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ULTIMATEDEAD , to asklemmy in Do you believe conscription is okay? Why or Why Not?

No, because in all times the elites don’t have to fight, while the plebs must die for [insert abstract concept].

vegai , (edited )

In Finland, (male) children of the elite serve in the conacription army just like everyone else. But of course if that doesn’t apply, it’s not great.

Stovetop ,

Do they really, though?

On paper conscription is fair to all, but in practice you end up with scenarios like “I have dual citizenship and opt to live abroad” or “My family doctor has declared me unfit to serve because we bribed them to say so of my medical history which I can provide records for” or “Yes I am planning to attend university for the next 10 years, so I am eligible for deferment until I graduate.”

I don’t know what the policy is like in Finland, but if a loophole exists, the rich have the means to find it.

And even when some rich kid does end up getting drafted, it always ends up being that strings get pulled and they land a really cushy deployment like being a logistics officer somewhere nice and safe, or a secretary for leadership. Never seeing active combat.

vegai , (edited )

I haven’t heard of any such exemptions, but I guess it will be really tested only if we have to go to war. It has been almost 80 years since the last time.

Especially_the_lies ,

I think it’s interesting that Prince Harry was allowed to serve on the front lines in Afghanistan. Granted, he was a volunteer and not a conscript, but the fact that the queen even allowed it was surprising. When I heard he was joining up, I expected that he would be in some cushy back office, away from the fighting.

original_ish_name ,

The queen fought in ww2

rich , to asklemmy in Which proprietary software do you prefer over their open-source alternatives, and why?

Microsoft Excel

Smallletter ,

Hah, with no attempt to explain because it’s very self explanatory.

rich ,

Ha yeah but to explain, without my excel vba scripts the place I work at would fall apart. Too many systems with varying formats from our clients and excel is the middleman, for better or worse. Nothing else does the job, only excel.

finestnothing ,

Libre calc is a great replacement imo. It has support for excel vba macros, but you can also make macros in Python, JavaScript, and their own macro language. For the most part it’s cross compatible with excel, but doesn’t support their xlsm file type as far as I know.

rich ,

I mean, I tried.

Problem is, I have only limited power in an enterprise led decision. I argued to have Notepad++ enabled on my login for my purposes and they accepted it - but excel is so engrained in everyone’s offices I simply cannot change.

Excel just works…there’s no fuss or stress or drama with admins. It just fucking works. I’m getting too old for hassle, so office it is.

CafecitoHippo ,

It’s fine if you never leave Calc. If you’re trying to use Calc at home and Excel at work, it’s absolutely awful. Key bindings aren’t the same. Basic things like auto completing formulas is different. It’s terrible to flip between the two.

snowe ,
@snowe@programming.dev avatar

That’s what I came here to post. People always think that other software are actual options. If you are using drools rules then other software can’t even follow the xlsx standard properly enough to even allow drools to compile correctly. It sucks because I’d rather not have to get licenses for my whole team to use excel when there’s plenty of free options and we don’t even use it that much, but it’s just so far into another league it isn’t even close.

odbol ,

What are drools rules? All the pages I’m reading are very high level “bueiness rules” what does that even mean?

snowe ,
@snowe@programming.dev avatar

oh sorry, forgot I wasn’t on a programming community. It’s a software for writing rules for business operation. Not relevant to the majority of people on the planet.

5ublimation ,
@5ublimation@hexbear.net avatar

Weren’t the MSFT X standards intentionally poorly defined with the goal of smothering OpenDocument in the crib?

snowe ,
@snowe@programming.dev avatar

I mean, maybe, but that doesn’t really change anything. Excel is better for a lot of use cases and whether that’s due to terrible antitrust violations or not doesn’t really change the fact of the matter. I honestly would love to use Libre or Open office, and it’s literally the first thing I tried, it just doesn’t work for most of the things I would need it for.

Pantherina ,

Why excel? For most things I wouldnt say Libreoffice is worse. Impress though is something to learn.

But now I can use Impress and Writer, Calc too but the graphs are shit. Thats fair to say, graphs in Calc are horrible. The rest should be pretty much the same… I guess, havent used Excel in years

guylacaptivite , to asklemmy in What is an extremely dangerous thing that we use daily?
@guylacaptivite@sh.itjust.works avatar

Your car. Just think about the forces and mechanisms invovled for this to happen. Every single day we travel at 100km/h in our 2ton at least metal box surrounded by hundreds of other people in their equally large and heavy and fast machines in a space barely wide enough to react in case of an emergency(not even considering if most are actually ready to act in such a case. All of this with realistically little training. Not to mention most people don’t really pay attention while driving and certainly don’t consider the life of others while doing so. It’s so impersonal and dangerous. If it was a never heard of concept, individual cars driven by any normal person would be considered laughably stupid at the very best.

Karcinogen , to selfhosted in What types of services are you not willing to self-host?

Password manager like Bitwarden. I’d rather they take care of it for me. The consequences would be too great if I messed it up.

AES , (edited )

Bwoa, you can easily take json backups. It is pretty safe imo.

apprehensively_human ,

Smart move, unless you really know what you’re doing and have redundancy. When I first made the switch from Lastpass to Bitwarden I had tried to host the vault myself instead of using the cloud version, which worked fine right up until the moment I had a server outage and lost access to all my passwords.

bdonvr ,

Eh, the clients all cache your vault. It shouldn’t be a huge issue for it to be down even for a few days.

But I do upload encrypted backups of the server every 6 hours to cloud storage

Engywuck , (edited )

Same.

Plus, my instance is proxies through Clouflare and only IPs from my country are allowed.

somedaysoon ,
@somedaysoon@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve managed to keep my KeePass database for almost 20 years going back as far as when I was a dumb teenager. Back then it was as simple as having a couple extra copies on usb drives and Google Drive, but now I keep proper backups.

My take is, I’d rather control it myself, I am responsible enough to take care of my data, and I actually wouldn’t trust someone else to do it. That’s a huge reason I selfhost in the first place, a lack of trust in others’ services. Also, online services are a bigger target because of the number of customers, and maybe even the importance of some of their customers, whereas I’m not a target at all. No one is going to go after me specifically.

SocialDoki ,

I think that’s what’s kept me at KeePass rather than moving to something like Bitwarden. Since it’s file-level encryption, anything that can serve files can also serve my KeePass database. When I upgrade servers or change to different services, restoring my database is as simple as throwing the file into that new service and going on with my life.

somedaysoon ,
@somedaysoon@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, my recommendation is basically this:

Do you need to share passwords?

No - use KeePass

Yes - use Bitwarden

ChrislyBear ,

Oh man, that’s actually really good advice! I recently switched to Vaultwarden, but you’re right: If my server goes down, I can’t even restart it, because the password for my account is in there! Damn! Close call!

Limit ,

Well with bitwarden/vaultwarden you can have a copy of your entire vault on your phone or computer or both… so even if your server was totally dead, you’d have access to your passwords. Solid backups is a must, I follow the 3-2-1 rule on super critical systems (like vaultwarden) and test that you can actually recover. Something as simple as spinning up a VPS, testing a restore, testing access, see if that could work in a pinch until you get your server back online, then tear it down. Linode is very cheap for this kind of testing, it’d only cost you a few pennies to run a “dr” test of your critical systems. Of course you still want to secure it, I’d recommend wireguard or tailscale instead of opening access to your DR node to the internet, but as a temporary test it’s probably fine if your running patched up to date versions of docker, vaultwarden, and I’d always recommend putting a reverse proxy in front like nginx.

newIdentity ,

Usually the password are also stored locally.

I can definitely access all my passwords offline with bitwarden

zephr_c , to linux in Why is openSUSE so... weird?

Most modern distros are either new distro trying to have more modern sensibilities, distros based off of Debian, Arch, or Fedora, or occasionally original things that are okay with being superficially similar to one of those while doing things differently at lower levels. OpenSUSE is one of the few remaining distros from the olden days that has been independent and doing their own thing for decades without spawning a bunch of forks or dying off. If you want to try something even older and crazier Slackware is sure an experience.

BrooklynMan ,
@BrooklynMan@lemmy.ml avatar

you may not know this, but suse was originally based off of slackware way, way, waaaaay back in the day before changing over to a jurix base.

gh0stcassette ,
@gh0stcassette@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Slackware’s package manager doesn’t even do dependency resolution. I respect the fact that it’s managed to keep existing this long and that so much of what it did inspired other distros, but I honestly have no idea why anyone would use it in 2023. Imo dependency resolution is the main reason to even have a package manager, without that I might as well install everything by cloning random git repos. If you want packages compiled from source, why not just use Gentoo (or Source Mage? Idk much about it, but I read through their website and it seems neat).

That being said, if anyone uses Slackware, I’d love to know why. It’s survived this long, surely it must be doing something right.

HakFoo ,

It’s completely surprise free. You’re not going to wake up tomorrow and find it’s dumped Systemd and Wayland on your front porch like some unsokicited car wreck.

xp19375 ,

I use Slackware because, in my opinion, it is simple, easy to understand, doesn’t get in your way, and strikes a good balance between being up to date, stable, and bug free. I also have it set up how I like it and don’t feel like installing something else. Honestly, the lack of dependency resolution has really not been a problem. By default, Slackware comes with a lot of libraries, and sbopkg (which builds SlackBuilds from slackbuilds.org) can do dependency resolution, as can some third party package managers. And with appimages and flatpacks, this is less and less of a problem.

That said, I use Manjaro on my Pinebook and am perfectly happy with it, and I’ve used Debian in the past too.

<rant> I use RHEL at work and it’s not bad, but I don’t really care for it. It feels overly complicated in terms of configuration and daemons running, and I don’t know systemd that well. Although I think this is mostly the fault of our satellite server, “dnf update” breaks on me at least once a month. Also, some packages are just plain archaic, and didn’t even update from RHEL 7 to 8. And I can’t seem to wrap my head around source rpms or how to make rpms. Slackware and Manjaro use straightforward build scripts. </rant>

pensivepangolin ,

Off topic, but how do you like the pine book? I have been on the fence for a while now!

xp19375 ,

Overall, pretty good considering it’s low price. It is a bit quirky, kind of like running Linux on a laptop 15+ years ago. Hardware support is somewhat lacking because it’s all pretty new. That said, the default Manjaro that ships with it works pretty well out of the box. It struggles a bit with video conferencing, in my case, roll20. It can play Minetest and Supertuxkart on minimum settings.

afb ,

The Slackware community has produced about 8 package manager front-ends that handle dependency resolution, so it’s not an issue at all and hasn’t been for over a decade. The big thing with Slackware is an emphasis on simplicity of design over ease of use and an expectation that the user will make all the decisions regarding how their system is maintained. I love it, use it on my main machine (Void on my laptop, Ubuntu on my server). It’s taught me a lot about operating systems in general and Linux in particular, and it lets me do whatever I like. I use sbotools and flatpak for my 3rd party software, the former being a ports-like interface to slackbuilds.org (like the AUR for Slackware, but far smaller and with a lot more quality control). Works great, no surprises, boots fast, rock solid and dependable.

FinalFallacy ,
@FinalFallacy@kbin.social avatar

I use it because 22 years ago it was more appealing than redhat or Mandrake. It forced me to learn more about Linux because I had to resolve almost everything myself than any other distro. I was using before it had a package manager and honestly after the dependency hell of rpms in 2000s it just seemed more problematic to use one that resolved dependencies than not. Usually I used to and sometimes still use it for a nice base to compile everything on. I dunno. It's my Linux equivalent to my first car that I loved.

thinkfan ,

It’s a wonderful distro that will teach you a lot about how Linux works. It’s weird, and beautiful and you might brick your system or an essential component (why the heck would I need groff?), but you’ll come out the other side knowing more and appreciating how things work and how easy they’ve become.

NevermindNoMind , to mildlyinfuriating in Amazon Prime Day lowest price great deal!! unless you count last week...or even yesterday...argh...

Ah there was a time when Prime Day was kind of fun, a Christmas in July kind of feeling. But now Amazon is just so loaded with knock off junk that doesn’t work, spam postings, review manipulation, etc I absolutely dread shopping on Amazon for anything other than something I need right away, can’t get in a local store, and don’t care if it breaks in 2 months. I’ve never given less of a shit about Prime Day than I do today, and that’s even without factoring in the price manipulation noted by OP.

ComradeBunnie ,
@ComradeBunnie@aussie.zone avatar

They need a “don’t show crappy Chinese junk” filter - I love shopping, but it’s impossible to browse for anything worthwhile, and incredibly boring.

guy_threepwood ,

I’m not sure there’s be much left if you switched that on!

silverson ,

There is a Tampermonkey script to highlight Chinese sellers: greasyfork.org/…/402064-soldby-reveal-sellers-on-…

10111011110101 ,

Thank you! And I seriously cannot believe how many sellers are Chinese. This is just crazy.

mershed_perderders ,

I can’t believe you don’t need anything from WEWEQ or GOVEEUOO or QUOPEO. These are household brand names!

TrenchcoatFullofBats ,

Don’t forget good old Pukemark, the brand Grandma trusts!

dan ,
@dan@upvote.au avatar

There’s a reason behind the weird brand names. The seller has to have a trademark on their brand name in order to participate in several Amazon programs, such as their predictive analytics. The easiest way to guarantee your trademark application succeeds is by ensuring it can’t possibly conflict with any existing trademark, and the easiest way of doing that is by generating a random string that’s (somewhat) pronounceable.

PutangInaMo ,

Wait until the trademark names are GUIDs lol

PutangInaMo ,

Lmao I told my wife recently the company names that dominate search results look like somebody just wiped their hands across a keyboard and said yep that’s the name alright.

gravitas_deficiency ,

Service/platform enshitification is extremely frustrating. Incidentally, it seems to have a very direct correlation with the greed and sociopathy of the CEO/owner.

db2 , to linux in Anyone else starting to favor Flatpak over native packages?

I don’t like flatpak or snap or any of them. System libraries exist for good reason, just because your computer is stupid fast and you have enough disk for the library of Congress a couple times over doesn’t mean you should run a veritable copy of your whole operating system for each program. IMO it’s lazy.

Sandboxing is a different thing though, if that’s the purpose then it’s doing it right.

ebits21 ,
@ebits21@lemmy.ca avatar

I have a ton of flatpaks which means packages are shared between them, so no it’s not lazy or a copy of the whole system. It makes a ton of sense for stability.

Updates are diff’s so downloading and updating is fast. Not entire packages.

Making every package work with only a certain version of a dependency and hoping it is stable doesn’t make a lot of sense.

db2 ,

You know you can have many versions of a library on your system at once, right?

ebits21 ,
@ebits21@lemmy.ca avatar

As long as they don’t cause conflicts. You know dependency hell is a thing right? The reason flatpaks were thought up in the first place? Right?

stevecrox ,
@stevecrox@kbin.social avatar

Nice out of date dependencies with those lovely security vulnerabilities!

ebits21 ,
@ebits21@lemmy.ca avatar

Touché

Developers shouldn’t be out of date, but yes.

GregoryTheGreat ,

That got so spicy so fast.

azvasKvklenko ,

Besides that it’s only partially true (unless we speak Nix systems) That’s also not the point of it. It’s more about having runtime environment that an app was built against and tested with.

stevecrox ,
@stevecrox@kbin.social avatar

You've just moved the packaging problem from distributions to app developers.

The reason you have issues is historically app developers weren't interested in packaging their application so distributions would figure it out.

If app developers want to package deb, rpm, etc.. packages it would also solve the problem.

ebits21 ,
@ebits21@lemmy.ca avatar

Sure. Except you gain universal compatibility for all distros that have flatpak and aren’t building all the different package formats. Makes it much more attractive for actual developers to package since it’s only done once.

There’s no right answer here, but there are definite benefits.

I’ve had many little issues since I moved to Linux years ago, most of which would never have been an issue if flatpaks were there at the time. My experience has been better with them.

manpacket ,

Makes it much more attractive for actual developers to package since it’s only done once.

I maintain a few apps that are included into some distributions with no participation from my side apart from tagging what I consider releases in my git repo. How is doing something only once is more attractive as not doing it at all?

true_blue , (edited )
@true_blue@lemmy.comfysnug.space avatar

Because you can make sure it was done right. You don’t have to worry about bugs or other issues being the result of faulty packaging if you’re the one doing the packaging. Plus It makes reproducing bugs easier when everyone’s using the same package, and declaring the flatpak as the official package makes it much more likely that people will use the flatpak.

zephyr ,

Yeah, that’s why Arch is almost the only distro that keeps everything installed natively. All other distros either have a troublesome workaround or only support flatpaks.

Rolling release just keeps everyone on the same pace. Yes, they break sometimes, but on the long run it just works.

onTerryO ,
@onTerryO@lemmy.ca avatar

As a long time Arch user, it’s not perfect, but it is perfect for me.

Tippon ,

I like them for the opposite reason. I’m still quite new to Linux, so I’m figuring out which software is best for me. I set up my server with Xubuntu and installed everything through Apt. I uninstalled a lot of software, but inevitably missed some things like libraries and config files.

Using Flatpak seems to keep track of everything, so uninstalling gets rid of everything that I would otherwise miss.

If it’s doing what it says on the tin, Flatpak is making my life much easier :)

DidacticDumbass OP ,

Trying to purge orphan dependencies is absolutely annoying. Talk about wasting space!

DidacticDumbass OP ,

I see your point, and I agree. No need to spend resources just because we have them.

Sandboxing is definitely a benefit, but alas as I am learning I have no control of it’s permissions, so that can potentially go wrong.

arirr ,

You can manage Flatpak permissions with Flatseal.

DidacticDumbass OP ,

Great! I knew it was possible. That is one less argument against it.

greybeard ,

Flatseal is super easy for anyone with a tech background to use. You can very quickly expand or reduce the access an app has to your system. Even below what the app comes with by default.

I do kinda wish the guis for installing flatpak apps were more forthcoming with the permissions, and possibly integrated some of the features of flatseal so you could modify the permission set before installing.

DidacticDumbass OP ,

It does seem pretty intuitive.

Honestly I just sometimes want the app to see a file outside of Downloads.

Lazylazycat , to showerthoughts in Modern life is so tied with smartphones living without it is increasingly becoming harder
@Lazylazycat@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, I love my phone and the whole world it opens up, having access to so much information in my pocket. But I also hate how tied we are to them now. I bought tickets for a gig recently and the only way I can access them is by downloading an app (that I’m only going to use for this one gig). What if I didn’t have a smartphone? What if I didn’t want to take a smartphone to a gig? You aren’t allowed to go to this gig without one, and it’s a small thing, but I don’t like how the option is out of your hands.

Pretty much every supermarket in the UK now requires you to download an app so you can access their offers. I hate this so much.

amanneedsamaid ,

The most ridiculous part are services insisting you install an app when everything their app does could be in a progressive web app. PWAs are less work to develop as they can run on any device with a browser. For fast food and clothing brands especially, I think PWAs are a no brainer. (Unless you want to track your customers coughTimHortonscough)

HikingVet ,

Decathlon you need a smartphone for their loyalty card. Only upside is you don’t have to get receipts for their 1 year return policy.

dustojnikhummer ,

In my country (Czech Republic) you can tell them your email address that is tied to your account

bobs_monkey ,

It’s your last point there. They want you to install an app because said apps can collect a lot more data points on a fool consumer than a web app.

CarbonatedPastaSauce ,

It is pretty ridiculous. They started doing the same thing with app ticket at Red Rocks in Colorado. So I have an ancient android phone I use for that shit now, doesn’t even have a sim card in it. Has the ticket app and I may put a grocery store app on it at some point, but otherwise it’s factory fresh. They can keep their grubby apps off my real phone.

lamprivate ,

My family got a new KitchenAid stove and I wanted to set a stop time for the oven while we went for a walk. I am able to do this on my shitty oven at our apartment.

I had to connect the stove to wifi, download an app, make an account, and link the stove. All to set a timer. Even then of course there was an error linking them.

Usually I wouldn’t have done that but I was really looking forward to the walk. I was one of the first adopters of Hue lights and used to be excited for smart home stuff. But this is so stupid.

Wondering if it’s some sort of data collection thing and also there’s no way a kitchen appliance company focuses on security and making their wifi connected devices secure.

So dumb.

lemming007 ,

I never buy any appliances with WiFi or any IoT shit, I draw a hard line there. That shit is cancer.

dustojnikhummer ,

I’m willing to buy smart appliances, but only if they are LAN only and connect to HomeAssistant. No data collection, no privacy policy, no outside access

lamprivate ,

It’s getting harder not to buy ones tbh

Rai ,

There’s always a way to get tickets without using an app.

It just takes LOTS OF MONEYYYYY

hardypart , to youshouldknow in Sorting by new on Lemmy isn’t a dumpster fire experience like it is on Reddit
@hardypart@feddit.de avatar

The whole posting and commenting culture is so much better here. I haven’t had a single argument with anyone since I’m here and I’m a pretty active user.

Noxvento ,
@Noxvento@lemmy.world avatar

I wanted to argue with you, but had to agree with you. ;-)

FarLine99 ,

such a truth 😁

Gullible ,

Unrelated, but when you squeeze a tube of toothpaste, where do you squeeze it?

HeavyRust ,
@HeavyRust@lemm.ee avatar

In my mouth.

No, I just put it on my toothbrush.

Gullible ,

Check out Bezos here, boasting about his toothbrush and functional oral orifice. My father lived 80 years without his lower jaw and what, you think you’re better than him or something? People like you disgust me.

Izzent ,
@Izzent@lemmy.world avatar

Onto my lasagna for extra taste.

Gullible ,

Whoa, that’s pretty neat, man. So you don’t have to brush after you eat it? I’m gonna save so much time tomorrow!

NotSpez ,

Found the true italian. Just like mom’s recipe (hand motion)

15liam20 ,

In the bathroom.

lazynooblet ,
@lazynooblet@lazysoci.al avatar

Obligatory Monty Python

mrmanager ,
@mrmanager@lemmy.today avatar

There are topics that will make people turn against you in a second. People just don’t talk about those. :)

amirul ,

Me too, dude. Wanna start an argument?

hardypart ,
@hardypart@feddit.de avatar

I don’t mind pineapple on Pizza.

proctonaut ,

How dare you have an opinion I kind of agree with?

amirul ,

Umm that’s cool. I like pineapples on pizza, too.

lemminer ,

Probably cause toxicity haven’t arrived yet.

tjtherealbest ,

I made a post about politics and got down voted liked crazy and they had to lock my post. There are small moments but it’s being kept in check

d00phy , to youshouldknow in YSK: Flossing your teeth is only uncomfortable when your gums are unhealthy

“Take care of your teeth” is my go-to “old person’s advice to young people.” Once you realize that dentists can’t really “fix” (as in permanently fix) most problems with your teeth (that you get one set for your whole life), that 5-10 minutes a day to take care of them doesn’t seem like so much.

Seriously, once you have a cavity, there’s a pretty good chance that tooth will eventually become a crown or implant. Once a tooth cracks, it will eventually get worse and have to go. Dentistry is mostly preventative, and for the most part they can really only apply a band-aid to serious problems.

Thatoneguyyoulove ,

Seriously please go to the dentist and take care of your teeth. My parents stopped taking me to the dentist when I was 16 and I didn't return till I was 30. I had developed a massive anxiety over it and couldn't even look at myself in the mirror because I was terrified to look into my mouth. I got off relatively lucky but for the love of God go to the dentist

bento ,

This comment hit hard, I know that feeling of looking in the mirror and being afraid to open my mouth. I went yesterday for the first time in over 10 years. I felt so much shame and anxiety, I didn’t sleep well for 2 nights leading up to the visit, but boy do I feel better now. Considering it had been so long the news wasn’t as bad as I was expecting, and it was not as painful as i thought it would be (my last visit was not pleasant) Now that i’m over that hump, i’ll be going back much more frequently and will be more diligent with my oral hygene. I wish I had done it sooner. Seriously, for those in a similar situation, just go to the dentist and set things right before it’s too late.

bkmps3 OP ,

Awesome job mate. I went through a similar stage with my depression. It takes courage to pull yourself out of situations like that so make sure you appreciate yourself.

redballooon ,

Oh dear. How do I make my 13yo understand that, who doesn’t seem to care?

orientalsniper ,

Show them pictures or videos of a root canal.

d00phy ,

If you figure it out, tell the world!

Irisos , (edited )

Show them this video and tell them this is what happens when you neglect your teeths. https://libreddit.domain.glass/r/popping/comments/py6qlw/teeth_cleaning_i_feel_this_was_the_most/

Nearly nobody will get a mouth that bad if they at least care to look at their teeths from time to time and have a basic hygiene, both dietary and oral.

But to at least get them interested, this video does the work really well.

(The video shows removal of a massive plaque of tartar. So I don't recommend anyone uncomfortable, with looking at the inside of mouths and with seeing some bleeding, to watch this video)

MementoMori ,

Totally agreed. I got this advice to “Take care of your teeth” when I was 20. My professor just said “You’ll never regret it.” I took that to heart. Why wouldn’t I do something I’ll never regret!?

seang96 ,

Pretty exciting though japanese researchers are doing human trials for medicine that blocks a protein that blocks a 3rd set of teeth from growing in, if that goes well we will probably have better teeth for longer time at least.

kemsat ,

The best 3D printer we know of is biology. Until we can grow a new tooth from some science broth, prevention is imperative. Even once we do, it’ll take a while to catch up to nature.

d00phy ,

That and for the price to come down to where mere mortals and/or folks with decent dental insurance can afford it!

Orvanis , to youshouldknow in YSK: Mastodon bots work here too— there IS a remindme bot already!

This is insanely cool… I don’t know why it never occurred to me that bots on other platforms could work here due to federation, but it makes so much sense. Thanks for sharing!

charles ,

I also love the idea that we can have “bot instances” (as mentioned by OP) so an instance can decide if they want most bots or not. Not sure if communities themselves can exercise that kind of control but that would be amazing as well.

Add that to the rapidly growing lists of things that are improved on a decentralized platform!

Fredselfish ,
@Fredselfish@lemmy.ml avatar

Will that bot work if I use lemmy.ml?

southsamurai , to nostupidquestions in Is it possible to bottle a fart while maintaining its freshness?
@southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

Freshness?

That’s a giant no. All of the stuff that makes a fart smell like a fart are too volatile to store.

Yeah, the main constituents are stable enough, but methane alone does not a fart make. Besides, not all farts contain methane.

The stuff that smells is what matters for freshness. Hydrogen sulfide (rotten egg), methanethiole (cabbage-like), scatole & indole (poop smell), dimethyl sulfide (garlicky) are the ones that are less than pleasant.

But there’s stuff like lemonine and pinene as well. They don’t smell unpleasant to most people, but in the wrong proportions, they can contribute to unpleasantness alongside others.

And all that’s just the main, common ones. You get traces of stuff like cadaverine sometimes.

The thing most (actually all, but I want to give leeway for the internet) of that have in common isn that they react with other things to some degree or another. They interact with each other in an enclosed space. Hydrogen sulfide is (iirc), the most stable of them, but it isn’t exactly going to sit unchanged in a container forever with the other ones.

There’s actually a decent amount of research into the digestive processes that involve gasses because they’re a big indicator of how things are working in the gut. There’s patterns of flatulence contents that vary between people with various digestive issues (like IBS, and IBD in terms of chronic conditions). Active infections change the patterns during infection, and may cause long term changes as well.

An interesting side note is that the chemicals that make farts is that they’re also found in rotting bodies, and rotting vegetation, though the proportions and exact chemicals vary between all of those. Digestion is controlled decay, if you want a pithy little phrase to piss off pedants :)

It isn’t even an inaccurate phrase; a lot of what happens in decomposition of animals (including humans) is driven by enzymes and bacteria, including the same ones found in our gut. But it’ll piss off pedants anyway, because it isn’t exactly the same thing.

There’s a reason that feces, flatulence, rot, bad breath, and even burning things can share smells in common. There’s a reason skunk spray, or musk, or even stale sweat have similarities that our noses can detect. Chemistry, chemical reactions.

They’re also partially done by itty bitty critters crawling on and in everything. Those smells in our farts, poop, and rotting flesh are all germ farts. They’re the waste products of bacteria (and fungi) eating our waste, the waste of everything. Those microbes are chemical factories.

It’s pretty fucking cool.

qjkxbmwvz ,

So we need to freeze our farts and thaw them out when we need them. Got it.

5oap10116 ,

when we need them

Loooool

TranquilTurbulence ,

That’s incredible. Do you have like a PhD in flatulometry?

southsamurai ,
@southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

Tbh, I could probably fake it and get away with it as long as nobody dug too deep. For a while, anyway lol

Just an interested party for multiple reasons, none of them kink related (I promise, even though saying it means nobody will ever believe it)

XeroxCool ,

Which is the chemical responsible for the overlap in smells between some of my farts and Wendy’s chicken nuggets? Help me Booty-wan, you’re my only hope

southsamurai ,
@southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

That would likely be more the retained lipids. Does your poo float well? If so, that’s likely the cause.

Acrolin (spelling may be wrong, I’m too tired too look it up lol) is the main chemical you smell from over heated oils. There’s also several types of aldehydes made as a byproduct of digesting fats, and they’ll tend to be more present when the fats didn’t get totally broken down.

But that’s usually something you smell more in poop than flatus. What you’re smelling in the gas is most likely traces akin to the levels of things like cadaverine that aren’t a main component produced as a gas the way hydrogen sulfide is.

That’s best guess.

If your poo is floating most of the time, and you’re smelling that distinct fried food aroma, might want to cut back on your fat intake a little. Or switch more to polyunsaturated fats at least. It’s okay if poo floats sometimes, but it should be either neutral buoyant, or sinking most of the time. If there’s enough fat that it floats regularly, that’s almost always a sign that you’re taking in too much, too often. Polyunsaturated fats won’t change that, but at least they’re a teeny bit less problematic healthwise (as of current best practices I’m aware of).

If it’s not floating, or the smell isn’t coming along with fatty foods, get your gall bladder checked just to be extra, extra safe. Something like half the people I’ve known that ended up having theirs removed had issues with their poo looking and smelling funny, often with higher fat levels and unusual smelling gas. Not saying it’s some kind of “oh my god” thing, it’s just being super cautious.

XeroxCool ,

They typically sink and they don’t have that particular scent component. Apparently, I’ve been living with bad info on buoyancy apparently because a couple decades Oprah said it’s supposed to float. As for fat intake, I cycle on and off with keto (high fat, low carb) but can’t say these farts occur during keto. I would also note it’s some scent very specific to Wendy’s nugs that I don’t smell anywhere else. Maybe it’s just a particular spice? It’s not present in the fries so I don’t think it’s specifically the oil. I appreciate your educated guess. I was hoping literally anyone else would have this experience. My wife concurs about the similarity of smells but the production is solely my talent.

savvywolf , to linuxmemes in Linux only has 0.3% market share in Antarctica unfortunately
@savvywolf@pawb.social avatar

Apple devices make sense - how else are you going to deal with the overheating problems?

kolorafa ,

But you have a lot of cold air to cool it down, and on a side note it makes your room warmer which you might want in that cold region 😅

(But the energy savings is hard to argue with)

HStone32 ,

apples still have overheating problems? that was a problem with the first macintosh. All because genius engineer and giant among men Steve Jobs didn’t think vents were trendy.

I guess the apples don’t fall far from the tree.

thejml ,

All joking aside, I haven’t had issues with Macs overheating in years, especially with the M chips. Last time I had an issue was when they tried to cram an i9 in a MBP.

Now the Dell laptops we have at work on the other hand, I’ve had to down clock them in bios so they don’t run at 100% or they will literally overheat just running windows. One of my coworkers has to run his upside down or it doesn’t get enough air through the vents to prevent it from auto shutting down due to thermal issues.

cm0002 ,

Dell

Well there’s your problem, I’ve instituted an IT purchasing policy with a whole section dedicated to banned brands, HP is first and Dell a close second lol (power is nice sometimes lmao)

Petter1 ,

We went from surface to Lenovo 😄

Andromxda ,
@Andromxda@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

That honestly feels like a downgrade to me

Petter1 ,

That could be… I did not decide 😂

Zelaf ,

Would love to hear your thoughts on HP. I had an internship at a IT company doing general setup and maintenance for businesses IT and since each consultant managed their own customer they often stuck with their own brands.

Having setup some of these I often felt like Lenovo was hot garbage, I’ve had a lenovo laptop with terrible manufacturing issues and the company I was at too and some of my friends. I would feel lucky if I get a Lenovo laptop without errors. Dell I haven’t heard anything bad of in general, one employee usually preferred buying them and then one other preffered HP. There was one or two people there who ordered Lenovo simply because they were so much cheaper for the specs but build quality and other components are just so garbage.

Of course, I’m not speaking about their budget 300 euro to 700 euro laptops now. The ones I was able to handle and setup were all 1300 to 3500 euros.

cm0002 ,

How long ago was this?

Many years ago, HP was actually pretty good even on their budget lines of the time. Then those got shitty to keep costs low, and it just creeped up from there until shitty cost cutting was evident throughout all their other lines up through premium business class laptops

Also, HP’s bullshit on other areas like Printing is what earned them the top spot

Dell suffers the same enshittification on their laptop lines that HP did, just a bit behind. I cannot tell you how many batteries turned into spicy pillows in just MONTHS after being opened even on their supposed premium business laptops

Lenovo used to be shit, but I’ve noticed they’ve stepped their game up the last few years while OTOH Asus is the opposite being good at first but now starting to show signs of enshittification.

Basically, brand loyalty is BS any brand can turn to shit at any time and any brand can go to being a diamond again (Except HP, they’ve become irredeemable in my eyes) and those business contracts to get bulk discounts serve no purpose other than to lock in IT departments to that specific brand instead of being able to be flexible when the times change

Zelaf ,

I had my internship there this year. The issues with my lenovo laptop started in 2021 after I bought it, managed to get my money back after 2 years late last year and decided to go full time on the Steam Deck as my personal computer alongside a portable monitor.

The HP laptops all felt pretty solid when I set them up, the company gave me a spare Lenovo laptop that was just laying around that worked okay, forgot which model but I think it was probably around their 1200 euro range probably. But the HPs didn’t have much in terms of keyboard flex and the trackpad felt really nice, however I was only having it for a couple of hours before they were being repackaged to get to the customer so no real time to judge anything.

I ralso recognised having brand loyalty towards prefab computers were pointless pretty early on. Everything from the lack of upgraidability to the lack of easy access to repairs and sending enormous parts for minor things just wasn’t cutting it for me. I’m glad with my Steam Deck now actually, with my monitor and wireless keyboard and mouse I can manage my own IT stuff at home from anywhere and do my dev stuff pretty comfortably. Knowing I can also go to ifixit to buy spare parts whenever I want is a nice bonus!

As for HP being shit in every other area, yea, I’m always gonna keep in mind to not buy their printers and stay away from them as much as possible.

What did add up on Lenovo’s side was their customer support in my country. They were very kind and helpful regarding my issue but I couldn’t sit around and wait for it to be fixed and them trying 100 different things.

But thank you for telling me your experience, I’ll make sure to keep it in mind when getting my job and hopefully have the opportunity to be able to give someone something that won’t break!

thejml ,

Interesting and sad to hear. Personally I’ve gone with Lenovo if I’m not going with Mac. Heck, My wife has a 2011 Lenovo which has been running flawlessly. The only thing I did was bump the RAM and put in an SSD when Win7 upgraded to 10. Maybe I just skipped the crappy years?

Zelaf ,

Almost sounds like it, these were all recent experiences. I’ve been looking at Lenovo previously as a potential “look-at-first” brand, can’t really say goto since if there was something more fitting I’d drop them in a heart beat back when looking for laptops but their offerings were cheaper and on paper didn’t seem to lack much.

savvywolf ,
@savvywolf@pawb.social avatar

I actually don’t know! It was a meme a while ago, but they might have fixed it by now.

KoalaUnknown ,

MacBooks haven’t had overheating problems since Apple switched to their own SOCs.

RandomVideos ,

So this is why the globe is warming

ulterno ,
@ulterno@lemmy.kde.social avatar

Macintosh heat sinking into ice-caps.

GooberEar , to science_memes in The Button

I dunno if it is intentional, but there’s a an additional layer of humor in this for me:

Where I live, there’s a company called Labcorp and they are basically the de facto company for pre-employment and random drug testing. I’m sure they do more than just drug tests, but drug testing is about all non-medical folks know of the place.

FinalRemix ,

Yup Yup LabCorp crew represent! They steal a lot of my blood on behalf of my doctors.

mkwt ,

I went to labcorp for a while when I needed monthly blood draws for my doctor.

RebekahWSD ,
@RebekahWSD@lemmy.world avatar

I have to get blood drawn every 3 months, and can go to either labcorp or the doctors office.

Which is technically also labcorp, or at least it’s somewhat affiliated with them. I think it’s the only blood game in town!

ChickenLadyLovesLife ,

Quest Diagnostics.

TheGrandNagus , to linux in [Unpopular opinion] Linux is not a good choice for regular users

Fucks around with GPU drivers for some reason

Experiences GPU driver issues

“How can Linux do this to me??”

fart_pickle OP ,

As I wrote, I did the clean install. Even if I didn’t do a thing with it, it would still break. As it did couple days ago.

GolfNovemberUniform ,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

Fyi messing around with drivers can even cause permanent hardware damage.

suburban_hillbilly ,

My favorite implication of these kinds of posts is that windows somehow doesn’t ever have driver issues.

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