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kbin.life

IHeartBadCode , to linux in Sell Me on Linux
@IHeartBadCode@kbin.social avatar

I’m also nervous about using an OS I’m not familiar with for business purposes right away

Absolutely STOP. Do not go with Linux, go with what you are comfortable with. If this is business, you do not have time to be uncomfortable and the learning curve to ramp up to ANY new OS and be productive is something that's just a non-negotiable kind of thing.

If you've never used Linux, play with Linux first on personal time. For business time, use what you know works first and foremost.

All OSes are tools. You do not just learn a tool when your job is waiting for a bed frame to be made or whatever.

TL;DR

If you are not comfortable with Linux, do NOT use it for business.

mayoi ,

If you don’t have a cheap throwaway laptop to try doing business with Linux, you have no business doing any business.

mateomaui ,

🏆 for the dumbest comment, congrats

mayoi ,

If you’re really this poor, give me your address and I will mail you a thinkpad that noone will buy from me for more than $20.

Isoprenoid ,

My brother in Christ, this isn’t about the money. This is about meeting business deadlines. OP can’t be using time trying to figure out something on Linux when his clients are waiting.

His first clients are also going to be where his solo practice either sinks or swims.

Seasoned_Greetings ,

This guy is a troll. He spends his time picking fights and deflecting anything that conflicts with his fragile world view. Check his profile.

Just thought you should know. He doesn’t really care about dispensing advice, he just likes feeling superior

Sage_the_Lawyer OP ,

This is good advice, I appreciate it. But I should clarify, I definitely won’t be launching my practice before I’m comfortable with the OS. I’m probably going to take some other user’s suggestions and do some test runs on my home machine to figure things out. I’m not launching tomorrow, there’s no real rush. My current contract runs until May 2024. So I’ve got 6 months ahead of me to figure things out.

hillbicks ,

My advice is try using existing documents with Libre office. You can install it on windows as well.

I use Linux for over twenty years now and installed windows on a vm last week to Wirte my resume. Libre office is fine, you run into problems when opening and editing existing ms office documents. At least that is my experience.

But give Libre office on windows a shot, see if you like it.

fushuan ,

I’m going to nitpick your comment because we are Linux users and it’s in our blood.

Heard about LaTex? You don’t really need to use Word to write resumes. In fact, I’d advise you against it. It’s easier to go to overleaf, download an existing template and generate a usable pdf that won’t break.

grue ,

Switch to Linux at home now. In six months, you’ll have a much better idea if you want to use it at work.

d3Xt3r ,

In addition to the other comment re. LibreOffice, I’d also recommend trying out OnlyOffice - generally, it has better compatibility with MS Office formats compared to LO, and the UI is very similar to MSO which may make it easier to use.

constantokra ,

PDFs might be your sticking point. I’ve not found any software that will handle all the different things you can do with acrobat in an easy way. But I have to heavily modify PDFs from time to time, and you may not have nearly the needs I do.

I’d suggest checking out libre office, and see if you can find a PDF application that satisfies you. The app store on pop os is really good, as is the interface, and if you don’t like tiling window managers, you can turn it off.

Another suggestion is to recognize you’re a novice. If you read something that sounds like a perfect setup, but it’s a little complicated, put it off. You don’t want to get in over your head, because linux distros will not keep you from breaking things. The defaults of any large distribution are a pretty safe bet.

cmg ,

Agree here.

Spend your time making sure you are protected against ransomware with good offline backups and able to recover your practice. Keep your payments separate from your comms machine.

Your job is going to have lots of shady things to click on/invoice/etc

Plan for it so a malicious client/infected evidence/mistaken click doesn’t take down your practice.

I’m 25y into this as a technologist and still make mistakes on “oh this will be quick”. Make sure your time sinks are 100% aligned with your business. Think of automation / value and you’ll have the right mindset.

If you find the tech side fascinating, there’s always demand for good tech lawyers and lawyer comms are entryways into technology management.

Tolookah , to asklemmy in What's an industry that would cause riots if it disappeared overnight?

The Internet.

That’d remove the circuses from our bread and circuses… and some of us are out of bread

Okalaydokalay ,

I would love to see this just to see the absolute chaos it would cause. I cannot visualize it.

AFLYINTOASTER ,

Just wait until Google implements Web Environment Integrity.

We should already be in the streets and we’re not.

ramblinguy ,

While I can see the plus side of being able to identify bots, I don’t think the WEI is the right way to do it, and Google definitely isn’t the right company to be handling it

VonReposti ,

Plus how do you spot the difference between a good bot and a bad bot? Web crawlers from search engines are for example inherently good, so they should still be able to operate, but if it is easy to register a good bot in WEI, it is also easy to register a bad bot. If it is hard to register a good bot, then you’re effectively gatekeeping the automated part of the internet (something that actually might be Google’s intention).

Bakersfield ,

I was thinking the same thing about Google wanting their bots to be the only ones allowed to crawl and index the internet.

schnurrito ,

A bot that only reads your website is good, one that posts things or otherwise changes your database less so.

teawrecks ,

Yeah, even if the hardware can validate perfectly that it’s not running any botting software, there’s nothing stopping someone from spinning up a farm of these machines and using a central server as a hypervisor for them all. It’s impossible to determine if your user is a bot.

absGeekNZ ,
@absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz avatar

I just wish everyone would switch to Firefox.

It is because Chrome has a monopoly, is close enough to monopoly.

expatriado ,

but how are we supposed to organize gathering times and places to start rioting? on the paper?

Bakersfield ,

Carrier pigeon.

Tippon ,

Bridgefy

bridgefy.me

From their site:

‘Bridgefy is a free messaging app that works without the Internet. Perfect for natural disasters, large events, and at school!’

It works over Bluetooth, and lets you send messages to other users without needing an internet connection. I haven’t used it yet, but the app looks straightforward enough :)

datelmd5sum ,

the internet is the first thing they shut down to control riots in authoritatian countries

soren446 , to nostupidquestions in Why is cooking a food item method called different things by what the item is, or what is the criteria?
@soren446@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • Slatlun ,

    Looks like we were typing at the same time. I totally agree with everything here.

    Mouselemming ,

    You’re correct but it begs the question, why the hell would they poach carrots? If any vegetable can stand up to boiling it’s a carrot. Blanching I could see, (that’s a 2 minute dunk in boiling water, OP, with a quick cooldown) if you wanted to pre-cook them so they wouldn’t be harder than everything else. Maybe they were just being poncy.

    Slatlun ,

    Poaching in olive oil, butter, wine, etc would give a different flavor. I agree that water poached carrots would be just a slower way to cook carrots than boiling them.

    Mouselemming ,

    Poaching in oil or butter sounds like a long way to saute them, especially when it takes sooooo long that you take your eyes off for a minute and they start browning.

    Slatlun ,

    If you keep your oil at the right temp (below boiling) the thing you’re cooking won’t ever brown. You get it cooked through evenly and infused with flavor from the poaching liquid. The texture and flavor will be much more like a boiled veggie than a sauted one. And usually if you’re poaching veggies you leave them in much larger chunks than you would saute - like even a whole carrot wouldn’t be weird.

    Mouselemming ,

    Okay but I’m thinking it would take a long time and on my stove it would get hotter than that even on the lowest setting, which was what I was getting at. (I assume you meant below the boiling temperature of water, not oil. And probably below a simmer.)

    Slatlun ,

    Yep, 80C or 180F. I’m not sure if you can actually boil oil on a stove, but I do know that would be a bad idea. If you ever end up wanting to poach you might be able to do it in your oven on a very low setting rather than the stovetop.

    Mouselemming ,

    Yeah, no boiling oil! Unless you need to defend the castle.

    In fact, I don’t think oil by itself can boil, it just smokes and then bursts into flame. The boiling effect when deep-frying is from water in the food becoming steam.

    Slatlun ,

    I looked it up and cooking oil definitely can boil in a physics/chemistry sense of the word. That temp is well above the smoke point. I agree that in a practical sense boiling oil is a fire ball before you’d ever have to worry about breathing too much oil vapor though.

    soren446 ,
    @soren446@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • PaupersSerenade ,
    @PaupersSerenade@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Firstly, I appreciate you breaking it down! I knew they were different terms, but never really knew them outside of the standard ‘poached eggs’.

    Secondly, soggy carrots can get bent. If it doesn’t crunch it’s not for me.

    soren446 ,
    @soren446@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • poppy ,

    You might be mildly allergic? Bananas as soon as they hit my stomach make me feel like I’m going to throw up.

    canthidium ,
    @canthidium@lemmy.world avatar

    Can’t stand soggy carrots. I can eat them in soup, but it’s not my favorite. I much prefer roasted or stir fried. Actually most veggies, I prefer that way.

    Jimmycrackcrack ,

    I feel like I shouldn’t like them. By description alone it sounds awful but for some reason, soggy carrots in a stew are fantastic and I prefer them to the more carefully cooked carrots you might get from a more upmarket version of the same dish. Somehow the now more mild sweetness with the strong kick if what they were cooked in a small and yielding bite is pleasant to me. I’m definitely in the minority though.

    canthidium ,
    @canthidium@lemmy.world avatar

    I really think it’s a texture thing for me. But I also don’t really get a lot of flavor when I eat soggy carrots. It just taste like mush to me. Roasting them really brings out the flavor for me as well as gives it a nice texture. Slightly burnt is so good. I love raw carrots as well.

    Pisodeuorrior ,

    All good but I'd just like to point something out.

    When you boil pasta you're actually hydrating it, and it's a process that occurs above 80C, you don't need water to be boiling savagely.

    In fact, it's preferable to let pasta simmer, as full boiling is a bit too "violent" and tends to damage most kinds of pasta.

    You know, when some pieces are broken and torn like when it's overcooked? You can avoid that by keeping the temperature low.

    Some people in Italy even turn the fire off after the water has started boiling ,as the water is hot enough to cook the pasta and keep it nice and firm.

    evilgiraffe666 ,

    Interesting, I was taught you used a rolling boil for pasta so it wouldn’t stick together. Maybe there’s a halfway where it rolls for a few minutes then gets turned down as the pieces soften and become vulnerable to tearing.

    RecursiveParadox ,
    @RecursiveParadox@lemmy.world avatar

    Le sigh. Your answer makes me really wish we could have the equivalent of r/askculinary here.

    NPC ,

    I’m a cook and just created !askculinary for you. Feel free to direct any culinary question you have to it and I’ll do by best to answer them.

    RecursiveParadox ,
    @RecursiveParadox@lemmy.world avatar

    I will think of some super obscure and technical question and/or a random stupid food safety question and ask it ASAP ;)

    Thanks, hope this gains some traction!

    NPC ,

    It probably won’t, at least not for a long time. But I’m always happy to share my knowledge.

    P.s. Your comment made me realise I should actually put something on that community. Imma update the sidebar right now.

    joel_feila ,
    @joel_feila@lemmy.world avatar

    Wait you dont boil potatoes?

    Jimmycrackcrack ,

    I noticed that too, but I think they meant, “in the situation where you want the potatoes to come out a particular way”.

    Their wording was “You’d use delicate foods like shell-less eggs or fish or potatoes you don’t want to overcook or break.” Which could be a list of things that you don’t boil including potatoes or a list of things that you don’t boil and also potatoes in the special circumstance where you don’t want those potatoes breaking.

    Honestly though I can’t think of any circumstance where I’ve heard of potato being cooked by immersion in water where that water wasn’t set to boil, they just take a long time to cook and need pretty heavy heat to soften so even when trying to be careful I’d find it strange not to boil them at all even if for just a shorter time frame.

    Jimmycrackcrack ,

    The thing I’ve always found confusing is how American terminology as far as I can make out seems to almost always say “fry” to mean what I would always specify as “deep frying” and “sauteing” where I would usually say “fry”. I think this is a Commonwealth countries thing and not just me. “Saute”, to me had always seemed a kind of unusually fancy affectation for people working in restaurants with the average person eschewing it for the term “fry” until I started using YouTube and Google for recipes and got exposed to so much American material that I discovered they make these distinctions. I guess there’s technical distinctions in how much oil you use in the pan (until the point of immersion where it’s deep frying) but that seems much of a muchness.

    Confusingly though I notice Americans seem to also sometimes use “fry” the way I would, but just sometimes. Eggs for example are “fried” but this is usually not meaning dropped in to a deep fryer. And then there’s the confusion over the meaning of “grilling” vs “broiling” because as far as I can tell the term “broil” isn’t used where I’m from and the the device Americans call a “broiler” is what we’d call a “grill” and things cooked under it are “grilled”. I believe the American use of “grill” is referring to a shape of ridged cooking surface but then you get “grilled cheese” which I’d called “cheese on toast” or a “cheese toastie” which involves putting the sandwich in to a flat frying pan and which involves neither a broiler nor a ridged cooking surface and isn’t referred to as sauteing nor frying. Then there’s “griddled” which I think again is referring to a particular shape of cooking surface but given “grill” I just don’t know.

    Definitely some interesting variations within mostly shared vocabulary.

    techingtenor ,

    Wow you definitely aren’t american as I’m scratching my head to even figure out what you mean by some of these. The average grill in america is a standalone outdoor cooking station with a metal grate used as the cooking surface. They are also found in restaurants but usually they are in a bit of a different form that what the average American thinks of as a grill. the grates give the characteristic lines of grilled food that many seek. A griddle is a grill where the grate has been replaced by a flat piece of metal, often used for small or runny foods that would fall between the grates of a regular grill.

    We also dont typically have standalone broilers. Most american ovens have a broil option where the top heating element becomes very hot and can be used to brown the food.

    The main difference between grilling and broiling, in my american eyes, is how they are used. Grilling is a technique for cooking food from start to finish. Broiling is a technique used at the end of cooking something to brown it or something to that effect. I wouldn’t use the broiler in my oven to cook a whole meal, and I wouldn’t turn on the grill or griddle just to brown something.

    In my eyes saute is when you use only enough oil to keep something from sticking or burning, while frying is when you use enough oil that it starts to really add to the flavor of what you’re cooking.

    I think the worst thing Americans have done is the air fryer though. Its just a fucking tiny convection oven, there’s no frying going on at all. They just know us fat Americans are conditioned to salivate when we hear the word fry and cower in terror from big science words like ‘convection’ lol

    ryathal ,

    For saute vs fry the big difference is movement. Frying means let it sit, generally flip it once per side a food can supportitself on. Saute means near constant stirring or agitation.

    Jimmycrackcrack ,

    Yeh a broiler here (Australia) is just as you describe and while I hadn’t given it much thought is too used in the mode you describe as well, it’s just that it’s called a “grill” and the act of using it is to “grill” which is an amusing point of confusion since it seems to have very different connotations in the states. I was aware that “Grilling” over there also connotated using the outdoor grated cooking surface that I’d call a “barbecue” but I guess where I was confused is that I thought the term also covered those otherwise flat surfaces that have the ridges like those George Foreman “grill” things but apparently that’s actually what a “griddle” is so that clears things up a bit. In either case I still can’t understand why a toasted cheese sandwich cooked in a frying pan gets called “grilled” and funnily enough it’s common to make a variation of that here that’s not quite as good but much easier and lazier to make where you put a single slice of bread covered with cheese (though not the American kind as that probably wouldn’t work very well with this method) under what I believe you’d call the “broiler”. This local method of melting cheese on bread really added to the confusion before I became aware that “Grilling” meant something different over there because I figured this must have been what was meant by “grilled cheese” before I figured that out lol.

    I think this system of classifying sauteing vs frying, is quite useful, a bit more precise than what I’m used to, just doesn’t seem to get much use amongst my circles here. Still the lack of distinction necessarily made between degrees of “fried” is interesting since “fried” chicken seems to quite specifically mean deep fried even if for many dishes a person might well intend to use a lot of oil to cook some chicken but not necessarily plan to deep fry it.

    shanjezi ,

    I have noticed many people from outside the US get hung up on grilled cheese. We just call it that for some reason and no one really thinks about it. If we stop to think, we know it is not grilled, and as far as I’m aware, it’s the only thing we call “grilled” that is not grilled. I think the reason we do not call it a toasted cheese sandwich, or cheese toastie, as I think I’ve heard in the UK, is that would imply the use of a toaster (a standalone appliance with electric heating elements inside slots just big enough for a single slice of bread). I suppose griddled cheese might be a more accurate name, but we are too far gone to make that change.

    ryathal ,

    Grilled cheese is cooked on a flat top grill/griddle, most people use a pan in home cooking because they don’t have a flat top or it’s just easier for a single grilled cheese to use a pan. Reubens and paninnis are other sandwiches that are grilled. You could probably argue that grilled generally means cooked at high heat. Then there’s pancakes which are more commonly cooked on a griddle than a pan…

    Kelsenellenelvial ,

    There’s a few different things here that make clarity difficult. One is the precise definition of various techniques, for example:poaching water is not bubbling, simmering water is gentle bubbles, boiling water is bubbling heavily(some say “full rolling boil”, which is what boiling always is. Second is simply the name of the cooking vessel/equipment, griddle vs grill vs broiler, which is sometimes the same term used to describe the technique applied. You can grill a steak, but you wouldn’t say you ovened a roast. Last is that many terms are misused so much that it’s just become common parlance. Technically a grill is a device with grates and a radiant device that cooks food through a combination of conduction and radiation, usually powered by propane or natural gas. A BBQ is a similar object powered by wood, but it’s common for an outdoor grill to be referred to as a BBQ, though when used with the lid down is a little different than an open restaurant style grill since it acts a bit like an oven too.

    YodaDaCoda ,
    @YodaDaCoda@sh.itjust.works avatar

    G’day mate

    Jimmycrackcrack ,

    (slight nod of head in your general direction)

    AnUnusualRelic ,
    @AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s why I cook in French. Much clearer that way, and the recipes use proper units.

    HobbitFoot , to asklemmy in why are companies trying so hard to have employees back in the office?

    First, a lot of studies have shown the productivity boost for WFH may not be uniform or actually exist. Whether the possible productivity boost is worth the money on office space hasn’t been answered, it is likely more in that gray area than WFH proponents want it to be.

    Second, while generic work productivity is about the same level, teaching new skills isn’t. We have data showing educating from home has been worse for students, and that seems to be filtering into the office place. Junior staff aren’t picking up skills fast enough and are probably a major reason why WFH productivity measures are lower than expected. It isn’t because new staff are lazy, just that they have fewer people to ask questions to and don’t ask as many questions in general.

    Third, building and maintaining a work network has fallen apart. People don’t know others in an office, which can be a problem in flat company structures where communication is not expected to go through the boss only. So you have people who feel like they are doing productive work, but aren’t talking to others. This can cause a lot of rework that the managers see in slipping deadlines.

    That said, the answer seems to be hybrid for these jobs as workers won’t tolerate full time in the office anymore. However, hybrid has been a clusterfuck in a lot of companies because the hybrid model is new and not everyone knows how to manage to it.

    Shard ,

    I just wanted to say that this is pretty much the most well thought out answer on WFH I’ve seen. It’s nuanced and balanced.

    Thank you.

    HobbitFoot ,

    You’re welcome.

    As you can see from some of the replies, there is the assumption that bosses and executives are evil and trying to make the worker’s lives worse, but I don’t see that in a lot of these discussions.

    I can also see how some staff may see themselves as being more productive yet their managers may see less productivity within their department overall.

    Zeth0s , (edited )

    I am absolutely happy for the people I manage to stay home if they have real work to do. They can clearly do whatever they prefer, even work from the beach as far as I am concerned, but I know that going to the office is a waste of time. But the job we do is project based, long deadlines, no real “daily business” to handle. It however requires maximum focus, because it is not trivial. Offices are hells for concentration and quality work.

    They can stay at home and call whenever they want whoever they want.

    It has been working great.

    It really depends on the positions. Office spaces are very bad for some positions, good fo others. Pushing a unique way of working for fishes and elephants cannot work. This is the main problem with current approach

    HobbitFoot ,

    There are some teams that can maintain full remote; I usually find those teams are filled with people good at their job, can see the big picture, and know to communicate early.

    The problem is that not all teams are like that.

    Jayb151 ,

    To speak to your points, I started with about 1 year ago in a new career in IT. We initially were coming in one day a week and this has moved to two days.

    First, when we moved to two days, I have it about 6 weeks, then started crunching numbers. By the sole metric of closing tickets… My team as a whole is more productive in the office. I didn’t break down exactly who was more of less productive, but I have my ideas. I’m willing to bet that I work better at home, but it’s a moot point as the team is better on site.

    As far as learning new skills, even at one day a week, I’ve caught up to the rest of my team and have surpassed them technically. Again, it’s IT and I’ve always had a strong interest, whereas I see some of the team probably view it as “just work” I’m actually enjoying the work. Again, it’s a second career so maybe maturity is in play here too, but even the younger guys who were hired after me are growing very quickly.

    You’re absolutely right about networking. I felt so isolated when I started. It wasn’t until I learned a few people a few steps above where I was that I learned who is a good resource, and who I can trust. Once I got my head around that, I think people actually see the work in doing and redirect me for it. If I were 100% wfh I don’t think I would be having as good a time.

    Just my experience

    Asafum ,

    Did you have any relevant experience or credentials? I’m looking to jump to a new career possibly in IT, but I have absolutely nothing on paper to sell myself with. The most I have is a few years experience in diagnostics as I was once a refrigeration tech.

    6daemonbag ,

    I’m about to bootcamp myself out of my current career and into IT. My related experience is limited and this is a major (and costly) move for me. Cashing out an old 401k to finance it. Otherwise I’d be taking a predatory loan from Sallie Mae…

    I’ll be starting from scratch, probably doing entry-level work. But I’m ok with that because I’ll eventually be able to better provide for my family, and I’m so broke and stressed that my hair is thinning. Check out springboard or thrivedx. My bootcamp is through them (haven’t decided between software engineer or cybersecurity) but handled by a local university.

    Asafum ,

    Thanks for the info! I’ll have to check that out!

    Jayb151 ,

    I have no paper credentials, but I was a licensed educator, so at least it shows I can get credentials if I worked at it.

    I started at a local community college party time, then transferred to my current role. Both bosses are the type like, “I can teach anyone IT, but it’s hard to teach soft skills.” Turns out they can’t really teach IT either and I’m left to getting knowledge from my team and outside sources.

    I am taking some azure fundamentals courses right now though, so I’m going that legit certs will make me more hireable

    antim0ny ,

    Your comment reflects what my own experience has been over the past few years.

    driving_crooner , (edited )
    @driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br avatar

    while generic work productivity is about the same level, teaching new skills isn’t.

    As someone who did his last year of college and first two years of career from home this is spot on. My senior simply refused to teach me anything, or even answering my chats and my manager didn’t care. I had to learn doing inverse engineering on the excel files because I cannot even sit at his side and saw him work ans learn. I changed companies a month ago to a full-time in office position and I’m learning more in this month that what I did on the past two years (its also helps that my new manager is also a college professor and have like 40 years of industry experience).

    slaacaa ,

    Great summary, I wish all the WFH fanatics would read and understand this. I really hate how in most online spaces they make it seem like 100% WFH is the answer for everything.

    PhantomPhanatic ,
    @PhantomPhanatic@lemmy.world avatar

    Thanks for helping bring this perspective to light. Most threads on work from home go all in on productivity being higher, but don’t take into account the longer term consequences of working from home on knowledge sharing, education, training, and team building. Even if productivity is higher now, that doesn’t mean it will remain that way in the long run.

    Rusty , to lemmyshitpost in 😲😲
    Ascend910 ,

    XD

    ghostwolf , to nostupidquestions in Data privacy: how to counter the "I have nothing to hide" argument?
    @ghostwolf@lemmy.fakeplastictrees.ee avatar

    Ask them to unlock their phone and give it to you. Chances are, you’ll quickly find out they have things they’d like to hide.

    electrogamerman ,

    I have nudes on my phone. I honestly don’t care if they leak one day, in fact, I have been to nudist beaches and I’m pretty sure there are online pictures of me naked already.

    That’s completely different to showing naked pictures of me to colleagues, etc.

    ghostwolf ,
    @ghostwolf@lemmy.fakeplastictrees.ee avatar

    But if your photos leak, your colleagues could see them. Someone can blackmail you. Or do that using any other sensitive information.

    electrogamerman ,

    But then I wouldn’t be showing to them.

    My problem is not they seeing me naked. My problem would be showing the photos directly to them. I mean when someone asks for my phone, im always like dont like at my photos, I have nudes, then some close friends have still go to my photos and then I dont care.

    ghostwolf ,
    @ghostwolf@lemmy.fakeplastictrees.ee avatar

    Indeed, it’s quite rare to find someone who isn’t concerned about their photos, messages, and other sensitive information potentially being leaked online. Good for you, though I don’t believe it’s representative. Even so, there are potential risks to consider. With the right information, someone could manipulate, blackmail, or coerce you without you even realizing it. Our brains are subject to numerous biases, making us susceptible to subtle manipulations. Knowing your traits and preferences allows one to tailor a persuasive message specifically to you. This strategy can be used to sell you anything, from a mobile phone to a politician. The implications of such tactics are significant, potentially affecting billions of people.

    redditcuntsz ,

    I couldn’t care less if a few photos leaked. Nobody in my community would care, if they did I wouldn’t care about them, and blackmail risk it’s far overblown especially within the context of photos. You are far more likely to be exposed by an angry partner. Being afraid that Google had a rouge dick pic that might leak with thousands of others is absurd.

    Nindelofocho ,

    its really more than just nudes, check this comment here: feddit.uk/comment/1062371

    AllNewTypeFace , to nostupidquestions in Why does lemmy.ml use the "ML" country code for Mali?
    @AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space avatar

    Marxism-Leninism?

    givesomefucks ,

    It’s hard to imagine someone’s been active on Lemmy for a year and didn’t know that…

    BertramDitore ,
    @BertramDitore@lemmy.world avatar

    I had no idea about this, and I’ve been here for just over a year. Also, keep in mind which community this is.

    cannedtuna ,

    I don’t think I’ve ever questioned it before. There’s so many servers I don’t bother to know the history behind them all.

    wildncrazyguy138 ,

    I literally thought it was for militant, because that’s how they come off over there if you’re not 100% in lockstep with them.

    Like they were fighting the man or something.

    xmunk ,

    I’d assumed it was a reference to machine learning.

    jacksilver ,

    Same

    MataVatnik ,
    @MataVatnik@lemmy.world avatar

    Same

    don ,

    Same

    boatsnhos931 ,

    Same

    UltraGiGaGigantic ,

    Me too, thanks.

    boatsnhos931 ,

    Yo tambien

    dogsnest ,
    @dogsnest@lemmy.world avatar

    I am the walrus?

    VulKendov ,
    @VulKendov@reddthat.com avatar

    I think you’re thinking of Lennon-McCartney

    BackOnMyBS ,
    @BackOnMyBS@lemmy.autism.place avatar

    Shut the fuck up Donny! V.I. Lenin. Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov!

    ChronosTriggerWarning ,

    What’s Walters problem, Dude?

    don ,

    He can’t keep getting away with this!

    UltraGiGaGigantic ,

    Twenty dollars can buy many peanuts.

    Anticorp ,
    jmcs , to asklemmy in Is there a specific religious term for the belief "God exists and he is evil"?

    Yes. It’s Dystheism.

    lettruthout ,

    “Dystheism (from Ancient Greek: δυσ-, romanized: dus-, lit. ‘bad’ and θεός theos “god”) is the belief that a god is not wholly good and can even be considered evil, or one and the same with Satan.”

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dystheism

    humorlessrepost ,

    Also noteworthy is misotheism. Seems OP counts as both.

    some_guy ,

    Dystheism

    TIL

    Conyak , to asklemmy in if you don't use facebook, what social media do you use to stay in contact with family?

    Text messages and phone calls. I don’t need to see my boomer relatives racist posts.

    Rhaedas ,

    That was disappointing, when you grow up thinking your parents are progressive and then as old age and its symptoms happen their guards drop and you find out that they always had some racist tendencies. I guess credit to them suppressing them for so long.

    Conyak ,

    I am originally from the south but my mother joined the Air Force and we moved away after she divorced my dad when I was very young. I’m so glad that I was able to experience life outside of that racist bubble. I’m not sure how I would have turned out had I grown up there.

    WraithGear ,
    @WraithGear@lemmy.world avatar

    Same with me. It’s weird, during the end of the Mayan calendar my grandparents asked my dad to leave his wife and two kids to go into their bunker to prepare to fight off the minorities that all follow the Antichrist during the end times. The reason we were not invited to their crusade was my mom voted Democrat, and Jesus would not give souls to children who would live to see the end times as that would be to cruel for their god. He told them hell no. And it was weeks before they resurfaced again and pretended nothing ever happened. Could i have been conditioned thus if my dad don’t join the NAVY? Scary thought.

    Bristle1744 ,

    Probably racist as well.

    Source: anonymous with an irrational hatred of the French, despite several generations removed from the French colonies.

    xmunk ,

    In my parents’ old age they’ve gotten more progressive. I reject the notion that people naturally trend towards conservativism as they age… I just think there are a fuckton of entitled “I got mine” boomers.

    spittingimage ,
    @spittingimage@lemmy.world avatar

    I recently read an article that claims people become more progressive as they age, but society becomes more progressive faster, so it just seems like they become conservative.

    sorrybookbroke ,

    I’d live to read this study if you can find it

    spittingimage ,
    @spittingimage@lemmy.world avatar

    It was just an article I saw while randomly browsing, I wouldn’t know where to look.

    cupcakezealot ,
    @cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    i think it was just the case in the past because people tended to have more means and affluency as they grew up in the 70s and 80s, so they naturally gravitated toward people like eisenhower and reagan.

    EldritchFeminity ,

    Yep. I saw a fairly recent study talking about this. The short of it is that they found no correlation between age and political leaning for ANY generation, but a strong correlation between political leaning and wealth.

    As people begin to benefit more from the system, the more they support pulling the ladder up behind them.

    The correlation to age here is that it gets harder to adapt to new information the older we get, so people are more likely to double down rather than change their perspective as society gets more progressive and inclusive. The best weapon against racism is experiences that put people in situations to meet people with different life experiences than them. Get them outside their little white suburban bubbles. This is why conservatives hate college so much. It’s often the first time kids are put in a situation where they’re both out from under the thumb of their parents and exposed to kids who grew up in different circumstances than their’s.

    CeruleanRuin ,

    This certainly has the ring of truthiness to it.

    z00s ,

    Its not just “I got mine”, it’s " I got mine and I’m gonna wreck shit so you can’t get yours"

    cupcakezealot ,
    @cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    i really must be lucky because my mum and dad are as liberal and accepting as can be. i guess i was just lucky to grow up in massachusetts and attend a pretty liberal methodist church. my pastor growing up even hand wrote me a letter when i came out as trans and apologised for how some of the church needs to change.

    EldritchFeminity ,

    How close did you grow up to Boston, or did your parents live in a city for a period of time? The closer you get to a city, the more liberal the population becomes, and there are some pretty backwoods areas of Massachusetts. My dad was conservative until he went to Boston College and worked at the bank collecting loans from the poorer sections of the city. Even Cape Cod had MAGA protesters yelling at the Bourne Bridge about the plan to house immigrants on the Air Force base for all 4 years of Trump’s reign of terror, and I could probably still find the Trump 2016 flag that I used to drive by all the time.

    cupcakezealot ,
    @cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    i was always outside of worcester actually so i only got to go into boston occasionally i grew up in grafton, northbridge, and millbury and went to church in shrewsbury. :)

    EldritchFeminity ,

    That’s pretty similar to me, though I grew up just over the bridges on the Cape. I always thought we were in a super liberal area being in Massachusetts (plus we were like halfway between P-Town and Boston), but as I got older, I was shocked by just how conservative it is there. It’s like a bastion of snowbirds’ summer homes and retirees who all care more about their property taxes than the kids who live there.

    cupcakezealot ,
    @cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    yeah millbury tends to me more democratic but then auburn and leicester is more republican :P

    honestly i do want to move overseas just as a goal but if that doesn’t happen, i’d love to move to salem or northampton

    SecretPancake ,

    We just didn’t see it in the past because we were all kinda racist. But we grew out of it.

    Midnitte ,

    This, but it was more surprising for other relatives, aunts and uncles mostly.

    Like, Jesus Aunt Beth, I didn’t realize you religiously watched Glenn Beck and believe Muslims are trying to take over American by genetic conquest.

    FlashMobOfOne ,
    @FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world avatar

    FB got my sweet pre-school teacher who I never, in 30 years, saw be mean to anyone turned into a MAGA who hates people. The programming worked way too well.

    oxjox , (edited )
    @oxjox@lemmy.ml avatar

    I’m the opposite. I don’t need to see my Gen Z relatives desperate pleas for attention.

    My boomer relatives are relatively liberal and don’t feel the need to share more than the vacation they’re on, the cocktail they’re drinking, or their high score on candy crush.

    Edit: I assume the downvotes are from butthurt Gen Zers. I don’t mean to generalize, I can’t imagine anyone doing that when discussing an entire generation, I’m simply offering my own personal experience. When my cousin is posting photos of himself in a banana hammock and my sister is posting daily cringe videos of her words of “advice”, AND IG keeps trying to show me this because the algorithm is trash, this keeps me off social media. Right, I should just not “follow” my relatives. Or, I could just stay away entirely. It’s fine.

    hungryphrog ,

    Seriously, every time I see stuff like this, I just wonder if people have completely forgotten that you can text and call your family and friends.

    FlashMobOfOne ,
    @FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world avatar

    This is the way.

    NaibofTabr , to gaming in I banned my kid from Roblox.... what next?

    For everyone saying OP should let their kid play Roblox and just ban spending money… just no.

    Roblox exploits child labor for profit and they have terrible scummy business practices. If you have even marginal ethical qualms about child labor and/or capitalistic exploitation of vulnerable people, you should be keeping yourself and your family away from Roblox. In your mind they should be in the same category as multilevel marketing, crypto scams and door-to-door religion peddlers.

    WetBeardHairs OP ,

    Roblox really is the lowest of the low.

    NaibofTabr ,

    I actually think it’s fair to call them child predators. They’re exploiting kids for money instead of sexual gratification, but it’s the same power dynamic. Child exploitation is their business model.

    Omega_Haxors ,

    A lot of sexual child exploitation goes down there too, so you don’t even need a roundabout definition of child abuse.

    nilloc , (edited )

    My son just turned 6 and I was thinking of looking at the game (he really likes actual Lego, and his buddies are into Minecraft and Roblox), but another parent at a bday party a few weeks back asked if we played, and then warned my that I needed to keep a close eye on it, because the suggested games algo was pushing really sketch things to his daughter.

    So I started looking and decided the shopping aspect was something I didn’t want to expose him to yet. But these revelations are making me glad we haven’t yet used it and never will.

    piyuv ,

    Do you have written sources for these? I’d like to educate myself but I can’t stand YouTube videos.

    ferralcat ,

    This guy’s argument would literally be that Mario maker is encouraging child labor because it doesn’t pay kids who make levels in it.

    ZeroHora ,
    @ZeroHora@lemmy.ml avatar

    Roblox sells the idea that you can actually make money with it, it has its own economy with job hunting and salaries. Mario Maker is just a community game.

    ICastFist ,
    @ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

    That’s an entirely different thing, because Mario Maker doesn’t lure anyone with the bait of financial gain.

    clearleaf ,

    That’s horrible. These 10 year olds are learning programming and game design skills for nothing. Good thing THAT was nipped in the bud.

    NaibofTabr ,

    This is addressed directly in the linked videos. Development for Roblox doesn’t translate outside of Roblox.

    ICastFist ,
    @ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

    Nearly everyone knows a bunch of skills “for nothing” or, worse, for fun! Gasp! Shocking, isn’t it?

    Also, did you know that modding is a thing at least since the 90s? You know, people that made modifications to games without expecting any financial return or job opportunities? People must be crazy if they’re putting so much effort just to have fun and share it, amirite?

    clearleaf ,

    I couldn’t stop myself from being sarcastic there, sorry. The utter cynicism struck me so hard I didn’t know where to begin explaining how wrongheaded I think people are being about that. I would for sure prefer Roblox not encourage mtx so much but sheesh man. I don’t think Timmy is trying to make the next Genshin Impact.

    NaibofTabr ,

    Intent makes a big difference. The value of Roblox as a platform and as a business is based on the work done by children to develop for it, and it was set up that way on purpose. They created an incentive model to encourage it.

    Nintendo’s value as a company is not based on kids creating Mario Maker levels, nor does Nintendo push kids to do so with the promise of earning money.

    GalaxyBrain ,
    @GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net avatar

    Considering the newest Mario game got a shitload of ideas from Mario maker levels, anyone who was good at mario making enough to be creative with the formula had their labor stolen as RnD for Wonder

    AOCapitulator ,
    @AOCapitulator@hexbear.net avatar

    it would be if the word literally meant figuratively or mario maker psychologically tortured children into spending cash for the privilege

    LemmyIsFantastic ,

    This guy’s video could just as well be about foss development. Nearly every point has a direct parallel.

    NaibofTabr ,

    Nobody dangles a carrot of earning money in front of potential FOSS developers. Nobody goes into FOSS thinking they’re going to get a big payout.

    FOSS is not pay-to-play. There’s no equivalent to Robux for FOSS developers.

    FOSS developers are consenting adults who volunteer their time for freely distributed software projects, not kids creating content for a video game company that charges them for access and then makes a profit from their work.

    Art3sian , (edited ) to nostupidquestions in What is the Israel thing going on?
    @Art3sian@lemmy.world avatar

    How long do you have? Here’s the very brief summary, and full disclaimer, I don’t have dog in this race.

    1. Jerusalem is an important place for both Jews and Muslims.
    2. They’ve been fighting over this space for two millenia. The Roman’s had it for a long time (Christian), the Ottomans had it for a long time (Islamic).
    3. After WW1 and the Ottomans were defeated, it passed onto the Turkish (Islamic).
    4. After WW2, with Britain now in control of it (Palestine) and with the surviving Jews now displaced worldwide with no country to live, the U.N decided to give Jews a new home and call this new place the State of Israel. They put Israel right in the middle of Palestine, which no Islamic nation could object to because they were all defeated in war.
    5. Since then, Jews call Israel their home country. Surrounding Islamic countries don’t recognise Israel and want the Jews to leave.
    6. Islamic nations including Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Iran, Syria have all gone to war with Israel (the 6-day War) to kick the Jews out. They’ve all lost because Israel is militarily backed by world powers. Israel is now a military powerhouse and have full control of the region.
    7. Israel allow Muslim Palestinians small areas to live in the area, namely Gaza and the West Bank, but they’re not particularity nice to the Muslims living there. This is the Palestinian/Israeli war that’s been going on for almost a century.
    8. This space is now two main religions crammed into a very small space. Both claim that it’s their ancestral land. Islamic nations don’t recognise Israel as a country. Most of the rest of the world does.
    9. Israel has become a defensive fortress with nukes, and is surrounded by five countries that hate it. No Islamic nation is strong enough to beat Israel. Skirmishes and shit fighting continues. Sometimes it gets serious. This week it got really serious.
    10. This fight will probably go on forever because of the religious significance of Jerusalem which neither the Israelis or Palestinians will ever give up claim to.
    11. So who’s right and who’s wrong? Probably neither. Probably both. Probably humans are just shit.

    EDIT: I know there’s lots of missing parts here but honestly, the full story would be a semester of university worth of info. I tried to keep this ultra-digestible, without bias or conspiracy or finger pointing.

    Thank you below for the corrections.

    joyjoy ,

    They’ve been fighting over this space for two millenia.

    It’s been on and off and off and off and off and off and off and off and off and on again.

    squaresinger ,

    It’s kinda like if the Italians showed up en masse in England, claiming that they have a right to the place, because the romans once held that area.

    The Jews weren’t the first people in Israel either, not even in biblical times.

    MartianSands ,

    The only thing I’d add is “not particularity nice to the Muslims living there” is putting it mildly.

    Because there’s always tension, Israel takes its security very seriously. Unlike most countries, who put a token effort into security most of the time, Israel really is an armed fortress. That makes it very easy for someone with an itchy trigger finger to shoot someone who didnt deserve shooting. Even with the best will in the world, it would happen from time to time.

    That, of course, makes the Palestinians very angry. An angry population poses more of a threat, and is more likely to do something genuinely aggressive. The Israeli security is thus tightened further, and their soldiers get even itchier trigger fingers and around and around we go.

    It doesn’t take long before everyone involved has a personal grudge for one reason or another, and things can get really vicious.

    Arxir ,
    1. After WW1 and the Ottomans were defeated, it passed onto the Turkish (Islamic).
    1. After WW2 the Turkish were defeated and they lost it to Britain. In the same war the surviving Jews were displaced worldwide and had no country to live, so the League of Nations (U.S, Britain, Canada, France mainly) decided to give Jews a new home and call this new place the State of Israel. They put Israel right in the middle of the British controlled Palestine, which no Islamic nation could object to because they were all defeated in war.

    Turkey never fought in ww2. Turkey was already after ww1 completely stripped of territory in the Levant. There also was no league of nations after ww2 anymore, but the UN was founded. No Arabic nations were defeated in ww2. Some of 4. happened after ww1 not 2. The creation of Israel was heavily objected by the neighboring Arabic nations, see 6-Day-War.

    Art3sian ,
    @Art3sian@lemmy.world avatar

    Ahh, fair. I got some WW1 and WW2 details mixed up. I’ll edit so I’m not feeding false info.

    Montagge ,
    @Montagge@kbin.social avatar

    There's a lot right and a lot wrong in this

    Account5600 , (edited )

    Very comprehensive write up, but i think something a lot of answers miss out on is…well, who was there before the romans? The romans called the area Judaea…land of the Jews. Before the Romans the Seleucid Empire had to deal with several uprisings led by…the Jews (the maccabean revolt). Its not enirely accurate id say to say the jews just materialised in the region in the 1950s…

    Apepollo11 ,

    The romans called the area Judaea…land of the Jews.

    Just a quick correction here. Judaea is actually named after Judah, son of Jacob.

    The word ‘Jew’ comes from the place name Judaea, not the other way around.

    Account5600 ,

    Ooh i didnt know that TIL

    volvoxvsmarla ,

    Thank you for recognizing that this stuff is not going on for a century or two, not even for centuries, but for millenia. The conflicts in the mesopotamian area are probably the oldest in the world. Reducing it to what happened after or shortly before WWII is like telling the history of the world/the universe starting from when homo sapiens came into place.

    Trying to figure out who this land belongs to seems futile. How many great grandfather generations do you have to go back to make this part of soil “yours”? Is 10 enough? 15? 20? Imagine your family lived in this part of the region since 1000 AD just for someone to come and say they’ve been here since 900 AD so you are technically a foreign invader and don’t belong there. Give back your house.

    I sometimes wonder if they go back further than the religions the conflict is supposedly based on. I mean, tribal conflicts have always been a thing, right?

    chicken , to fediverse in Is lemmy.ml turn into authoritarian?

    Coming from Reddit, the very existence of this thread is a breath of fresh air. That there are mod logs at all to be able to document this, that there is a place where it can be posted that is not under control of the mods being criticized, is an enormous improvement over an unaccountable centralized platform.

    JonEFive ,

    The other beautiful thing is that if you aren’t satisfied with the behavior of mods and admin on one instance, there are literally hundreds of others to choose from. You aren’t stuck dealing with bad actors if you want to participate. And if moderation of a particular community upsets the users, they are free to move to or create a similar community on a different instance.

    The major downside of this is that it’s going to create echo chambers, but that’s unavoidable. It’s not like this is a new problem. Communities that reject outside ideas outright have existed long before the internet.

    d3Xt3r , (edited ) to nostupidquestions in Why don't laptops have proper low power states where useful stuff like downloads can run during sleep/with the lid closed?

    Why don’t laptops have proper low power states

    Actually, they do, it’s called the “S0” low power state, and it’s part of the ACPI standard. Microsoft calls this “Modern Standby” in Windows (and “suspend to idle” in Linux) , and it’s pitched to do exactly what you’ve described.

    The only problem is, the implementation sucks. Most users actually hate the S0 state because it consumes so much power - on some laptops, even the fans may continue to run on S0, and your laptop may overheat if you’ve closed the lid and chucked it in a bag, and it’s in the S0 state.

    Also, because Microsoft and Intel have been pushing this so much, the “standby” mode now defaults to S0 instead of S3 (which is full suspend-to-RAM). So many users actually actively seek to disable S0 and go back to proper S3 standby, via registry hacks etc.

    So why is S0 so bad? Part of this is due to the limitations, long history and the variable nature of the x86 platform. All the power-saving stuff was implemented as an after-thought - both at the hardware and software levels. Whereas ARM, at least the modern ARM ecosystem, was developed with mobile usage and power saving from ground up. An x86 PC is also made up of components from disjointed manufacturers, and we need all those components to implement the same standards so that it all works well as expected. So for instance, if a particular component isn’t capable of entering a low-power or active standby state, then it won’t - and you can’t do much about that, unless you’re Apple and have a tight control over the ecosystem.

    The second half of the problem comes with the software. All applications must be modern standby / S0 aware, if not, one of two things will happen: that app will keep the system awake, or the app will get suspended by the Desktop Activity Moderator (DAM). Either way, the app must be capable of running in the DRIPS phase (deepest idle runtime platform state), which rules out most Win32 apps (basically almost every app that’s not on the Microsoft Store).

    Finally, the reality is that most PC users don’t care about modern standby regardless - and why should they, when they’ve all got smartphones, which handles notifications well? Also, hardly anyone does large file downloads these days, and the people who do still download, wouldn’t care about doing it while on battery (and if they do, they can take manual actions to lower the power consumption, such as switching to a power saving plan and turning off the display etc).

    Ultimately, most people would expect a laptop to go into a fully suspended state when the lid so closed and they’re on battery, because if they’re on battery the #1 concern for them would be the battery life. So most people actively seek to disable S0 and see it as a hindrance.

    MrFlamey OP ,

    Thanks for the excellent response.

    I wonder if Valve will try to implement it in Steam OS for the Steam Deck’s successor, as a lot of people complained about the lack of downloading while asleep after the Deck was launched. It would still need cooperation in hardware I assume, but they were able to get resuming games working, so it doesn’t seem like an insurmountable problem if there is enough desire from both gamers and Valve.

    Vash63 ,

    I don’t think this would need to wait for a successor. The problems are software, not hardware. They would need to have games and SteamUI get suspended but leave other processes running, might be tricky and prone to bugs.

    NeoNachtwaechter ,

    The problems are software, not hardware.

    Of course hardware is part of the problem too.

    PC architecture does not allow, for example, that the network interface may feed any data directly to the harddisk. Every bit and byte must be input to the CPU and then output from there.

    Otherwise we could allow the CPU some real good sleep while other devices remain a little active.

    bigdog_00 ,

    Isn’t this the idea of having a chipset (Northbridge/Southbridge) on the board, to handle some of these IO tasks?

    Also, I recently saw the Cathode Ray Dude video on Dell’s Brain Slug, where down basically hijacked the system with a low-power ARM SBC. I almost wonder if something like this would be possible, it would obviously require a revision but it would theoretically allow for suspended downloads, invite notifications, etc. It would also be fairly expensive and complex though

    NeoNachtwaechter ,

    Isn’t this the idea of having a chipset (Northbridge/Southbridge) on the board, to handle some of these IO tasks?

    Well, not in the way we are talking here. The bridges work under the CPU’s direct commands. When the CPU goes to sleep, they have nothing to do either.

    Maybe a PC’s CPU can do some short time limited sleep like microcontrollers do, and maybe that would be useful for such scenario’s. But even then the main problem remains that the CPU wants to be in control of everything.

    MoonManKipper ,

    Very informative- thank you

    fiat_lux ,

    Thankyou for answering some historical mysteries for me. It has always irritated me that I didn't know why programs only sometimes drained battery while asleep - but it wasn't always like that, and I couldn't find a pattern in what programs affected it, and I didn't know why a Linux dual-boot on the same drive didn't cause the same issue. The backstory of this makes a whole lot of experiences make sense now.

    What is involved in an app being S0 aware and running on DRIPS? Is this a badly-educated-developers-requiring-permanent-network-connections issue or a Microsoft-proprietary-certificate-bullshit thing or something completely different? I'm mostly curious for if I ever dive into desktop application development what performance optimisations I should be keeping in the back of my mind.

    d3Xt3r ,

    I haven’t developed a desktop app in ages so I’m probably not the best person to ask this, but my understanding is that if you develop a modern UWP app, then it’s automatically S0 aware, but you can also make use of WinRT APIs to execute background tasks during modern standby. The user can also choose whether or not to allow this activity.

    I’m not sure if the WinRT APIs can be called from a regular Win32 app though. For Win32 apps, as far as I’m aware, they should get suspended by the DAM automatically (and background services may get throttled), but Windows may choose to unsuspend/unthrottle these apps if it thinks some critical activities are happening. I never looked into what it deems as a “critical activity”. Personally though I always disable S0 so that my laptop suspends as you’d expect it to.

    Bottomline is, if you’re making a UWP app it should all just automatically work, maybe look into the WinRT APIs, and if you’re making a Win32 app you need to look more into the DAM. There’s some info on that here: learn.microsoft.com/…/desktop-activity-moderator

    fiat_lux ,

    Thanks so much, this is extremely helpful. I've been separate from the entire Windows ecosystem for a long while, so a high level overview like this is perfect. I now have all the acronyms and names I need to research further instead of trying to figure out what acronym is responsible for what, which is always the most tedious part.

    qupada ,

    and the people who do still download, wouldn’t care about doing it while on battery

    Very much this; I've got a whole army of machines I can SSH into to launch a long-running download, which frequently additionaly cuts out a 2nd step of copying the file to where it needs to be after downloading it (a action which would normally cause additional battery usage on the laptop).

    And I thoroughly agree with you; I want the laptop to go to S3 sleep immediately when I shut the lid, and then pull it out of my bag a hours later with only a couple of percent of the battery consumed in the interim.

    shellsharks , to nostupidquestions in What is the worst US state to live in generally?
    @shellsharks@infosec.pub avatar

    Every time ive seen an article about worst state it’s always Mississippi :-/. But these days thanks to awful leadership Florida and Texas are making a case for the crown.

    Sharpiemarker ,

    You’re not wrong.

    Mississippi is typically ranked very low due to a history of poor public education standards as well as being a battleground for civil rights. Not much has changed.

    Fortunately for Mississippi, Florida man is working overtime towards the enshitifcation of their own education system.

    There’s absolutely a direct correlation between education, human rights, and a higher standard of living.

    BurntPunk ,

    Growing up in Alabama we used to joke that the unofficial AL state motto is “Well, at least we ain’t Mississippi” and Mississippi’s motto is “Well, at least we ain’t Missis…AW DAMMIT”

    philoneous ,

    Ditto for Louisiana, it was always “well at least we aren’t Mississippi “.

    TenderfootGungi ,

    Louisiana has the highest violent crime rate. It is the last state I would live in.

    Acronymesis ,
    @Acronymesis@lemmy.world avatar

    According to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program, the 5 most hazardous states in the U.S. in 2023 are:

    Louisiana: Overall Crime Rate of 537.5/100,000 people, making it the most dangerous.

    Mississippi: Overall Crime Rate of 413.2/100,000 people.

    Alaska: Despite a low population, a high Overall Crimes Rate of 386.2/100,000 people.

    Arkansas: Overall Crime Rate of 385.9/100,000 people.

    New Mexico: Overall Crime Rate of 369.5/100,000 people.(More info about this)

    You ain’t kiddin!

    Source

    jscummy ,

    I’ve also heard “Thank God for Mississippi” as a slogan for any of the underperformer states

    uncle_bagel ,

    Typically what happens when you rank 51st in most quality of life stats (which usually include DC alongside all 50 states).

    captainlezbian ,

    Mississippi also just has really bad infrastructure. Like water is a concern in places there

    VanillaGorilla ,

    It's a race to the bottom, and Florida isn't here for the second place!

    (Or participation trophy? I can't decide what fits better)

    Deestan , to nostupidquestions in Why do hacked channels on youtube always post Tesla/SpaceX stuff?

    If I were a scammer, I’d want to attract marks who are A) greedy, B) gullible and C) think they are smart.

    I’d go for Elon’s fans yeah.

    dactylotheca , (edited )
    @dactylotheca@suppo.fi avatar

    This is absolutely it.

    No, they don’t want people who hate Elon like another commenter suggested – the idea that a scammer would think that the people who are most likely to fall for their Elon crypto scam are the haters and not the people who are uncontrollably guzzling his cum is frankly bizarre.

    ByteOnBikes ,

    I mean this is how a lot of spam emails worked.

    Back then, it was scammers telling marks that Bill Gates can help them get rich off the internet.

    uhN0id ,

    Imagine how bad it’ll get with generative AI only getting better. Think about someone like Linus Tech Tips getting hacked and an AI video getting uploaded of him telling his users to go sign up for a chance to win some $5000 PC “we’re giving 500 away!” and that site which won’t even have to look like anything other than “someMadeUpBrand.com/giveaway/linus”. It’s crazy to even think about how many people would fall for that shit. If the AI is good enough I might fall for it and I’m pretty damn good at catching it (for now).

    j4k3 , (edited )
    @j4k3@lemmy.world avatar

    Nope. You jack an edited video that is ready to upload. Then, only insert a blip of an easter egg hinting at some soon to happen contest.

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