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kbin.life

JustinFTL , to android in What free apps and games are good to put on an android phone?
@JustinFTL@kbin.social avatar

@QuietStorm not sure if you're into FPS games, but I've sunken obscene amounts of time into Call of Duty Mobile and haven't paid a dime. It's free to play, but they advertise micro transactions to you, which are easily ignored. And I've played it no problem on a $50 Moto e6.

tom , to maliciouscompliance in Dispose of financial records? You got it, boss.

So I once made the mistake permitting a client to store some (say a dozen) boxes of financial records in my home for a couple of weeks. By ‘permit’, I mean they just dumped them there, and I didn’t physically restrain them from leaving.

You chose… poorly.

Saigonauticon OP ,

Haha…yeah. I’m an academic at heart and my first few years at running a business were a complete disaster. I’ve since graduated into being a mediocre businessperson, which is probably about as far as I intend to get.

tom ,

that sounds like you made it. one day you’ll be a good businessperson!

Saigonauticon OP ,

Maybe someday, but it’s exhausting. I would probably be much happier if I just closed shop and went to do a PhD. I might even be able to afford to, in a couple of years.

Then maybe teach engineering in some unknown university in the countryside. Or run a machine shop that helps artists make things. Or just build alarmingly large robots for no reason at all.

weirdwallace75 , to explainlikeimfive in ELI5: The standard model of quantum physics

The particles are fairly easy:

There’s two basic categories of fundamental particle, fermions and bosons, based on what kind of spin they have. Spin in quantum mechanics is a fundamental property; there’s no way to stop an electron (for example) from spinning or to give it more spin. Fermions have half-odd-integer spin and so obey Fermi-Dirac statistics, which means there can’t be more than one of them in a given quantum state. Bosons have integer spin and so obey Bose-Einstein statistics, which means they can bunch up in quantum states. This leads to electrons, which are fermions, separating themselves into separate electron shells, which results in the solid matter we know and love, and bosonic atoms like rubidium being able to form a Bose-Einstein condensate, which has a lot of interesting properties.

Fermions are divided into quarks and leptons, where quarks are fermions that do participate in the strong interaction and leptons are fermions which do not. There’s three generations of each; the quark generations go up and down, strange and charm, and top and bottom, with each generation more massive, and therefore more short-lived, than the previous. All matter you’ve ever directly experienced is made of up and down quarks, which combine to form protons and neutrons in atomic nuclei, using gluons to mediate the strong force. Leptons may be charged or uncharged, by which I mean electrical charge, and also come in three generations named after the charged “electron-like” lepton of that generation, those being electrons, muons, and tauons. Each of those charged leptons has a charge of -1, and, again, each generation is more massive and shorter-lived than the previous. The neutral leptons are the neutrinos, which only participate in the weak interaction and gravity and, therefore, barely interact with other matter at all. Huge volumes of neutrinos from the Sun ghost right through Earth completely unchanged, night and day. Yes, we have solar neutrinos shining up through the ground on us at night. The neutrinos, while they do come in three generations (electron neutrinos, muon neutrinos, and tau neutrinos), have a very poorly-understood mass; while it cannot be zero, we don’t know what it is, only that it’s very small, and beneath some threshold value which gets revised downwards every so often.

Bosons are force carriers, and divided into two categories based on mathematical properties beyond even this post. The gauge bosons, all with spin 1, are the photon, which carries the electromagnetic force, the W and Z bosons, which carry the weak force, and eight gluons, which carry the strong force. The only scalar boson, with spin 0, is the Higgs boson, which is one of the things that helps give matter mass.

Particles have antiparticles, which have equal and opposite charges (electromagnetic, weak, and so on) to their opposite number. For example, the electron’s antiparticle, called the positron, has an electromagnetic charge of +1. Even neutrinos have antiparticles, which helps balance the books as regards something called lepton number. However, some truly neutral particles, such as the photon, the Z boson, and the Higgs boson, are their own antiparticles.

BackOnMyBS OP ,
@BackOnMyBS@lemmy.world avatar

thank you very much!! I’ll think about it and ask follow up questions in the morning 🙂

weirdwallace75 ,

I’m sure you will have questions. Physicists still have questions. ☺ For example, we don’t know why there are three generations of quarks and leptons. Even my very, very brief overview can lead directly into mysteries of the universe.

ABearAttack , to futurama in Favorite Futurama cameos?

I’d say Nixon but I feel like that’s cheating?

I would say the Beastie Boys.

TurretCorruption ,

Well considering nixon is voiced by billy west, id say thats cheating. Dude voices almost everybody.

ickplant , to futurama in Futurama Sleepers
@ickplant@lemmy.world avatar

We watch it before bed either to help us fall asleep or to drown out any sex noises. It’s conditioned me to either get sleepy or horny when I hear the theme music.

FrancesTheMute OP ,

Umm, I didn’t want to say anything about this part of my relationship to Futurama in my first post on Lemmy, but I will confess this is something we do as well. And we suffer the same conditioning haha!

ickplant ,
@ickplant@lemmy.world avatar

I wonder how many of us are out there…

FrancesTheMute OP ,

I am to. We definitely thought we were alone in this one and kept this one to ourselves haha. Means there are likely many others!

ickplant ,
@ickplant@lemmy.world avatar

There are dozens of us. Dozens!

Trusting , to patientgamers in What games were so good you completed them in one sitting?

Spec Ops: The Line. I started playing it in the morning, the story kept me engaged (and the gameplay was fun enough). I played it all day to its conclusion.

Vordus ,

Ironic!

Trusting ,

Why?

Vordus ,

Because it’s a game that’s constantly telling the player that they should stop playing it. That everything is going to get worse if you do and it’s all your fault. That you’re going to cross the line again and again and again until every single person in the game is doomed. And then we play through the entire thing anyway, because it’s so fucking good.

Bojimbo , to nostupidquestions in If someone with an innie belly button were to put a toilet plunger over it and pull, how much force would they need to turn their innie into an outie?

Some pregnant women get outies in their second or third trimester, so there must be an amount of force that would do the same.

PutangInaMo ,

So push out from the inside. Got it.

h34d , to youshouldknow in YSK it's either "should have" or "should've". "Should of" is incorrect

While it is true that “should of” etc. can easily originate from a confusion between “‘ve’” and unstressed “of”, which sound identical, the statement

“Should of” is incorrect

itself is at least a bit misleading and prescriptivist in its generality.

Interestingly, there seem to be at least some native English speakers who genuinely do say “should of” (with a stressed “of”) sometimes. This paper for example argues that people who say “should of” really do use a grammatical construction of the form modal verb + of + past participle. One argument the author mentions is that this would also explain the words “woulda”, “coulda” and “shoulda”, since “of”->“a” is quite common in general (e.g. “kind of” -> “kinda”), but “'ve”->“a” basically doesn’t occur elsewhere (e.g. no one says “I’a” or “you’a” instead of “I’ve” or “you’ve”). Another is that the reverse mistake, i.e. using “‘ve’” in place of “of” (e.g. “kind’ve”), is much rarer, which is a clear difference to e.g. the situation with “they’re”/“their”/“there”, where people use these words in place of the others in all combinations frequently. I recommend this blog article for a much longer discussion.

Also, whether genuine mistake (which it almost certainly is in many cases, although probably not all) or different grammatical construction, YSK that “should of” etc. didn’t just become popular recently, but have been used for centuries. E.g. John Keats wrote in a letter in 1814: “Had I known of your illness I should not of written in such fiery phrase in my first Letter.”. Many more examples (some older as well) can be found e.g. here or here.

TL;DR: While in many cases “should of” etc. can well be a mistake, originating from the fact that it sounds identical to “should’ve” when unstressed, there is some interesting linguistic evidence that at least in some dialects of English native speakers really do say “should of” etc. (i.e. in those cases it is not a mistake, merely non-standard/dialectal).

ronaldtemp1 OP ,

Isn’t “have” either an auxiliary verb or verb and “of” a preposition?

Are these acceptable? If yes, why? If not, why not?

  • I of heard that story before.
  • Diane of already gone.
  • John ofn’t phoned, of he?
  • I ofn’t visited London before.
  • Of you seen Roz?
  • Of she been invited?
  • They still ofn’t of any news when I spoke to them yesterday.

I don’t know man, Oxford Dictionary (click Grammar Point to expand) says that www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/…/have_2

A common mistake is to write ‘could of’ instead of could have or could’ve

I could of told you that.

I could’ve told you that.

The reason for the mistake is that the pronunciation of ’ve is the same as that of of when it is not stressed. This is a common error but it is definitely considered wrong in standard English.

corsicanguppy ,

I don’t know man, Oxford Dictionary …

Tells us what’s popular; sometimes also what happens to be correct.

FreedomOfExpression ,

“Should of” is grammatically incorrect, regardless of whether the user/speaker is aware of its incorrectness. It’s a fact, and a fact per se cannot be misleading. It’s as simple as that. Linguistic conventions, as you’ve illustrated, can be formed over time, but that again doesn’t take away from the fact that such usage is grammatically incorrect to begin with.

h34d ,

Just read the second (or the first, but that is more technical) link I shared. Some native speakers do in fact seem to say “should of” even when the “of” is stressed, so in their dialect it would be grammatical.

juusukun ,

…the reason “in some dialects of English native speakers really do say ‘should of’ etc” is phonetics. Kids hear “should’ve” and repeat it phonetically, before learning the actual words or their meaning. Combine that with the awful state of education and literacy in the USA (and other countries etc) and voila, you’ve got some armchair internet expert justifying it with some big words trying a weeeee bit too hard to make it work.

Then you’ve got teachers who still gaf and know their shit who will correct this before middle/high school, and no, last I checked it was never added to the dictionary or considered correct. Language of course is living and ever changing, but the line must be drawn somewhere lest we devolve into shouting and grunts like neanderthals

corsicanguppy ,

Kids hear “should’ve” and repeat it phonetically,

This is the failure of “no child left behind”; it seems that’s all it did !

Dougas , to youshouldknow in YSK that kbin.social is now federating, adding hundreds of communities and ~26k more users content

This is great but I am still unable to search for communities in kbin. At least I tried !politics and !opensource a few time the last few minutes but still no result.

pruwybn ,
@pruwybn@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I haven’t been able to join Kbin magazines by searching in the !magazine format, but when I just paste the URL from Kbin into the search I’ve been able to add them that way.

fubo , to nostupidquestions in Why do people prefer cars over public transport?

We can’t sensibly talk about people’s preferences without talking about the environment in which those preferences arise.

Here are some things that are true for most car drivers:

  • The road starts right at your house. You don’t have to go anywhere to get on it.
  • Your car is right at your house whenever you want to use it. You never have to wait for it.
  • Public transit requires that you pay up-front; the costs of using your car only bother you occasionally (e.g. fueling, maintenance, taxes that pay for roads).
  • Businesses you want to visit are often required by law to provide parking for cars as part of commercial zoning.
  • Cars are the dominant vehicle on the road; other vehicles such as bicycles, motorcycles, and scooters are in many ways treated as second-class citizens.
  • Your employer didn’t choose to locate close to transit, but they did build a parking lot.
Puddy , to selfhost in [Help] Any advice on buying a domain name?

Thx for mentioning infomaniak, I’m looking for alternatives to Mailbox.org as they had to increase their prices. I’ve tried self hosting but somehow it always has been a hassle, might be just me though. Also mailinabox wasn’t around back then. I’ve got my domain at namecheap, they’ve got all the tools and a super cheap whoisguard service. Prices depend on the tld you’re looking for, so you’ll have to look it up.

DidacticDumbass OP ,

Hm, I could have looked at namecheap too. I ended up going with Porkbun because of well… it is cute and lovely. Not a great reason to choose a service, but it came highly recommended.

NevermindNoMind , to cooking in What is your favorite meal using rice?

Butter. I use rice as a way to transport butter into my mouth.

PoodleDoodle OP ,
@PoodleDoodle@lemmy.world avatar

Amazing. My toddler does think that butter is its own food group so would probably work. 🤣

j_erasmo , to linux_gaming in Gamepass with Proton?

It is currently not possible. Games installed through GamePass have some kind of Windows compatibility layer which cannot be run by any wine or proton versions. At least not yet.

Protegee9850 OP ,

Dang. Thanks! I’m assuming for eg Steamdeck folks are installing windows for game pass?

j_erasmo ,

Yep, for steamdeck your options are to install windows or to stream. Greenlight is a good linux application that handles the streaming better than the website imo. It can also do remote play if you have an Xbox, which generally has much lower input latency.

savoy , to selfhosted in Does Anyone Host a Discord Alternative? Like a Matrix/Synapse Server?
@savoy@lemmygrad.ml avatar

For Matrix, I’d recommend https://gitlab.com/famedly/conduit over synapse, with the expectation that all of synapse’s features haven’t yet been added (most notably support for spaces, which may or may not be a dealbreaker).

It’s incredibly easy to set-up and very lightweight. I never self-hosted synapse due to how resource-heavy it is, and constantly had issues with dendrite racking up resources as well.conduit has honestly been the easiest thing I’ve self-hosted.

DaGeek247 ,
@DaGeek247@kbin.social avatar

What front-end are you running with conduit? I just spent two hours trying to get element to talk to it but i've put it off due to so much failure with it.

ultimatespleen , to android in How to make android more Private?

I’m curious what you don’t like about iOS. I started out on Android, switched to iOS and never looked back. I realized I was doing most customization in Android to feel like iOS lol. the privacy upgrade is priceless imo.

_MoveSwiftly ,

iOS is not private, it’s secure.

Private: Only you can see it, the servicing company does not. In the case, Apple not only sees your data but sells it too.

Secure: The data is protected from unwanted access by 3rd party vendors.

These are rough definitions though.

gimlithepirate OP ,

Yeah, this is what concerns me.

Stock Android is neither. So for the average user, Apple iOS is probably better.

I’m on lemmy so I’m probably not the average user lol.

gimlithepirate OP ,

Pure personal preference. I’ve traditionally gone back and forth almost every time I get a new phone. It’s really only in the last 2-3 years I’ve hit the point I significantly prefer android.

For me, some of the interface choices on iOS are no Bueno. Additionally, the lack of a button, or simulated button is not something I’m fond of.

I’m also not convinced they are more private. I think Apple’s incentives line up more with mine than Google’s, but only barely. Independent researchers are pretty mixed on whether Apple is actually blocking all apps, or just making it so Apple is the only one who can profit off of people’s data.

The only reason I think they are probably more private is the giant hissy fit Facebook threw over their settings.

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