get mad at their comment when it’s the only viable option. Is your problem with Linux or is it the fact that it brings you anxiety to know MS is in control of you? What if we substitute another OS for “Linux”? Does that make you feel any better?

I’m honestly not trying to be a jerk; these are honest questions. That’s probably saying more than for OP, though; they, of course, knew the answer before they asked.

s_s ,

It’s not a jerk.

GNU/Linux literally gives you the ability to control your own operating system.

You can dose yourself in radiation until you’re puking all over the place or you can actually cut the cancer out.

There are plenty of questions that linux isn’t a great answer for, but for this question, it really is the solution.

roro ,

So a new OS is the answer for a pop up OP gets? I use Linux professionally and I can definitely tell you are deluded cuz Linux is pretty shit from a user perspective

rkk ,
@rkk@lemmy.world avatar

i am the user and it looks good to me. Clean the shit off your glasses/eyes.

s_s ,

Well, you want to stop one pop up and there’s likely a Windows-based solution.

But as long as you are still on windows, there will always be another popup. Begging you to try a new service or buy a new product. When someone asks “ever again” the only answer in Linux.

Microsoft has made it clear they don’t give a shit about home users.

Buddahriffic ,

Why are you expecting obscure Windows advice (MS obscures it because they want to continue nagging people to use their shit) from people who gave up entirely on Windows?

MS is nagging people to use products they don’t want to and now you’re nagging someone who doesn’t use Windows for advice that they likely don’t know and probably don’t really care to find out.

There’s probably a way to prevent this specific pop-up from appearing, but that solution may or may not apply to future pop-ups. The only way to guarantee windows will never nag you is to not use it. Even giving in will just prevent this particular nag.

MeatsOfRage , to gaming in Where's my current gen rocket jump?

I do miss the days when Epic would build bespoke games to show off their new engines. Now they just dump it all into Fortnite.

ininewcrow , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit
@ininewcrow@lemmy.ca avatar

I’m Canadian and we have a long heritage with English things … especially tea. But our brothers and sisters are American so we have a lot of overlap in our culture.

I grew up in northern Ontario in an indigenous community. Mom and dad were traditional people who were born and raised in the bush. They lived on your old English black tea. We treated it like a survival food and basically cooked it like it was coffee. All my life tea was made by boiling water in a large metal 4 litre tea pot and once there was a rolling boil, you dropped in eight tea bags and let it bubble for a minute until it all turned into a deep reddish liquid. The best tea was always in the first half an hour, after that it was like drinking a really strong coffee.

I drank that from the time I was a baby … really! I remember seeing mom fill a baby bottle with warm tea, canned milk and a bit of sugar and feed it to my baby brothers. I assume she did the same to me.

Once I started living away from home, I drank less tea and more coffee. But I always love my black tea.

Never order it in a restaurant in Canada. Half the time a cheap little restaurant will just use hot tap water and drop the shittiest tea bag thats been sitting on the shelf for years to make your brew.

The only public place to get good tea is at Tim Hortons, the Canadian coffee chain. They actually make the kind of tea I grew up with, really strong brewed tea that is kept fresh regularly. Their coffee is shit but their tea is excellent … at least to me.

Blackout ,
@Blackout@kbin.social avatar

Thanks for sharing your story. I bet that tea your parents made was also useful for a lot of things. Did they ever make you run on a treadmill afterwards to power a generator?

ininewcrow ,
@ininewcrow@lemmy.ca avatar

As a kid, me and every kid around me in the same situation probably drove our teachers insane … I feel terribly for them when I think about it now. But in the summer time when we were off school, I’d wake up drink a cup of tea, eat some toast and then spend the entire day outside, rain or shine. Starting when I was about seven or eight I’d spend the day on my own. We were surrounded by family so there was never a problem. I’d come home for more tea and supper was always at six, eat for ten minutes and head out again until the sun went down. We have freezing Arctic winters here between the great lakes and Hudson Bay but as a little kid, my parents thought it was normal to just give me a light parka and let me play outside with my friends for hours. I remember being about 11 or 12 and wandering away into the bush in minus 20 degree weather an hour from home with my friends just to say we could do it.

Always made our way back to the house for another cup of tea. That energy drink is basically what powered most of my life. I didn’t have a treadmill but I probably traveled thousands of kilometers because of this drink.

Tea … I’m probably 50% tea at this point in my life … I’ve been drinking it since the day I was born.

smeg ,

We’ve got a passport waiting for you at the border if you’re interested

thisbenzingring ,

Im not a black tea drinker, Liptons was black tea growing up in the US and I did not like it. It is fine for sun/ice tea but still not my thing. But I visited Ireland and was exposed to Berry’s and I have to say that stuff is fantastic! But 2 minutes seeping is all it needs or else it gets bitter.

I visited a Tim Horton’s for the first time recently. It was in downtown Victoria and I have to say that it was an experience… Not a good one but at least I can say I have done it.

WashedOver ,
@WashedOver@lemmy.ca avatar

I have to say Tim Hortons has slipped. I’ve been in better versions of Tim’s in New York state where they are a little more like a mini cafeteria than the high traffic flow models the Canadian ones have become. At some point McDonald’s Canada took over coffee supply from Tim’s. Not sure who they are but Tim’s new coffee is not my cup of tea

WashedOver ,
@WashedOver@lemmy.ca avatar

Similar fond memories of growing up straddling English and American traditions on the wet Westcoast with English and Swedish grandparents.

My grandfather always had coffee brewing on the wood cookstove in his cabin. It was a metal 2 piece drip system. Always adding more hot water to the top as the day progressed. Like your example the first cups are the strongest. They had those white rogers sugar cubes and canned condensed milk from Pacific as creamer. Us grandkids would be bouncing off the walls from the caffeine and massive amounts of sugar most of the day.

Then at night with dinner it was Orange Pekoe tea with milk to finish the day. I’m surprised we got any sleep to be honest looking back on it.

Now living close to the US border I sometimes forget when I’m south tea is not such a normal thing in a restaurant and I get odd looks from those when ordering it. Usually they are the kind of place that serves Coke with breakfast though so I’m already in the wrong place for tea as it is.

For me Tea is the only thing I get from Tim’s too in the way of a London Fog. When it comes to Coffee Canadian McDonalds is my way to go. US McDonald’s coffee is something else terribly not enjoyable.

fubo , to nostupidquestions in Are smart door locks more or less secure than traditional door locks?

Against what sort of attack? Who’s the attacker? What capabilities do they have? What do they want?


There’s a saying, “locks are to keep your friends out.” If someone really means you harm, a lock is not going to keep them out: they can smash a window, break down the door, or hit you with a rubber hose until you give them your keys or passwords. This applies no matter what kind of lock you have.

But a lock represents a social barrier: everyone knows that trying to defeat someone else’s lock is a hostile act. The law recognizes this in many places: breaking-and-entering is a more severe crime than trespassing.

A lock may slow down an attacker. It may redirect an attacker to go after your neighbor’s stuff instead of your stuff — but not if everyone has locks.


A password lock has some advantages over a key lock. You don’t have to issue physical keys to everyone you want to allow in. Many allow you to create and revoke passwords separately — so you can grant a friend access to your house while you’re away, and then revoke it when they no longer need it.

However, a password lock also has some disadvantages. If you give a password to one person, that person can easily give it to everyone. That’s a lot harder with a physical key, because they’d have to go make a lot of copies of that key — which, if nothing else, costs money and time.

A computerized lock can create an audit trail: it can record when it was opened, and even which credentials (passwords, keys, …) were used to unlock it.

Any lock can have vulnerabilities — most common key locks can be picked; computerized locks can be attacked through their computer hardware or software.

Late2TheParty ,
@Late2TheParty@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks for reminding me of this XKCD gem!

xkcd.com/538/

fubo ,

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber-hose_cryptanalysis

In cryptography, rubber-hose cryptanalysis is a euphemism for the extraction of cryptographic secrets (e.g. the password to an encrypted file) from a person by coercion or torture—such as beating that person with a rubber hose, hence the name—in contrast to a mathematical or technical cryptanalytic attack.

gregorum ,

There’s also just the social engineering side of it. I guessed my father’s door code just because I know his birthdate.

HidingCat ,

Beat me to it! Locks are just but one part of securing your home.

cloudless OP ,
@cloudless@feddit.uk avatar

It is for a house in a residential area, and I don’t keep a lot of valuables in the house. I wish I knew who the attacker would be, so I can catch them with pre-crime.

fubo ,

If you’re concerned about burglars, one problem is that if they decide to hit your house, they can just break a window.

Where I live, burglars often hit cars rather than houses; and they’re very willing to break windows to get in, especially if they see something valuable in the car. They spend no time trying to defeat the locks — hell, some don’t even check if the car is locked. They’re pros; they’ve practiced smashing a window and looting the car quickly.

A lot of the loss due to burglary is the damage the burglar does on the way in, rather than the value of the things stolen. And upgrading locks does nothing to reduce this.

Maybe instead of upgrading your locks, you might be better off spending the same amount of money upgrading your insurance?

SlightlyMad ,

Are you an insurance salesman? Because this script probably would have worked on me!

fubo ,

Here’s a sillier economic take on it:

Locks should be difficult enough to break that if you can develop the skills to break them, you’re smart enough to get a real job and not be a burglar.

bluGill ,

Cars have historically been broken into and stolen a lot. Thus auto makers have put extra effort into good locks. Some hardware store deadbolts are so bad you anyone can pick them with lock picks - no instructions needed. Only the best deadbolts are equal what a car has. Likewise breaking a car window is typically harder than breaking a house window.

MelodiousFunk ,
@MelodiousFunk@kbin.social avatar

Likewise breaking a car window is typically harder than breaking a house window.

All it takes to break a car window is a single tap. There's specific tools available, or someone can just use a shard of ceramic. Shatters completely and instantly.

bluGill ,

Right, if you have that tool. If you don't have that tool though a rock you find won't work unlike many house windows.

MelodiousFunk ,
@MelodiousFunk@kbin.social avatar

$10 on Amazon. Or just a piece of broken spark plug. Anyone who seriously wants to break a car window will have something handy.

Or maybe thieves are just walking down the street and see a fancy bag on a seat and a rock and just decide to do the deed on a whim and get foiled by tempered glass. ¯_(ツ)_/¯

bluGill ,

Shhh, most thieves don't know that and are taking cheap opportunity.

dogslayeggs ,

I love my August smart lock. It auto-unlocks my door when I get home, so I never need keys or to reach for my phone. It also has a key pad to unlock if I dont have my phone. It has alerts and reports status on an app. I can unlock or lock the door remotely for people to check in on things for me while Im away.

Yes, it has issues and eats batteries, but its so convenient.

agent_flounder ,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.one avatar

If you’re not in infosec you should be. (Source: am in infosec)

fubo ,

Oh, I did that for a while. 2001 was a mess of a year … right after the planes started flying again after 9/11, the Nimda worm came out.

agent_flounder ,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.one avatar

Yeah that was a rough time indeed. I recall getting hit with a couple of those big worms back to back.

fubo ,

2002 was a blur, and then in 2003 came SQL Slammer.

SamboT , to technology in How do i stop this kind of pop up from ever appearing again? Win10

Don’t use chrome

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