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lemmy.today

SuperSpruce , to memes in Thank you American software
  1. TikTok, regardless of the country of origin, is known to be spyware on a much greater level than everything else on this list. It collects every click, interaction, and even your clipboard, among other things, sometimes while not using the app.
  2. Yes, this kind of data harvesting should be illegal for Google, Facebook, etc. Do something about it, US government. Unfortunately our next best option is to use FOSS where possible.
zalgotext ,

Yeah I remember when TikTok was first getting popular in the States, and some reverse engineer I followed on Twitter posted his findings about it, and it was honestly pretty terrifying. Like unfettered access to your device, regardless of permissions granted, and remote code execution capabilities kind of terrifying. I don’t think Spotify does that lmao

caveman ,

This mean android permissions don’t work and a Google should be hold accountable also

TheAnonymouseJoker ,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

Like unfettered access to your device, regardless of permissions granted, and remote code execution capabilities kind of terrifying.

You realise you need to provide proof for Android sandbox bypassing, right? Or are you just going to be a racist liar?

brain_in_a_box ,

TikTok, regardless of the country of origin, is known to be spyware on a much greater level than everything else on this list.

How do you support this assertion beyond just saying “it is known”?

Tankiedesantski ,

Source: Trust me bro [1]

[1] I don’t like people who look different from me.

SuperSpruce ,

Ahhh, typical Hexbear, jumping to the conclusion that I am racist because I said TikTok is bad without any citations. See the other reply in the thread for the citations.

Tankiedesantski ,

TikTok is not the only company that uses its pixels throughout the internet. The report found Google, Meta and Microsoft, among others, use these trackers.

Your first link has a sentence expressly disproving your own thesis, so in addition to concluding you are a racist, I can also now conclude that you didn’t read your own sources.

FunkyStuff ,

Justifying their attacks with claims of superiority, defending the obvious contradictions with equivalence. Classic motte and bailley.

SuperSpruce ,

I never said the other companies don’t also track you outside of the app.

Tankiedesantski ,

TikTok, regardless of the country of origin, is known to be spyware on a much greater level than everything else on this list.

brain_in_a_box ,

Your citations did not support your claim at all, you’re just openly lying and hoping nobody bothers to check.

SuperSpruce ,

I’m not trying to openly lie. If you have any evidence that any of the other platforms are expressly worse than TikTok for privacy, please show me.

Tankiedesantski ,

Goalpost shifting, your original post said that TikTok is known to be spyware on a much greater level than anything else on this list.

Your statement isn’t true even if you prove that Tiktok is the worst offender on the list. You need to prove that Tiktok is worse to a much higher degree than anything else on that list. Your own source straight out says that at least 3 of the other companies on the list engage in similar practices.

SuperSpruce ,
Tankiedesantski ,

From the very first link:

TikTok is not the only company that uses its pixels throughout the internet. The report found Google, Meta and Microsoft, among others, use these trackers.

Rigorous scholarship there, champ.

brain_in_a_box ,

Literally none of those sources support your claim that:

TikTok, regardless of the country of origin, is known to be spyware on a much greater level than everything else on this list.

So at this point you’re just knowingly lying and hoping nobody bothers to check your links.

turkishdelight ,

Nothing beats Instagram, Facebook, Google, Microsoft or Twitter in spyware. Have you heard of the Snowden revelations? These companies provide all their data to US spies.

TheAnonymouseJoker ,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar
  1. TikTok, regardless of the country of origin, is known to be spyware on a much greater level than everything else on this list. It collects every click, interaction, and even your clipboard, among other things, sometimes while not using the app.

Can you provide concrete proof that this is the case, when compared to other Western social media platforms? You sound like a scientologist.

SuperSpruce ,
TheAnonymouseJoker ,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

ABC News does not provide the “cybersecurity report” they “obtained”. Usually this is a sign of Washington ordering news outlets to do their thing. Wired looks the same. And going by the video format of WSJ tabloid, it also has nothing of substance that technically breaks down things.

bstix , to technology in Unity deleted these terms, don't let them get out

If those were the terms you signed, those are the terms that matter.

PaintedSnail ,

But do the terms you signed say they are allowed to change the terms at any time with notice?

rbits ,

Yes that is what the post you commented on says But they also say you can use an old version if you don’t like the changed terms.

PM_Your_Nudes_Please ,

Sure, but they also say you can use an old version if you prefer the old terms. Basically, that if they update the terms, it’ll only apply to the current/future versions.

So just stop using the current version. Just use the old version which still has the old terms. You never agreed to the new terms, and under the terms you agreed to, you can continue to use the old terms.

PaintedSnail ,

That poses an interesting question. If they can change the terms, and say that you agree to the changes by continuing to use their software, and they remove the clause allowing you to use the previous agreement, then can you use the previous agreement? It’s a bit of a buried shovel problem. Have you agreed to not use a previous agreement by continuing to use the software, or can you stick to the old agreement that lets you use the old agreement?

DarkenLM ,

The terms can say that your firstborn shall be sacrificed to an Eldritch Deity by accepting them, but that doesn't mean it's enforceable.

essteeyou ,

I mean, in this economy, what’s one first-born even worth?

IntergalacticZombie ,

$10?

PaintedSnail ,

Enforcability is one of the major issues, and why companies try so hard to keep issues like this from the courts.

Mossheart ,

Tell that to the Eldritch deity.

bstix ,

They can change the terms, but if you don’t sign the new terms then you have never accepted the new terms.

For some reason, companies think they can write anything into their terms and think it matters. It doesn’t. Most contracts aren’t worth the paper it’s written on.

PaintedSnail ,

“By continuing to use the software, you agree to the new terms…” which is, of course, hogwash, but wouldn’t stop them from say “Sorry, the new terms were released and you agreed, so pay up.”

Dultas ,

Depends on how long your license is for. If you have a 1 year license and they change the terms, you are going to have to sign new terms for the next year’s license.

theworstshepard ,

Typically terms of service can and will be updated and if you don’t object to them you’re deemed to have accepted them.

Many people will be familiar with emails entitled “your terms of service have changed” or “updates to your terms of service”

GJdan , to greentext in Anon has a question

What on earth are you all cooking to have so much oil left over that you can pour it into anything?

Rocketpoweredgorilla ,
@Rocketpoweredgorilla@lemmy.ca avatar

For me it’s mostly the deep fryer. When I change the oil it takes about 4 1/2 liters to refill.

GJdan ,

That makes sense, I didn’t imagine that many people bother deep frying at home, but I guess I’m wrong :D

But in this case people are describing adding a little oil to a bottle at a time where with deep frying you could fill a bottle every time I think.

gentooer ,

Here in Belgium nearly every household has a friteuse to make fries.

GJdan ,

Wow, I just bake them, I’m sure it’s not as good though.

Whelks_chance ,

My parents could keep that going for a good long time by filtering it through a few layers of kitchen paper, it got rid of a lot of the burnt stuff, came out quite clear each time.

VirtualOdour ,

Don’t they warn against reusing too much because it breaks down into carcinogens?

LinusSexTips ,

Probably, but don’t most things these days go out of their way to kill us anyway? 😅

masterofn001 ,

I use paper coffee filters in a metal strainer.

Takes a while, but the oil comes out clear and back to its original colour and flavour after 2 passes.

bizzle ,
@bizzle@lemmy.world avatar

I just got a deep fryer literally two days ago how often should I change the oil?

Rocketpoweredgorilla ,
@Rocketpoweredgorilla@lemmy.ca avatar

They say around around 10 uses or a max of three months, depending on how often you use it and what you’re frying.

For me personally I tend to stretch it a bit further… the main thing is that it isn’t rancid or starting to get too dark.

bizzle ,
@bizzle@lemmy.world avatar

Sweet thanks!

Tlaloc_Temporal ,

Most importantly, old oil can have a lower smoke point than is safe. Definitely replace your oil if anything starts to taste burnt.

ikidd ,
@ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

Drain it through a filter and refrigerate it if you aren’t using it constantly. It’ll go rancid pretty quick.

hydroxycotton ,

Have you every heard of the method of cooking called frying?

GJdan ,

Sure, but not usually with enough oil to pour out of the pan after cooking.

a_wild_mimic_appears ,

That depends on the dish - a Wiener Schnitzel for example should be able to move freely in the oil (because it should be kept moving while frying), or the breading will be pretty underwhelming. Same goes for most stuff with breading. I always try to be very conservative in my cooking oil usage, but in those cases it’s just not an option.

GJdan ,

Ooh that makes sense, and I want schnitzel now.

Damage ,

Do you make potato fries in a pan?

MachineFab812 ,

A lot of people do, actually. Seasoning them right for them to come out more “french fry” than “dried potato” is more involved than a lot of people might like, but I personally don’t do it because I’m being picky about the flavor. I don’t own a deep-frier and salted-dried-potatoes are good enough with a lot of entrees.

riodoro1 ,

Yeah, like what the fuck. People here really think that you can’t fry with just enough oil.

filcuk ,

Well, not normally, but for example crispy breaded anything should be dunked in oil at least half way.

psud ,

I don’t call it oil since it’s solid at room temperature, but if you fry meat you’ll liberate fat (dripping)

GJdan ,

Meat! I was forgetting about meat…

hellfire103 , (edited ) to lemmyshitpost in Leaked photo

That’s far too good for AI. It has to be photoshopped.

Mr_Fish ,

I’ve never seen “this is so good that it has to be photoshop” before

Fuck_u_spez_ , (edited )

And it’s becoming increasingly likely you’ll never see it again.

TopRamenBinLaden ,

That is a suspiciously normal looking hand with the correct amount of fingers.

Asafum ,

It’s really not that hard to get correct hands so I usually assume the person posting is either lazy or doesn’t know about ways to touch up an AI gen picture if I see too many fingers or weird hands.

Neato , to memes in Capitalism really just reinvented sleeping outside SMH
@Neato@ttrpg.network avatar

That’s camping with all the shitty parts and a really nice cot.

Wind, rain, dust, falling shit, bugs, animals, etc. You can get a similar atmosphere by having a tent and opening the vent flaps. Or like, sleeping under a tarp to mitigate rain if you really want that outdoorsy feel. I knew a guy who slept in a hammock on nice nights but I fear the skeeters.

MacNCheezus OP ,
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

That’s camping with all the shitty parts and a really nice cot.

That is indeed the joke.

ItDoBeHowItDoBe ,

There are nice bug nets made specifically to fit around hammocks. You see the sky and not be eaten alive.

tissek ,

Some hammocks even have the bug net built in creating a nice bugfree cocoon.

Uschaan , to lemmyshitpost in They're all dicks if you ask me

I’m pretty sure Tenxas would be worse.

MacNCheezus OP ,
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

Where would we even put all of those? Canada?

Doombot1 ,

Space, where they can’t influence things? They should be fine with their independent power grid, right?

Classy ,

Gulf of Mexico

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA ,
@HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world avatar

The gulf says mexicno

TheMightyCanuck ,
@TheMightyCanuck@sh.itjust.works avatar

Please God no. We already have Texas lite with Alberta

Source: Albertan

MacNCheezus OP ,
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

How about Albeighta as a compromise

JohnDClay , to lemmyshitpost in Target acquired

What could be shoot that he didn’t already shoot? In the books, he already managed to fell a fell beast from long range. And it’s not like shooting the eye of Sauron with a sniper rifle would kill him.

the_joeba ,

Not with that attitude

takeda ,

He did all of that with a bow, imagine him with a sniper rifle…

Blue_Morpho ,

Same number of kills just at longer range. Gimli still wins.

jewbacca117 ,

it would be much harder to stab an orc with an arrow then shoot said arrow if Legolas was armed with a sniper rifle

Khrux ,

He could just do the equivalent and stab them with bullet, duh

Ephera ,

Bayonet?

Mango ,

Honestly, it seems like he’d have about equal stopping and slower fire rate.

ryathal ,

A sniper file would have stopped the orc that blows up the wall at helms deep.

explodicle ,

Yeah but with the higher reload time, he might not have been ready for the first shot.

nova_ad_vitum , (edited )

And it’s not like shooting the eye of Sauron with a sniper rifle would kill him.

I agree, but I still think someone should have tried. Even if it didn’t kill him there’s a giant gulf between not killing him and doing nothing.

This applies more to Voldemort than to the eye of Sauron tbh. Ofc he has horcruxes blah blah blah but if they just got an SAS sniper to shoot a 50 cal sniper round at him from a mile out - again, I’m not saying it would kill him but… would it have done nothing? All I’m saying is there’s a thing called due diligence and they should have at least tried.

creditCrazy ,
@creditCrazy@lemmy.world avatar

Also it might be possible that attacking the eye of soron could blind him.

xmunk , to programmerhumor in Thanks, TCP/IP

UDP: Hold my beer.

daBeans ,
@daBeans@sh.itjust.works avatar

beer proceeds to shatter on the ground

Dlayknee ,

UDP: meh

CmdrKeen OP ,
@CmdrKeen@lemmy.today avatar

Here’s another one, catch!

embed_me ,
@embed_me@programming.dev avatar

Or don’t. I don’t care. Anyway here’s the bill

Enzy ,

UPNP: I’m about to end this whole man’s career

PoolloverNathan ,

Universal Plug’n’Play?

negativenull ,

Well, the packets start comin’ and they don’t stop comin’
Fed to the rules and I hit the cable runnin’

sharkwellington ,

and they don’t stop comin’ and they don’t stop comin’ and they don’t stop comin’ and they don’t stop comin’

-DDOS attacks

Kelo ,
@Kelo@lemmy.world avatar

Didn’t make sense not to ping for fun

HiddenLayer5 ,

UDP: Throws beer in your general direction with no prior notice.

Manmikey , to lemmyshitpost in They're perfectly good brownies, Karen. What is your problem?
@Manmikey@lemmy.world avatar

There’s 7 spaces in the baking tray, there’s 8 brownies! What is the 8th brownie op!

Denalduh ,

Brownie roulette!

MacNCheezus OP ,
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

Uh oh, my plan has been foiled

RegalPotoo , to cat in Bello! Am I Tortoiseshell?
@RegalPotoo@lemmy.world avatar

Tortoiseshell is a colouration, not a breed - you get long hair tortoiseshell cats, same way you get long hair tabbys.

Fun fact: due to the way the genetics works out, male tortoiseshell cats are incredibly rare - less than 1 in 100,000 iirc

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

and the male cats that are torties are… how shall we say, a bit extra?

(generally. the male torties or calicos have XXY chromosomes. though it’s also possible they’re a genetic chimera.)

smokebuddy OP ,

Awesome, I did some looking into it but never saw any discussion of hair length. I was reading about the lore of them and wanted to ask before getting any deeper

vivavideri ,

She gon’ be fuzzy. And a little bit nuts. Enjoy. Also smooch her head for me.

JCreazy , to programmer_humor in Absolute legend

It seems like I’m constantly finding bugs in businesses’ apps. Do they not have people test them?

example ,

sure they do, you’re one of them

vithigar ,

As someone in the dev team for a “business app”, we probably know about most or all of them, but they’re just not important enough for anyone in management to prioritize them as part of a sprint. It’s also possible no one has given us reproducible steps to make them happen, so we just straight up don’t know what to fix. Usually the former though.

jol ,

They do, and they have a backlog of hundreds of issues to fix and they must prioritise then. If fixing a bug doesn’t make money, it’s not priority.

MashedTech ,

I deal with this every day. It hurts me to my core.

Lost_My_Mind ,

I hate how they’ll spend 4 years squashing all the bugs…and then they cancel the software, and release a new buggy version.

RGB3x3 ,

cough Sonos

KillingTimeItself ,

i will never forgive the emby team for creating the single most idiotic (although rather funny) transcoding system.

It has a resolution selection, along with a bitrate selection, so you would think it forces transcoding.

It turns out the resolution is actually just a suggestion, and the bitrate is what it targets, if it doesn’t meet the bitrate, it will transcode, and if you get lucky, it might transcode to the specified resolution.

bitchkat ,

I am steadfast that I will occasionally take some time and kill off some low hanging fruit. For me, its kind of like a break and lets me clear my head on the bigger issues.

jol ,

Even then, there are bugs that need multiple people (design, engineering, content, QA, etc) and are not something that can be fixed on a whim.

bitchkat ,

Those would not be considered low hanging fruit.

jol ,

The problem is that what users consider low hanging fruit is often not, and what is low hanging fruit for devs, is invisible stuff that users don’t notice. The intersection is the tastiest low hanging fruit, but as such it’s also rare and easily picked by anyone.

bitchkat ,

I never said that users were involved in this. This is just grabbing some bugs off the queue that are simple to fix but have been deprioritized by project manager.

But they do make the customer happy because they are the one that submitted the bug.

mrkite ,
@mrkite@programming.dev avatar

I would fix that bug but the complete rewrite that management has had me working on for the past two years will make it obsolete anyway.

douglasg14b ,
@douglasg14b@lemmy.world avatar

Ah, the circle of life

NigelFrobisher ,

Sometimes no.

Blackmist ,

Yes, they’re called “customers”.

KillingTimeItself ,

they test them…

Whether they do anything with that testing is another story,.

chocoladisco ,

We are supposed to be testing them? /s

KillingTimeItself ,

you already are smh, you just don’t know it!

Andrenikous ,

Sometimes. Other times they layoff the QAs and anyone else whose job is about quality.

douglasg14b ,
@douglasg14b@lemmy.world avatar

They usually do yes however it’s all about prioritization.

You may have hundreds or thousands or open requests and issues.

With tens of thousands of closed issues that were either not reproducible, not actually problems, or largely indecipherable.

There’s usually a feature roadmap which is where most of the development money and time is spent. If it’s an older business application then certain bugs might easily take weeks to find, fix, test, validate, go through user acceptance, A/B test, and then deploy. But fixing is expensive work, so if the bug isn’t severe it’s usually deprioritized next to higher priority work.

enbyecho , to science_memes in It is very therapeutic to garden, though.

I ran commercially successful regenerative farms for many years. Here is the shocking truth Corporate Jesus ™ didn’t want you to know:

You aren’t “competing” on price or quantity. You are competing on quality. Quality in taste, quality in freshness which also means quality in nutrition^ and quality in sustainability.

So… it might cost you a bit more in money and/or time to grow food in your garden but you are getting so much more value out of it. That’s the yield and that’s the cost effectiveness.

That’s massively more efficient than subsidizing huge-scale industrial agriculture so that some giant corporation can yield higher profits. In fact, come to think of it, shouldn’t home gardens be subsidized?

^ E.g. 90% of vitamin C in spinach is lost after 72 hours from harvest

TubularTittyFrog ,

home gardening requires time and land.

It’s largely a privilege for those who have both. not a solution for the economically depressed who have neither.

zazo ,

that’s why OP was suggesting we subsidize home (and I’d add allotment) gardens - give people money to plant food and flowers and they’ll be better of f both physically and mentally.

TubularTittyFrog , (edited )

and who will till the soil, weed, fight pests, harvest, etc.

govt going to provide the physical labor and extra hours per week that is required too?

I mean I get it. I’m a rich white person with a lot of leisure time and I own property where I can have a garden… but turns out not everyone has this stuff. Half my younger friends have no time and no property on which to garden. And those folks are much better off that say, a single mom of two who rents and is struggling to provide her kids with food because she’s working 50 hours a week to pay rent. Should I just tell her to ‘make your own garden! that will totally feed your family of three…’ just put dozens of hours into your concrete driveway of plastic tubs that will provide you with a few weeks of vegetables, most of which will rot before you can use them… unless you want to devote more time and money into canning.

Gardening is great. But jerking myself off and generalizing and saying everyone else should be doing what i have the luxury to do… just makes me a smug self-righteous ass. People buy food from stores because it’s convenient and fast.

zalgotext , (edited )

and who will till the soil, weed, fight pests, harvest, etc.

In the case of a home garden, the homeowners, just like it’s expected for a homeowner to care for all the other plants on their property.

In the case of an allotment/community garden, community members would provide the labor. That’s how they currently work.

I mean I get it. I’m a rich white person with a lot of leisure time and I own property where I can have a garden… but turns out not everyone has this stuff.

I’m confused what the problem is - just because you know some people that wouldn’t benefit from a home garden subsidy, doesn’t make it a bad idea, if it encourages more people to grow food at home. It’s not a one-size-fits-all solution to be sure, but it is a solution that would work for some, with little to no downside that I can conceive of.

Also the whole “you need a lot of land if you want to garden” thing is kind of a myth. You can do a surprising amount in containers, with vertical systems, or even indoors with grow lights or hydroponics these days.

Edit to address your edit:

Gardening is great. But jerking myself off and generalizing and saying everyone else should be doing what i have the luxury to do… just makes me a smug self-righteous ass. People buy food from stores because it’s convenient and fast.

I don’t think anyone’s saying “everyone should garden”, just “more people should garden”. The original suggestion we’re discussing was to subsidize gardening, which would help reduce the barrier to entry and make it a more attractive option. Option being the keyword there - subsidizing something doesn’t mean everyone has to do it, and it certainly isn’t an attempt to belittle or shame anyone that can’t or doesn’t want to garden.

enbyecho ,

Involvement in food production to some degree is involvement in your own freedom and independence from capitalist hegemony. To me it’s the opposite of privilege. It’s not a luxury and it’s so so sad that people think of it in those terms.

Somehow along the way folks were instilled with the idea that growing their own food is hard, not efficient… even equated with being poor or some kind of peasant. And there’s a very good reason for this - big industrialized agriculture doesn’t work except at huge scales and it takes everyone buying cheetos and hot dogs for it to work. And somehow we got into this rut where you have to work 50 hours a week - paid a fraction of the real value of your labor - to afford the “value-added” food that is not nutritionally dense, tasty or grown sustainably.

The truth is that growing food is about as simple and basic as it gets IF you have the knowledge. It is even more viable if people work collectively to get some of those economies of scale.

So take 10 hours of that week and use it to produce valuable food for yourself and for your neighbors. 2-3 families working 10 hours a week each grows A LOT of food. You do not need a lot of land… indeed there is land out there available to be used for community gardens, for free.

Unlike a lot of folks, I’m not going to say this can’t work in every situation because I believe it can. Further, I believe it’s an existential necessity.

TubularTittyFrog ,

Do you fertilizer your garden with your own shit?

enbyecho ,
  1. Don’t throw mud. Behave like an intellectual and remember the human.
enbyecho , (edited )

It’s largely a privilege for those who have both. not a solution for the economically depressed who have neither.

I’m pretty sure that’s what Corporate Jesus would want people to believe. And to be honest, sometimes labeling something as “privileged” is just another way of reinforcing that thinking. It doesn’t have to be that way.

  1. Gardening does not require much time relative to the value of the output. Many new gardeners will say “oh but it’s so time consuming” because they are still learning and make lots of mistakes. If you have your systems up and running and your processes down, it’s a fraction of the actual value produced and is extremely efficient. Don’t get me started or I will go on about this in extreme nerdy detail from personal experience.
  2. Collective action can massively increase both the availability of suitable land and the output relative to any one individual’s effort. An obvious example of this is community gardens such as the Gill Tract in Albany, CA. If Occupy the Farm had been better supported we the people could have had the whole thing, but there still is a large garden available for use by neighboring houses. And there are community gardens and vacant land waiting to be community gardens everywhere. It just takes folks to say they can do it to make it happen.

A key component in this is a general misunderstanding of the value of your labor. When you garden you retain 100% of the value of your labor and your time is worth much more. When you work for others and then have to pay for food at a significant markup, you are losing a very large proportion of that labor. This is one of the central lies of capitalism that forces you into wage slavery and promotes false narratives like “growing food is most efficient on a huge scale”. Efficient to whom? Not to you.

Edit: Another related example is the Berkeley Student Farm on the Oxford Tract and 6 other urban spaces. They are doing some amazing work and it’s worth a few moments to read about them: www.studentfarms.berkeley.edu

d2k1 ,

Don’t get me started or I will go on about this in extreme nerdy detail from personal experience.

Please do! I am just starting with some gardening and haven’t much experience yet.

enbyecho ,

Please do! I am just starting with some gardening and haven’t much experience yet.

Uh oh.

Well I’ll just mention one thing… just. one. thing. Ok, no, let me do my top beginner mistakes, which seem to all be not understanding what plants need.

  1. Over-watering. For example, tomatoes (and solanaceae in general) like periodic deep watering and shouldn’t be overly moist. I always starve them for water until they start to get a little crispy (literally they look like shit) and do my weekly-ish harvesting the day before watering.
  2. Not hardening-off starts. Don’t plant those peppers in the ground without having them gradually outside over a few days, ending in being out overnight for a day or three.
  3. Not understanding soil and air temperatures. It’s super helpful to know the daytime highs and nightime lows and ideally soil temps as well. Some plants just really won’t grow well when it’s too hot (lettuce) or too cold (tomatoes, cukes, etc)
  4. Growing starts in your living room window because it “gets lots of sun”. If your plants are leggy and weak it’s because they get sun for part of the day and it shifts around too much.
  5. Assuming you have to nuke every living thing anywhere near your veggies. 95% of all insects are beneficials and if you do not provide habitat for them and/or you use copious pesticides, you are killing more good things than bad. On my last farm we used no pesticides, organic-approved or otherwise. This works if you have pathways of (ideally natives) for beneficials to thrive in. The classic example is flea beetles - they thrive in barren hot soil while the beneficials that would eat them avoid that. So plant your arugula near some grasses (like right up against it) and you will not likely have a flea beetle problem.
d2k1 ,

Thank you, that was interesting. I would like to subscribe to your newsletter 🙂

But I am not sure I understand point 2. Are you talking about seeds?

enbyecho ,

But I am not sure I understand point 2. Are you talking about seeds?

People buy or grow “starts” - little baby plants in pots - and often don’t let them adjust to being outside before sticking them in the ground.

d2k1 ,

Ah, gotcha, thanksñ

31337 ,

What are the solutions to #4? Had that problem this year. Something killed about a 1/4 of my tomato and pepper starts because they were still really small when it was time to plant them outdoors (guessing snails or cutworms; I have a lot of both).

enbyecho ,

What are the solutions to #4? Had that problem this year.

Cutworms and similar (I have armyworms) are very annoying. Standard advice is tilling and keeping things clear of weeds but that has the effect of removing habitat for beneficials. My approach is mechanical removal, which I’ve found very effective: go out when said critters are active, usually at night, and pick them off. It’s labor intensive but you only need to do it 1-2 times. For many worms, they’ll bury themselves just under the soil surface during the day so if you lightly till with a hand trowl or something in about a 4-6" circle around the plant you can often find them. I also just over-plant, expecting to lose some - we also have gophers here who take about a 10% tythe on nearly everything. Some folks use cardboard collars around the base of peppers and tomatoes but I didn’t find that effective and it was a pain.

Obviously the bigger and stronger the plants are the greater the more damage they can take and still survive. Often really small solanaceae are still susceptible to damping off (too much moisture) or may just not be big enough to withstand the shock of transplanting.

So… a cheap and very effective solution to the “living room window” problem is a mini greenhouse or cold frame of some kind, if you have the space. The idea being to give your starts a more ideal growing environment to strengthen them as much as possible before going in the ground.

Even just a simple 2’x4’ cold frame made from scrap wood and recycled glass or plexiglass (or better, double walled greenhouse panels) can help the starts make the transition better. You can still start things inside when it’s too cold and be careful to move them around to get maximum sun, but then move it to the cold frame as soon as night time temperatures support it and then let the starts mature in there - they will do much better in the heat and light. I use a passive solar greenhouse made from an old Costco barn frame and covered in proper greenhouse plastic (about $130). I have these dark grey barrels (55 gallon food grade barrels used by factories to hold things like syrups - $15 each) that are filled with water and heat up during the day. This provides enough thermal mass that I can start things even when daytime highs are in the 30s. You can replicate this on a smaller scale in a cold frame with even just a few gallons of water.

Other options include season extension methods like row covers (Remay or Agribon). The idea being to even out temperature extremes as much as to protect from frost. A simple hoop made from metal conduit will last way longer than PVC and can be stuck in the ground better. Heavy row covers like AG-50 will get you a lot of frost protection and even if it’s not freezing at night many starts will appreciate the higher nighttime temps. Just be sure to ventilate during the day as it can get too hot. For smaller areas an old blanket or even sheet will help retain some heat. Or alternatively, a small plastic container that you put over the start, usually just at night… like a yoghurt container or bottle of some kind.

I use this last method quite a bit for things like watermelons where I’ve got 8’ spacing and Agribon is just not efficient. I made little “hats” out of wire and scraps of Agribon and cover the mounds (I direct seed) until they germinate and get their true leaves. I have to do this because I grow heirloom varieties that take forever and my season is relatively short.

NegativeInf ,

Hell yea! Let’s bring back victory gardens! With a subsidy!

adam_y , to lemmyshitpost in Fact checked
@adam_y@lemmy.world avatar

We will return the bicycle when you hand over the fekkin potatoes.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/77c37819-5c6a-4214-80e1-cf15a92c79a6.jpeg

FartsWithAnAccent ,
@FartsWithAnAccent@fedia.io avatar

There's nothing worse than a bicycle thief!

Veedem , to lemmyshitpost in I heard you wanted more
@Veedem@lemmy.world avatar

Hey!

I did it first and got TORCHED

lemmy.world/post/12962791

volvoxvsmarla ,

Well you didn’t call them jews tho

Veedem ,
@Veedem@lemmy.world avatar

Because it’s way too on the nose!

Aggravationstation ,

Nose! Is that antisemitism?

Veedem ,
@Veedem@lemmy.world avatar

Ah crap. The torching resumes lol

pancakes ,
@pancakes@sh.itjust.works avatar

Torching? Now that’s antisemitic for sure.

DannyMac ,
@DannyMac@lemmy.world avatar

I’m sorry, friend! When I looked at this post, I thought it would be funnier if it was spelled like “jhoes.” I guess this one performed better because it eased people into it whereas you outright went there.

explodicle ,

I think it’s because he just did the wordplay and didn’t ask “our opinion on” jhoes, which raises the jhoish question.

juliebean ,

if it makes you feel any better, i downvoted both of you (but this one is better because it seems to depict actual items, and not ai generated nonsense)

Wilzax ,

Maybe don’t use AI to make your memes next time and see what kind of response you get

Veedem ,
@Veedem@lemmy.world avatar
shootwhatsmyname , to lemmyshitpost in As requested
@shootwhatsmyname@lemm.ee avatar

Not to be that person, but her proportions are off and she’s not respecting the environment’s vanishing point. I used to love her, but this making me question her motives.

radix ,
@radix@lemm.ee avatar

I’m trying to learn perspective. What is there that isn’t respecting the vanishing point?

MacNCheezus OP ,
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

I think that person is referring to the fact that the airplane’s trajectory is slightly ajar from the straight line that goes from the camera to the vanishing point. Perhaps the pilot got off course a little.

Tangent5280 ,

The enclosing airplane is so large, that there is natural formation of cross winds by pressure differential. One such pressure differential is giving our brave pilot trouble as he navigates the treacherous path from seat J3 to seat K3.

MacNCheezus OP ,
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

I ain’t no expert, but this guy sounds like he knows what he’s talking about, so it’s probably the correct answer.

radix ,
@radix@lemm.ee avatar

Oh, now that you say it it seems obvious. Thanks!

shootwhatsmyname ,
@shootwhatsmyname@lemm.ee avatar

I mean, just look at her. You can physically feel the rebelliousness in her adverse yaw. I can’t even imagine how disruptive her adiabatic lapse rate is. She needs to be grounded

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