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kbin.life

dgmib , to nostupidquestions in What happens of you use the gas from the exhaust pipe to inflate a tire?

The exhaust from a typical ICE wouldn’t have enough pressure to inflate a tire, so you’d need a compressor. Of course if you had a compressor you’d just use clean air.

If for some reason you used a compressor to compress exhaust gases to fill a tire, it would mostly be the same as filling with air at first.

Exhaust gas is mostly a mix of carbon dioxide and and water vapour, with small amounts of oil residue, and other organic compounds. The water vapour will condense as it cools likely leaving some liquid water in the tire, which won’t cause immediate issues but will cause vibrations which will accelerate wear not just on the tire but possibly the entire suspension.

The organic compounds will cause the rubber to break down over time and the tire will wear out sooner.

Steve ,

Works pretty good to fill up an air mattress, or an airbag offroad jack

Ilovethebomb ,

Much lower pressure, of course.

wilberfan , to youshouldknow in YSK that if your turn signal is blinking unusually fast (like 3 or more times a second), it generally means you have a bulb out.
@wilberfan@lemmy.world avatar

Many seem to have the attitude that if you never use them, the bulbs will never burn out. Problem solved.

Brkdncr ,

How is your BMW these days?

folkrav ,

Here it’s the pickup trucks

acockworkorange ,

Here’s the EVERY FUCKING ONE. Seriously what’s wrong with you people? It’s bad enough that cars in the US aren’t forced to use amber turn signals, but I guess it doesn’t matter here because no one ever touches the damn blinkers!

can ,

What do they have if not amber turn signals?

acockworkorange ,

Oh boy, do I have a surprise for you. Their cars blink the brake lights. You read that right. Bonus video

elbarto777 ,

Interesting. I never thought the turn signals are amber by mandate in other places.

dubyakay ,

It’s not by mandate. It’s a bad fad that is unregulated. Front blinkers are still amber.

Edit: I misread your comment.

acockworkorange ,

I can’t speak for everywhere, but in Brazil the emitted light must be amber by law. Some after market parts and some auto makers get creative and manage to put a red mask on it that somehow still lets amber light through. But it’s rare.

Emerald ,

Let’s go technology connections

CeruleanRuin ,

Except when they’re already merging in front of you. It’s like thanks bud, glad you thought to use the signal when two of your wheels were already over the line cutting me off. Cool cool cool.

acockworkorange ,

I am willing to cut some slack in a “oh shit, forgot the blinker this one time!” spirit. But yeah, using means using it properly. Enough in advance that other cars can react and don’t forget the fucking thing on forever. How do people not get annoyed by the clicks?

baseless_discourse , (edited )

Imagine BMW and Tesla collaborate on a pickup truck, comes with a free box of bud light.

jvrava9 ,
@jvrava9@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Nissa Altima, BMD and partiay Audi drivers be like

thoughtorgan ,

Q5 and a4 drivers use signals. If it’s an S model they do not 😂

Davel23 , to gaming in Rant: Valve's new Steam Deck screws speak volumes about their ethos.

Valve is possibly the closest thing to a non-evil company in the world today.

ivanafterall ,
@ivanafterall@kbin.social avatar

This is why Gabe is my billionaire of choice in the forthcoming billionaire mercenary wars.

bear ,

When the corporation wars start over the remaining arable land and drinkable water, I’ll be joining the Steam Corps

andrew ,
@andrew@lemmy.stuart.fun avatar

Maybe this is going to be the real Half Life 3. You thought it was scary in VR? Get ready for IRL.

picnicolas , (edited )

I had to stop playing Half Life Alyx when it got to the dark flashlight bit with zombies jumping out at you. Nearly gave me a heart attack. Definitely couldn’t handle it IRL. edit: autocorrect

andrew ,
@andrew@lemmy.stuart.fun avatar

Yeah I definitely took breaks and actually just never went back after a certain point. Not because it was too intense directly, but one of my breaks, I just never went back.

picnicolas ,

Same. I was planning to but never did and that was years ago. Hoping to set up the old vive again soon.

HeartyBeast ,
@HeartyBeast@kbin.social avatar

Yeh, you say that. But you know they finished Half Life 4 about 2 years ago and are holding it back on purpose

YMS ,
@YMS@kbin.social avatar

Mostly because they have to wait for Half-Life 3 in order not to confuse the customers.

HeartyBeast ,
@HeartyBeast@kbin.social avatar

That’s been in the warehouse for 10 years.

All_Your_Base ,
@All_Your_Base@feddit.cl avatar

One of the benefits of not going public, I guess

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

But it only works as long as the replacement for Gabe Newell has the exact same ethos about the business. Changing hands always risks changing how things function at a company. Unless Newell has been practically grooming a successor for years, it’s very likely that a replacement will want to “shake things up.”

When Newell retires/passes, things will change. Time will tell if it will be for the better or the worse.

Fubarberry ,
@Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz avatar

Unless Newell has been practically grooming a successor for years

Supposedly he’s doing this with his son. Only time will tell though.

theangriestbird ,

Great, the Kendall Roy of Valve

antrosapien ,

How much time do we have?

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Well he’s 61, and the average life expectancy for males in the US is 73ish. He is well-to-do, so he likely has better access to healthcare than most, meaning he will be one of those who lives past 73. I’d suspect we have twenty years at best, but more likely about 10 years if he retires at a “reasonable” age.

Sentau ,

Unfortunately gabe is also overweight and hence has the health risks associated with being overweight. So him only living till the average age has a higher possibility.

Phen ,

Not exactly. Of course Gabe could be replaced by some idiot who fucks everything up, but if Valve doesn’t become publicly traded it will continue to be in the best interest of whoever ends up owning it to continue doing things this way. Gabe doesn’t do good things just because. He does it because happy customers means more money in the long run.

Publicly traded companies on the other hand need to extract as much money as quickly as possible and have no regards to what will happen to it a few months later. So even if Gabe dies, all Valve needs is a leader interested in what’s best for itself.

erwan ,

Private companies owned by institutional investors are no better.

The real difference is the the founder still own the company.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

When GabeN dies, shit gonna hit the fan.

Davel23 ,

It's my understanding that Gabe's son is being prepped to take over when the time comes. Hopefully he shares his father's values.

SnotFlickerman , (edited )
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Dear God. Because Nepotism has worked out so well so many times in the past. /s

Just shut down the company now, Gabe.

From an interview with his son:

“If it’s one thing I’d like to see Valve do, it’s push it with more their ideas,” he said. "The people there are the smartest I’ve ever met, the hardest working, the most inspiring. The culture at Valve is a very good one but they’ve kind of found this point where they’re a working machine. And that’s good, but I think they should reach out and do something scary. Do something that they don’t know what the outcome is going to be.

They make incredibly smart decisions, but sometimes you have to do something stupid. Sometimes you have to have a stupid crazy idea and say ‘fuck it’, go with it. Valve has a mindbogglingly enormous amount of resources at their back, and I hope they find the courage to throw it at something new. I want to see them push the envelope again.”

Yeah this chucklefuck is going to break shit day one, guaranteed.

Cavemanfreak ,

Eh, it sounds more like he wants then to go back to the roots and developer a groundbreaking game, like Portal, or HL2, again. Which doesn’t sound like a bad thing. To do something groundbreaking it probably helps if you dare to do something that is scary.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

They literally already did that with the SteamDeck, it’s absolutely groundbreaking. They created a whole new product category, but it took years of planning and patience and watching the market. It happened with prototypes like the Steam Controller, the Steam Link, and the original vision for Steam Boxes, as well as the nearly decade of work they’ve done on Proton to get Windows games to run well in Linux. It didn’t happen with a “stupid crazy idea” that they said “fuck it, go with it.” It started with a smart idea, well executed, over a long period of time, with many bumps in the road on the way to success.

Steam Boxes were originally announced in 2012, this is the result of a full decade of work.

averyminya ,

Unrelated: do you know a hot saucerman or are there 4 fans of this random show-cast?

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Everyone loves Scotty Auks, doncha know?

argv_minus_one ,
@argv_minus_one@mstdn.party avatar

@SnotFlickerman @Cavemanfreak

And one hell of a lot of work, too! Reimplementing the Windows APIs that Wine didn't already have, and then optimizing those implementations enough to be not only sufficient for some of the most performance-sensitive software under the sun but faster than actual Windows, is no small feat.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I wonder how much of Newell’s past at Microsoft helped with that? He helped produce the first three versions of Windows.

While Windows works wildly differently these days and the last one he worked on was Windows 3.0 (maybe 3.1?) and a massive amount of stuff has changed in how Operating Systems work since then.

However, I do wonder if his familiarity with the old systems helped at all.

Cavemanfreak ,

Yeah, you are correct, and that’s why I think he was talking about games specifically. That’s a grade A assumption from me though (and a bit of hopium?)

tricoro ,

People here are so scared of bad things happening that they can’t even imagine that something good might happen.

Crotaro , (edited )

So SteamDeck, Valve Index and pushing back against the short-term money maker that was NFTs until half a year or so, among other things, aren’t scary enough projects when you’re “just” a game developer and distributor?

K0W4LSK1 ,

Hope is the word that scares me here

lea ,

I love their approach to Hardware and Linux but have we collectively forgotten that Valve had a huge part in pushing loot boxes and underage gambling? Far from being the least evil company, but still a net win for consumers and I appreciate that they exist.

Plume ,

And you wanna know why? :)

divulgâcheIt’s because they’re not public. So investors can’t ruin everything like they always do.

megopie ,

More specifically “private equity” investors who are gradually looting the US economy.

cmnybo , to linux in Did we kill Linux's killer feature?

There has always been the option of installing software from source. The package manager won’t update anything installed from source.

You don’t have to use Flatpak, Snap or AppImage if you don’t want to. If you use the package manager to install everything, it will update everything.

BCsven ,

Except doesn’t ubumtu now force a snap on you even if you try installing a package app?

elbarto777 ,

The solution is to use any of the other hundreds of readily available distributions.

BCsven ,

Exactly. I dont have flatpak or snap integration installed so packages are packages. I think it was Ubuntu being delivered with snap as part of the OS. As well as CLI ads.

aperson ,

Yes. Some packages are just meta packages for their snap versions.

killeronthecorner ,
@killeronthecorner@lemmy.world avatar

I’m confused by this. If I run apt install, am I getting stuff from flatpak?

ItsDedo ,

Yes and no, you’re getting stuff form Snap, not flatpak

killeronthecorner ,
@killeronthecorner@lemmy.world avatar

Even when I’m running apt directly? That seems insane.

ItsDedo ,

Yep, that’s why some people are so upset about it. I guess there’s a config to disable it but I wouldn’t know, I use Arch btw

BCsven ,

You have to check your distros info, but from popular Linux podcasts they were claiming certain distros used the apt get but once the package manager saw what you want it would throw in a snap or flatpak of the same. Not all distros. I think Ubuntu was one.

mfat OP ,

If I use ubuntu I’m somehow forced to use them.

Even on Fedora the average user is presented with many flatpak results when they use the GUI software manager. Not everyone is technically adept enough to check the origin of the app. So it’s kind of being forced on users.

akhial ,
@akhial@lemmy.world avatar

If you use the Fedora software manager it updates everything at once? It even updates BIOS firmware.

ulu_mulu ,

If I use ubuntu I’m somehow forced to use them.

Yes, that’s why I stopped using it years ago (among other reasons).

Users are not out of options, they don’t need to check the origin of the apps themselves, it’s enough to ask other users what distros don’t do the things they don’t like and use those.

coolmojo ,

You can use bauh. it is a graphical app manager which can Install and update appimage, deb, flatpak, snap and web apps. github.com/vinifmor/bauh

barrett9h ,

so ditch this nonsense and use a better distro?

REdOG ,
@REdOG@lemmy.world avatar

The package manager won’t update anything installed from source.

emerge lols

msage ,

Portage: Am I a joke to you?

InfiniWheel , to asklemmy in Is ADHD over diagnosed?

Self diagnosed? Definitely

Actually, properly diagnosed? Probably underdiagnosed actually. Friend of mine had to go through a lot of pricey hoops just to get tested in a reputable place.

blindbunny ,

This feels like the correct answer.

The amount of people I go on a date with and tell them I’m ADHD and they follow with, “me too” when they are obviously not, is crushing. I’m glad my learning disability is fun to cosplay for you. The juxtaposition of people I meet in wild and tell them I’m ADHD and they are like, “Oh what’s that like?” as they’re looking for the lost keys in their left hand or leg stemming, feels… curious.

cubedsteaks ,

god that sucks to hear.

I’m alarmed at the amount of people I met, mostly women, who are like upset when I tell them I’m not autistic. It’s like they want me to be or something. They insisted I needed to get tested to be sure.

Like what is with these people wanting this to be common and wanting to get people join in like its a club? It’s a genetic trait. You either have it or you don’t I thought.

Blake ,

If multiple people seem surprised that you’re not autistic and encourage you to seek diagnosis, I dunno, maybe there’s something there? Are you a woman yourself?

cubedsteaks ,

Well I had the luxury of dating a psychologist who specializes in diagnoses and her brother is autistic - so she is very aware of autism and how it works and what it looks like in different people.

When I told her that random autistic girls from my comm were making this assumption she gave me the biggest eye roll and a laugh. Because duh, I’m not autistic.

xkforce ,

Other people see you differently than you see yourself. And you wouldn’t necessarily realize you were part of the autism tribe because as far as you were concerned, everyone is in the same tribe as you. You wouldn’t really know what it was like to experience things with a different tribe’s mental wiring. Just like I didn’t really figure out that my brain literally worked differently than 95+% of the population (ADHD) until I was very thoroughly an adult.

cubedsteaks ,

because as far as you were concerned, everyone is in the same tribe as you

I definitely don’t think that way. I’m aware that I am different from other people.

Reposting from my other comment:

Well I had the luxury of dating a psychologist who specializes in diagnoses and her brother is autistic - so she is very aware of autism and how it works and what it looks like in different people.

She confirmed I’m not autistic and thought it was hilarious that anyone would assume that about me. She’s known me for years and she has experience in that field. She knows better than just randoms at a meet up group would.

xkforce ,

If I could snap my fingers and not have ADHD I’d do it. People think ADHD is just being scatterbrained and hyperactive and think its at best quirky and at worst annoying but a lot of the hallmarks of ADHD cause a lot of suffering just existing in society. eg. executive dysfunction/impulsivity, emotion dysregulation (seemingly feels like your emotions are harder to control which is part of the rejection sensitivity), difficulty building and maintaining relationships, difficulty holding jobs, being unable to quiet your thoughts late at night (80% of us have insomnia/delayed sleep patterns to one extent or another) and being very prone to boredom that can often feel almost physically painful. And of course, society treats you as if your personality is shit because what people see is someone forgetting things, making bad snap decisions and generally being annoying. So a lot of us dont think highly of ourselves because thats often how we are conditioned. To think we are lazy, uncaring, annoying and thoughtless/impulsive.

Blake ,

I’ve also got ADHD, so I understand the struggle. But personally I think ADHD has a lot of upsides as well. People with ADHD are often really fun to be around, they have often really different perspectives on the world and see things that other people don’t, and tend to take everything in their stride. ADHD people in my experience are better at out-of-the-box thinking, handling stressful and chaotic situations, and extremely capable when they’re interested in something.

The reason that ADHD feels debilitating is because capitalist society forces us to conform with neurotypical behaviour, because conformity is more important than outcomes. If ADHD people were allowed to work their to own schedules, and allowed to focus mainly on tasks which interest them and offload things that they find boring/tedious, it would go a long way towards getting the best out of people with ADHD. If it’s handled well, they can easily outperform neurotypical coworkers, it’s just very much about harnessing the chaotic energy that we have.

xkforce , (edited )

ADHD feels debilitating because there are things you have to be able to do to function in any society that ADHD makes more difficult than it is for everyone else. I have to remember to take medication that keeps me alive. I have to put my contacts in or I am metaphorically blind as a bat and it feels a lot better to actually be able to see things. I have to interact with other people in an acceptable manner i.e not blurting out the first intrusive thought that comes to mind. I have to eat and drink when I should. Yeah I literally forget to do that a lot because I am engrossed in some activity or another. I have to go to sleep at a normal hour or I wake up feeling like shit because my circadian rhythm is fucked up. There are just some things you will never ever avoid doing even in a luxury space communist utopia.

And while there are some advantages to ADHD like creativity, hyperfocus and being less likely to die of obesity related diseases due to hyperactivity, it is not fucking worth all of the other stuff that caused me to want to be tested for it. Not because society forces normality on me but because I want to do a lot of stuff without having a wrestling match with my own brain.

My wants and needs are important to me and those wants and needs are often incompatible with the ADHD tribe that I was born into.

Blake ,

I’m not trying to say that ADHD isn’t a disability, I’m saying that the worst parts of it come from society being intolerant of our needs. You’re not lazy or selfish, you’re doing the best you can <3

BestBouclettes ,

It’s definitely under diagnosed. 5% of the world population is thought to have ADHD. I know plenty of people around me that show serious signs of it and they have no idea. Granted I’m not a psychiatrist, but I live with an ADHD person and the similarities are striking.

Xenos ,

If social media is to be believed, 95% of us have it

zero_spelled_with_an_ecks ,

Social media is not to be believed. About anything.

andrew ,
@andrew@lemmy.stuart.fun avatar

I do believe that’s a paradoxical statement considering where you made it.

zero_spelled_with_an_ecks ,

That’s the joke.

BestBouclettes , (edited )

Absolutely not, the tricky thing about ADHD is that it’s mostly lots of small things that everyone has or does. (Bad short term memory, executive dysfunction, rejection sensitivity, inattention, difficulty to focus, etc). People with ADHD have a lot of them all at once and that’s the problem. It’s a spectrum with a threshold of issues to have at once to be considered ADHD. That’s why it’s not easy to diagnose, it can vary wildly from person to person.

Franzia ,

Something I’ve noticed hanging out in online communities is the selection bias. Sometimes everybody in a community really does have the same tendencies and characteristics.

JackbyDev ,

It also doesn’t help that many folks use Adderall and other ADHD meds recreationally.

JTskulk , to nostupidquestions in Porn is harder to access

Bro if you’re having a hard time finding porn on the Internet, the problem is you!

beefcat , to technology in Nvidia will stop price gouging you for their cards and features when you stop buying them.
@beefcat@beehaw.org avatar

People did stop buying them. Their consumer GPU shipments are the lowest they’ve been in over a decade.

But consumer habits aren’t the reason for the high prices. It’s the exploding AI market. Nvidia makes even higher margins on chips they allocate to parts for machine learning in data centers. As it is, they can’t make enough chips to fill the demand for AI.

puppy , to asklemmy in What is an extremely dangerous thing that we use daily?
PipedLinkBot ,

Here is an alternative Piped link(s): piped.video/jN7mSXMruEo

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.

legion02 ,

Also garage doors for that matter. That spring can be lethal when it breaks.

rho50 ,

Surprised I had to scroll this far down to see this!

LeateWonceslace , to asklemmy in What is an item below 100 bucks that everyone should own?

3 dozen pairs of identical socks. Mine are black crew cut. I’ll wear them until the last few pairs are worn through and I’ll never have a sock without a mate.

theangryseal ,

This is how I roll.

I buy that merino wool though so you sure as shit aren’t getting it for under 100.

Still, all of the problems I had with my feet before the switch are gone.

IonAddis ,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

You can still get wool blend from Costco.

theangryseal ,

Welcome to Costco. I love you.

For real though I get that 90% merino blend and I’m happy with it. I haven’t found anywhere cheaper. It’s about the same everywhere you look.

Everyone recommends washing them a lot less than regular socks but i just don’t have it i me so I buy a few dozen pairs. I only skip putting on a clean pair if I haven’t had a shower, and that’s rare. It’s usually the first thing I do every day.

HidingUnderHats ,
@HidingUnderHats@lemmy.world avatar

You do you. I subscribe to the “variety is the spice of life” mindset. I need different styles for different use cases and different colors just for fun.

LeateWonceslace ,

See, I do that with my shirts because shirts, and it makes sense. The main reason I don’t do that with socks is because they’re paired items.

kameecoding ,

don’t cheap out on things that separate you from the ground, socks/shoes, tires, bed, work chair

xilliah ,

You’ve got life figured out

linearchaos , to nostupidquestions in Why don't schools simulate a typical 9 to 5 work week for students and remove homework entirely?
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

There are compelling reasons send them 9-5

There are also compelling reasons not to

  1. Teachers spend a non-trivial amount of time post class working on previous assignments, future assignments, setting up tests coordinating with other teachers and staff. If they start all this at 5, they’re stuck at the office until very late.
  2. Busses/kids on the road before rush hour
  3. Extra-curricular activities are better off earlier than later, don’t want clubs running into diner time.
  4. better chance of getting home before dark in winter at Northern latitudes
PatFussy ,

What if all the honework in the future is done online and multiple choice… if its a written asignment it can be graded by an AI. Bada bing teachers have not much more to complain about. If you are a teacher and are still complaining about having to grade homework, its probably because your administration is stuck in 2007.

seang96 ,

AI isn’t good enough to grade written responses. If your referring to chat gtp and the like, they meant to be factual. Also online multiple choice homework can suck awfully depending on the course; physics comes to mind in this scenario since it requires an answer with precision and matching units to mark the homework as correct and that can make it really difficult to resolve and even if the teacher sets it up for partial credit if you get it right after attempts, if you can’t figure it out it is a 0. That physics homeaork destroyed and consumed my entire life lol

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

A better argument would be, is homework worth it? Once AI has significantly advanced to be trustworthy enough to grade, it will be trustworthy enough to do the homework.

Want to be forward facing? How long before AI replaces teachers? What if classes were solely presented as video feeds. At any point you can raise your hand, It would stop the video feed. You ask the AI question. It formulates a response and then tests you to make sure that you understand the answer before moving on.

Imagine getting the equivalent of one-on-one tutoring in every subject.

What if instead of milestone tests the AI just follows along and makes sure you understand what’s going on? What if the next day it does a quick recap on the previous days lesson and asks you a couple of questions to make sure you get it?

What happens when each individual learns at their own pace and goes as fast or as slow as they need to. What happens when you can just walk away from a lesson and come back later?

Edit: I just cleaned up some text from voice dictation.

croxis ,
@croxis@kbin.social avatar

There are a couple of flaws with this. I spend a great deal of time structuring lessons to get students working with each other. I have met, and taught, too many people who have said that the only reason they stuck out through high school was the relationships they developed with thier peers and staff. We've seen what happens when students only do solo computer work, and it isn't pretty.

linearchaos ,
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

There’s no requirement to be socially ostracized. You can still have groups, clubs, online and offline connections.

I suspect most students will likely find they have more spare/social time. When they can learn at their own pace with individual attention.

You may find that less kids feel like they are toughing it out, under these scenarios.

croxis ,
@croxis@kbin.social avatar

I use the Modern Classroom Model for my classroom for the last couple of years which is a self-paced system. In 2020 during our zoom school year I was also fully self paced. Here are a few things I've found.

A handful of students will shut down with self-paced learning. They have low self-efficacy and are failure avoidant.
Another handful of students will hand off their chromebook to "the smart kid" in a different class and have them take the mastery checks for them. They will end up bombing the mastery assessment, but teenagers are not known for their executive function.
A different handful have limited capacity for additional cognitive load. It is hard to do school when you don't know where you are sleeping that night or some other chronic trauma. They thrive when being told explicitly what to do, how to do it.
Yet another handful will fly through the curriculum because they long ago figured out the game of school. Yet when I check in and ask deep, meaningful questions to see if they really understand the topic, they can't.

Young gen Z and gen alpha really need to work on social skills and work ethic. Solo-self-paced experiences don't cover it.

Khotetsu ,

I disagree on the work ethic point, but that could be its own whole rant about how the concept of “work ethic” is fundamentally flawed in a society where many jobs simply aren’t fulfilling and are only done for the carrot on a stick of being able to buy food and a roof over your head.

But on everything else, I wholeheartedly agree as somebody who came to hate the school system but loves to learn. It’s not just a Gen Z and younger issue, though I imagine they have it even worse considering the pandemic. I think it’s a flaw in how the school system is designed. School focuses on solo work almost to the exclusion of collaboration, and life just doesn’t work that way. Society is a collaborative effort, and even working at a cubicle farm on a solo project, it’s not like you can’t talk to your fellow workers to help solve problems. Plus, the pass or fail mechanism of the grading system ends up punishing mistakes and either creates risk aversion outright, kids who don’t bother because they’ve failed so many times that they believe it’s not worth even trying, or those kids who do well without trying until they get to later grades and have no study habits, who then learn that if they’re not instantly good at something, then it’s not worth putting effort into because they don’t know how to be bad at something long enough to get good.

I’m certainly no teacher, but I think the issue is that the foundational framework of our current school system was designed to create workers who could be expected to work on a factory line. People who could be given a short and simple list of repetitive tasks to follow, without the need for collaboration or anything more mentally demanding. Add in that many school subjects (at least when I was in school 15-20 years ago) lack any real-world context to their purpose, just “learn this because you have to,” and I’m not surprised that kids also have no drive to dig deeper than a surface level understanding. I remember the mentality of “just remember it long enough to do the test, and then dump it for the next set of things you have to learn.” It got me through high school.

Blackmist ,

AI doesn’t know what it doesn’t know, let alone what somebody else doesn’t know.

“Understanding” is just something that AI can’t do. It doesn’t know what your words mean, or what it’s own word mean.

Stovetop ,

The advantage of curriculum is that you could feed it a textbook or a dozen and have that be the only information it knows. It doesn’t need to know everything, just the specific criteria that a government sets as baseline knowledge for specific tiers.

The science will improve with time.

Peruvian_Skies ,
@Peruvian_Skies@kbin.social avatar

AI is nowhere near good enough to be trusted with grading written assignments, and won't be for a very long time.

Hogger85b ,

God I hope not I can't stand ai grading an answer can be partially right or even wrong but cause interesting discussion from a human while badly implemented AI (which is what schools likily would have access to) will just give a percentage failure rate and move on.

thebestaquaman ,

Better chance of getting home before dark in winter at Northern latitudes.

Cries in living at 62^o^ north

Stovetop ,

For #4, with current school hours, you either go to school in darkness or you go home in darkness. That’s just reality for those who live further north.

linearchaos ,
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

This is true, I would argue that it’s relatively better have the darkness be early in the morning less mischief happens.

dangblingus ,

In the winter, even at the most southern point (Windsor, ON) Canada gets dark around 4pm.

Classy ,
  1. We shouldn’t be forcing our children to spend the majority of their waking lives chained to a desk doing menial work mixed with some valuable education and instead allow them to actually be kids and be outside doing kid things.

I’m a private teacher and I see so many kids who are like, I am in school from 8-3:30, then from 3:50-5 I’m in softball, then I’m in a study group from 5:30-7. I go to bed at 9.

Kids aren’t allowed to be kids much of the time anymore. Most everything seems to be in the duality of either “Glued to their devices” or “Endless cycle of extracurricular and studying”

linearchaos ,
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

I absolutely refused to do homework back in the day. I had one math teacher that took your median grade and used that as the final grade. I would calculate to the assignment what it took to get an a, and do that much homework between arriving to class and the time she checked homework in.

I would always rush to complete my assignments early in other classes do any homework that I could get done before class change. I always aced my tests.

I think the worst was when the teacher would assign us to read ahead of chapter for the next days lesson. Yeah so you want me to be miserable tonight, and double bored tomorrow.

I also hated that the teachers never communicated. They would unintentionally group-assign hours of workload in non-GT classes.

Ret2libsanity , to maliciouscompliance in Here's all the source code

I stare at Linux source code very often looking for vulnerabilities.

I unironically have printed pages out to sit down with.

The idea of having the whole kernel printed… is… fun. Lol. How would your organize it for reading? Different chapters that are the directories of the kernel code ?

MxM111 ,

Why would they organize it in any way? It was not one of the requirements… so, alphabetically.

EN20 ,

Obviously and we are talking per line and not per file are we?

Llewellyn ,
@Llewellyn@lemmy.ml avatar

Per byte

MxM111 ,

Alphabetically, per bite. It is beautiful.

InfiniteStruggle ,

The first 40000 characters are “a”

a1studmuffin ,
@a1studmuffin@aussie.zone avatar

I’d love to hear more about this - do you do it professionally (for preventative reasons), as a side hobby, or as an attacker for malicious/selfish reasons? No judgement, genuinely curious as it takes a certain personality type to do this kind of work and I find it really interesting.

ngdev ,

I think they just stare at it, hoping the vulnerabilities come to them in a moment of revelation. A Linux Joseph Smith, the kernel playing the part of the Golden Plates.

morgan_423 ,
@morgan_423@lemmy.world avatar

OP said this happened in Utah, so maybe so!

HamBrick ,

The small overlap of my two largest hobbies, programming and making fun of Mormons. Perfect.

Ret2libsanity ,

Professionally

My title is senior vulnerability researcher. Focus on mobile devices. That’s all I can really say without doxing too much

But the Linux kernel is always a juicy target because of the coverage and exploit there gets you.

crbn ,

Neat. Why is Linux kernel relevant for many mobile users? Is iPhone built off of it the same way Mac OS is?

What do you mean by coverage and exploit?

drcobaltjedi ,

MacOS is based of a BSD distrobution of Unix. iOS is a fork of MacOS

crbn ,

Ah ok makes sense

SwingingTheLamp ,

MacOS and iOS have Darwin as their base, which is really a mutt. Apple started with the NeXTSTEP kernel, which was a mix of 4.3BSD and Mach, then folded in some FreeBSD, other open source components, and some in-house code.

It’s Android that uses the Linux kernel as its base, and the millions of phones makes it a juicy target.

crbn ,

Not too surprising that iOS has linux in its DNA, but never realized Android does too. Always assumed it was more windows-based. Good to know.

kbotc ,

iOS doesn’t have any Linux.

FreeBSD is not Linux. Linux is a kernel and Apple uses Mach, a different kernel. They do both share that they’re POSIX, but OS X is actual, factual, UNIX, and Linux has never paid the money to qualify.

crbn ,

My bad I’m conflating bash and Unix. From my end both apple and Linux use bash so they have the same underlying base…but I realize that’s not accurate, and even unix and bash are not synonomous.

Butters ,
@Butters@lemmywinks.com avatar

How different is the FreeBSD kernel from the Linux kernel?

Like in terms of interfaces, if I were to port a device driver, am I just changing some header files and some constants/enums/ifdefs?

Or there’s like entirely different function signatures / APIs?

kbotc ,

I would look at the source of LinuxKPI to get an idea of how different they are.

Butters ,
@Butters@lemmywinks.com avatar

Well of course I could go look at the source code. We had to write a hello world Linux module in college. Was just being lazy and thought some expert might give a quick synopsis.

Though based on your reply, I’m guessing they are more different than I imagined.

waigl ,

OP said it happened around the year 2000. Linux was at maybe 2.4.something back then. The kernel was much smaller then than it is today.

uis ,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

Imagie if they included modern AMD GPU drivers.

johnnyjayjay , to piracy in Windows Activation
Equinox ,

This is the way

ninakuup21 OP ,
@ninakuup21@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks! I’ll check it out tonight

ninakuup21 OP ,
@ninakuup21@lemmy.world avatar

Sorry for the double reply but do you know if this works for every version of Windows 10 or just specific ones?

safesyrup ,

should work on every version. Afaik the activation sequence is the same for all windows 10 versions so i can’t see why it wouldn’t work on some versions

archy ,

Worked on 11, safe to assume works on all 10’s

mikezila ,

I’ve used it on probably 10+ windows systems that I’ve had to refresh/set up for various needs and people. I’ve never had it fail on any flavor of 10/11.

Aux ,

This is the correct answer!

glitchinthematrix ,

Definitely this is the way

dax ,

It’s pretty ironic that this is hosted on a Microsoft owned service. I hope they have a mirror available somewhere

AlecSadler , to programmer_humor in everywhere I go

In my defense, the backend contracts change so often in early development the any just made sense at first…

…and then the delivery date was moved up and we all just had to ship it…

…and then half of us got laid off so now there are no resources to go back and fix it…

…rinse, wash, repeat

count_dongulus ,

Use the unknown type so at least someone might have enough brain cells to validate before casting because squiggles

steuls ,

Its sad how relatable this is

marcos ,

I’d guess the lack of defined backend contracts is caused by the same issue that made you unable to fix those any later.

Anyway, the frontend / backend split is stupid and ridiculous. It’s even worse because both sides usually include tasks that do need to be split up.

bleistift2 ,

In my defense, the backend contracts change so often in early development the any just made sense at first…

Refactorings and changes are the prime reason to use TypeScript. You edit your data objects and get squigglies everywhere shit won’t work anymore. A godsend!

AlecSadler ,

110% agree. But…

One job I worked at wouldn’t let us do this because it created too large of a QA impact (lol). We were only allowed to modify code in the smallest section possible so that testing could be isolated and go faster.

At another job they mandated that TypeScript wasn’t allowed because it “slowed down development”. It was soooo laughable. The number of bugs introduced that could have been readily caught was absurd, but management never put the two pieces together.

lemmyvore ,

Typescript only prevents typing bugs… why did they have so many typing bugs?

AlecSadler ,

Typo’d property names when accessing was the biggest one. Assuming a property was one data type instead of another and not casting or handling it appropriately. Accidentally calling something like it’s a method when it isn’t.

I ran a bunch of plugins on my end to help with some of that, but many of the older or stubborn devs refused and would refuse anything but, like, vim with no add-ons.

bleistift2 ,

Elderly team mates with the flexibility of concrete, yay!

bleistift2 ,

I believe you don’t have to actually use (meaning “compile from”) typescript to profit from it. If you maul the compiler options hard enough, you might get it to analyze JavaScript and provide type checking.

AlecSadler ,

That’s what I did locally.

But a lot of this JavaScript wasn’t even transpiled/compiled for prod, just uploaded to a bucket and referenced directly. It was painful.

lemmyvore ,

Oof. I guess you can use typescript to make up for lack of IDE but it sounds like you had bigger problems anyway.

gravitas_deficiency ,

Sadly, this is the way.

hswolf ,
@hswolf@lemmy.world avatar

Record<string, unknown> ftw

Eol , to funny in Trash pandas know trash when they see it

Wow if racoon paws can do that damage imagine a what a crowbar can do.

dactylotheca OP ,
@dactylotheca@suppo.fi avatar

Or a raccoon with a crowbar

YourPrivatHater ,

Or a racoon with a heavy steel ball.

MentalEdge ,
@MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz avatar

Or a cane-wielding racoon with a long family history of breaking into stuff.

gnutard ,
vaultdweller013 ,

This image feels like its from fucking Crestline.

robdor ,

Bro do you want to start Planet of the Racoons?! Don’t give them any ideas

maniclucky ,

I mean, now that you say it. A little bit.

jaybone ,

Only a good raccoon with a crowbar can stop a bad raccoon with a crowbar.

harrys_balzac ,

No such thing as a bad raccoon with a crowbar

WhiskyTangoFoxtrot ,

Or a crow with a racoonbar.

ChaoticNeutralCzech ,

A crowbar can seriously damage pretty much any vehicle. Nobody believes Elon’s promise that it would be sturdy as a tank. Out of all Cybertruck failures, lack of prying protection is one of the least concerning.

snooggums ,
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

Found the Muskrat

bolexforsoup ,

Or just somebody who is using a little common sense instead of giving into the (I’ll admit very tempting) opportunity to dunk on musk.

Most consumer products don’t hold up well against a crowbar.

snooggums ,
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

Most companies don’t brag about their cars literally being built like a tank.

_stranger_ ,

I think you’re severely underestimating the power of a crowbar

reddit.com/…/german_ww2_training_film_showing_how…

snooggums ,
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

I think you missing the point that I am clearly saying about Musk’s bullshit which is not about fucking crowbars.

ChaoticNeutralCzech ,

I agree but you misunderstood my comment. The fact he said it would be like a tank compared to the actual execution should be enough to point out that he is full of BS, and you don’t need a crowbar to prove it. Yes, Musk fans believed him on that (I didn’t) and most no longer do.

snooggums ,
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

Yet people won’t shut up about the stupid crowbar instead of the point about Musk lying and you excusing him for being a liar.

_stranger_ ,

zero people here are excusing him for being a liar

zero people here ever believed him to begin with

zero people here believe any vehicle can be built “like a tank”. (How rock-like really were Chevy’s from the 90’s? What does Ford Tough even mean!? Can I really drive my Ram through solid objects as the name implies!??!)

What people are saying is that a raccoon can claw through a rubber seal, regardless of the marketing because, as it turns out, racoons don’t believe musk either (and they likely don’t watch ads).

bolexforsoup ,

When did I ever excuse him? I explicitly said he’s a piece of shit and his truck is dangerous waste.

You are just latching on to one dumb marketing thing he said and treating it like it’s gospel that’s been disproven. He’s an idiot and a bigot. He says a lot of dumb shit.

Duamerthrax ,

You haven’t seen pickup truck commercials. Hell, even Apple used military tank imagery in their commercials.

danc4498 ,

This was a very unpopular pun. Better luck next time!

ChaoticNeutralCzech ,

How did you reach that conclusion? I share Thunderf00t’s opinion on Elon Musk. However, the fact that crowbars can ruin any car still stands, and the reason people usually don’t do that is only thanks to the fact that they are not psychopaths.

snooggums ,
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

The crowbar “point” was stupid and irrelevant. It was just normalizing Musk’s lies.

ironhydroxide ,

That section is a rubber like section to seal the gate against the tonneau cover. Not surprising at all that paws and teeth can tear it.

Snowclone , to lemmyshitpost in Freeloaders

They don’t drug test on SNAP Benifits, because everytime the GOP tries to pass a bill to do so, the ways and means committee reminds them that it would more than double the cost of the SNAP program to pay for even the most lenient drug testing. But they do try every few years.

They would rather pay more than the entire program already, to get those filty poors off assistance.

Also some fun facts, most SNAP recipients are children, most are white, and most make enough money to no longer need assistance in under 5 years, at which point they are back to paying taxes. Which pays for SNAP. Making the system quite self- sustaining. It’s cost is minuscule to tax payers, and yet it’s a constant wedge issue, why? Because of America’s greatest fear, that if we do something that benefits people, we might accidently help the wrong people. People who aren’t even white.

jaspersgroove ,

They tried it in florida and 96% of recipients passed…but not before the state spent $400,000 in taxpayer money with the drug testing company…that had the governors wife on its board of directors

UnderpantsWeevil ,
@UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

not before the state spent $400,000 in taxpayer money with the drug testing company

Honestly, given Rick Scott’s reputation for bilking Medicare into the billions, this is one of the smallest tier scams I’ve heard of in Florida. They didn’t even take the state for a full seven figures (unless, of course, the number is being drastically under-reported which is always a possibility).

jaspersgroove ,

It stopped at $400,000 because the state Supreme Court ruled the law unconstitutional and put a stop to the whole operation. He’d have made tens of millions if not more otherwise.

Blackmist ,

The point is not the cost. It’s the cruelty.

BubbleMonkey ,

It’s often both because funneling! Yay!

Cosmonauticus ,

Because of America’s greatest fear, that if we do something that benefits people, we might accidently help the wrong people. People who aren’t even white.

You just explained how unions fell apart, pensions stopped being a thing, schools lost funding, college education went up, and social safety nets disappeared.

I constantly come back to this quote from LBJ

“If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll empty his pockets for you.”

electric_nan ,

Aaaannndd… It is also a kind of subsidy to US agribiz.

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