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lemmy.world

Mcdolan , to lemmyshitpost in ATDT5551212

deleted_by_author

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  • FlyingSquid OP ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Although it sucked so much if you were downloading something like a large (for the time) game and had call waiting or someone picked up a phone in another part of the house. 3 hours down the drain.

    fox2263 ,

    Download Managers were a god send for that reason.

    FlyingSquid OP ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Definitely, but there was a time before them. A dark and evil time when your world could be destroyed by a guy calling to sell gutter cleaning services.

    fox2263 ,

    Or your mam deciding to call her sister for 3 hours even though she just saw her.

    It took a very long time to get counter strike

    demonquark ,

    Holy shit. I completely forgot about download managers.

    fox2263 ,

    I had one, I forget its name, but it was a firewall AND download manager. Bizarre combo if you ask me but it was pretty cool. Its logo was a lightning bolt I think.

    RampantParanoia2365 ,

    Second house line was a game changer. Literally. It let me play Quake online.

    CaptDust ,

    When “going online” was an evening activity, not a necessity of life

    GenesisJones ,

    Hey are you off the phone??? I wanna get online!!!

    -Shouted from a different floor where the PC was

    HeyThisIsntTheYMCA ,
    @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world avatar

    Hey get off the phone I want to look at saucy pictures of, um, shut up it’s my gravy magazine okay

    UnrepententProcrastinator ,

    Going offline is my weekend activity. Time to pile up the firewood for winter.

    Pons_Aelius , to risa in I want to get off Mr. Bones' Wild Ride

    we’re closer to Star Trek every day

    Did you forget all the horrible shit that happens in the star trek timeline between 2000 and the founding of the federation in 2161?

    Going off the TOS timeline, WWIII starts next year...

    FancyLad OP ,
    @FancyLad@lemmy.world avatar

    This is what I said to my little brother after watching the DS9 2-parter about the Bell Riots

    Uranium3006 ,
    @Uranium3006@kbin.social avatar

    It was pretty spot on. All they gotta do is put a wall around skid row

    BrutalPoseidon ,

    The Bell Riots also start in 2024. Oh boy, it’s going to be a wild few years.

    digger ,
    @digger@lemmy.ca avatar

    I came here to say that. They start in September, so we’ve got a little less than a year. Though, I do wonder how a true first contact would affect us.

    Pons_Aelius ,

    I do wonder how a true first contact would affect us.

    A good chunk of the population would not believe it was true (the gov conspiracy crew), while another section would not believe it was just happening now ( the Roswell crowd)

    Another section would believe it was the bible end of days and the aliens are Satan and his demons.

    digger ,
    @digger@lemmy.ca avatar

    I don’t like what you have to say… But I don’t disagree with it either.

    samus12345 ,
    @samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

    Probably something like the Mirror Universe first contact.

    r00ty Admin ,
    r00ty avatar

    Well, I was thinking about Trump's plan to make homelessness illegal and offer "offenders" the option of moving to a rehabilitation "tent city". It seems like an eerily similar plan.

    Tammo-Korsai ,
    @Tammo-Korsai@kbin.social avatar
    bionicjoey ,

    Happy O’Brien noises

    Stampela ,

    How is nobody doing 2+2 and figuring out we’re the “mirror universe”? At best.

    Anticorp ,

    What’s weird is that I’m pretty sure I’m not from the mirror universe, but sometime right around the time they had that supermassive hadron collider accident, the world started getting bizarro. I think either our universes fused, or I got caught in a temporal anomaly and ended up here.

    1simpletailer ,
    @1simpletailer@startrek.website avatar

    Yeah Gene Roddenberry could see the direction capitalism was taking humanity, his optimism was that enough of us would be able to survive the collapse and we would rebuild better in its aftermath. That part remains to be seen, but Star Trek has always been collapse aware.

    Zaphod , to lemmyshitpost in Magic man
    Tylerdurdon , to memes in Duolingo too

    Looks like a passive aggressive attempt at getting someone to take action, but it failed miserably.

    NickwithaC , to casualuk in TIL postboxes extend an extra foot or two into the ground
    @NickwithaC@lemmy.world avatar

    And you never hear of them getting stolen or vandalised. They come from an era of timeless design and top notch build quality.

    Karfkengrumble ,

    There’s one incident that immediately comes to mind.

    craftyindividual ,

    That’s like burning a swan!

    tocopherol ,
    @tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Just in my brief time here this morning I’ve already seen two Peep Show references and I’m loving it

    I_Has_A_Hat , to lemmyshitpost in Immune to marketing

    I think anyone who grew up heavily using the internet in the 90s/00s is inoculated against ads as a survival mechanism. Back in those days, clicking ANY sort of ad was a good way to get a virus or spyware. I learned to avoid ads at all cost and, to this day, I’m distrustful of any ad I see.

    Dagrothus ,

    This is true even today. Ads are shady af and even the top link on Google is often a literal scam/virus. Ie for years if you looked up the most popular game client for runescape - runelite - the very first link was a fake version that stole your login info. They paid Google and Google said ‘not my problem’. Not to even mention ads on other sites like Facebook. Even in the cases where an ad isnt a blatant scam or virus, ads are inherently dishonest by design and there is no consequence for using them to lie about your product.

    Binthinkin ,

    Still shady and also useless. I don’t buy shit I see in ads because I don’t let them track me.

    It’s better the industry just dies and the people go back to being psychiatrists.

    Lucidlethargy , to memes in Pls help its been on for 5 miles now
    WeirdAlex03 ,
    @WeirdAlex03@lemmy.zip avatar

    Only 6,000 blinks? That’s nothing but a watered-down scam-in-a-bottle preying on the naïve drivers trying to buy blinker fluid for their very first time. It has to be good for AT LEAST 10,000 blinks before I’d even consider putting in my car

    Nfamwap ,

    6,000 blinks in a BMW though. That’s a lifetime supply.

    CoderKat ,

    Hey, where’d you find this? Do they have any that works on the rear blinkers?

    iforgotmyinstance , to lemmyshitpost in And now Bezos is trying to insert ads everywhere

    I don’t have Peacock but I’m hanging out at my parents house and apparently when you pay for Peacock you have to watch ads at the beginning and end of shows PLUS every time you pause.

    Every single time they paused it transitioned to an ad. What psychopaths run NBC?

    cryptosporidium140 ,

    deleted_by_author

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  • Krauerking ,

    So truly terrifying psychopath if looking at their cancellation process is any indication

    FaeDrifter ,

    Comcast voted the most hated company in 2017 Comcast?

    weariedfae ,

    Kabletown

    confusedbytheBasics , to programmer_humor in Every Single Freaking Time

    Select text to copy. Middle click to paste.

    Don’t use Ctrl…

    jmcs ,

    deleted_by_author

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  • BakedGoods ,

    Don’t they ever test shit?

    NotSteve_ ,

    It’s less that it’s broken and more that it hasn’t been implemented yet AFAIK.

    nintendiator ,

    Same difference.

    Jean_Mich_Much ,
    @Jean_Mich_Much@jlai.lu avatar

    I’m using sway and I still can do that with urxvt

    30p87 ,

    To be fair, I would not expect someone using a wayland WM and urxvt to use the mouse to copy-paste.

    Jean_Mich_Much ,
    @Jean_Mich_Much@jlai.lu avatar

    I understand. I’m not using sway and urxvt as someone more skilled would do. I’ve Made this config some years ago to try but nowadays I’m not doing computer things anymore but I’ve kept this config because it’s light, fast and it’s simply working. So basically, today I’m just copying my passwords from pass in urxvt to my webmail in Firefox with my mouse for checking mail …

    Vilian ,

    what?, no

    Bazz ,

    I’m sorry but… it works on my machine

    Trobador ,

    I never realized that was why people used the primaey clipboard on Linux…

    But I’ll be frank : fuck that. I’d rather disable it entirely and stop having to deal with random text pasting in bad places when I’m using the touchpad

    confusedbytheBasics ,

    What wonky touchpad makes that a problem?

    You could use shift -insert instead I suppose.

    _number8_ , to memes in Most Metal Stage of the Pandemic

    i loved the parts where it felt like we were examining all of our social norms and skipping the ones that were dumb and pointless. but now everything has to be just as dumb and shitty as before for no reason [no social safety net allowed, WFH bad, etc]

    Patches ,

    There absolutely are reasons. They just aren’t reasons you agree with.

    The oncoming commercial real estate collapse is a big one. You just don’t give a dick about it. And neither does anyone here.

    can ,

    I’ve been priced out of real estate, why the fuck should I care?

    Zhao ,

    Real estate is a rich people problem now and I hope they’re having a fucking crisis.

    JesusLikesYourButt ,

    Yeah, that’s prime schadenfreude for me personally.

    Gabu ,

    Nobody with a brain gives a shit about it, because it SHOULD happen. Land isn’t a commodity to hold and rent, even the fathers of capitalism thought so.

    Viking_Hippie ,

    Now everything has to be as dumb shitty as before for no reason

    Just as I thought I was out of having to shake the hands of twenty people when arriving at a family party, they PULL ME BACK IN! Some of them literally!

    TheRealLinga , to memes in Remember to tuck in your EV at night or it might get angry 😡🔥

    This feels like some alt-right anti EV car propaganda

    Timecircleline ,

    To me it looks like a training excercise. Electric car fires are different from ICE fires

    rcmaehl OP ,
    @rcmaehl@lemmy.world avatar

    Yep. This was from a manufacturers video. Just the idea of a fire blanket was a bit funny for me as it’s just not something you’d think of.

    Pyr_Pressure ,

    You’d need a big blanket for a Tesla semi

    rcmaehl OP ,
    @rcmaehl@lemmy.world avatar

    Biggest of bois are the biggest of sleepers

    Fiivemacs ,

    Or, reality. Wait till things really start getting hot globally and the battery manufacturing is sold to the lowest bidder for more ceo profit. I personally have no issues with Evs, but knowing how batteries fail…Esh…it’s a very spicy pillow

    pipe01 ,

    Wait until you find out how a tank of gasoline fails

    BruceTwarzen ,

    Not as bad, not as long and it's extinguishable.

    CADmonkey ,

    Fire departments across the US have the tools and chemicals on hand to deal with a gasoline fires.

    Electric cars are fairly new (that Baker from 1910 doesn’t count, because it had lead-acid batteries and nobody drives one) and aren’t as common as ICE cars, so fire departments haven’t all caught up. Outside of huge cities I imagine a fire department doesn’t have the equipment to deal with a battery fire.

    pipe01 ,

    Yeah fair enough, hopefully with time this will be less of an issue

    Absolutemehperson ,

    Just spray it with water!

    hackris ,

    Wait until you see a gas tank spontaneously combust (you won’t). The same way you won’t see a gas tank explode when overfilling it or puncturing it.

    JohnDClay ,

    Except you totally would. If you punctured a gas tank, it’ll get gasoline on hot components that’ll cause it to ignite.

    Saik0Shinigami ,
    @Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com avatar

    Do you think the gas tank is IN the engine bay or something? The hottest thing underneath a gas tank might be the exhaust… The ignition temp of gas is something like 500F/260C… Without spark… it’s not going to happen just out of the blue. An Exhaust CAN get that hot… But under most normal uses, basically all normal cars won’t get that hot (racecars and other “performance cars” probably will get hotter than the ignition temp of Gasoline).

    JohnDClay ,

    I was thinking in terms of a crash or a huge object intrusion. That’ll be pushing all sorts of things to places they’re not supposed to go, such as hot break pads or even parts of the other car.

    Just like in normal operation you wouldn’t be able to catch a gas tank on fire by puncturing it, you wouldn’t get a puncture on a battery either in normal operation. It’s the extreme crash scenarios you need to worry about. Both batteries and gasoline are very energy dense and potentially dangerous. And both have a lot of mitigation strategies to keep them from being a hazard. Batteries aren’t inherently lots more dangerous like the original comment seemed to be implying.

    Saik0Shinigami ,
    @Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com avatar

    you wouldn’t get a puncture on a battery either in normal operation.

    Batteries at this point are almost universally the base of the car… It’s not hard for debris on the road to kick up and puncture the underside of a car.

    A fuel tank would simply leak it all out… Unless there was a spark. A battery cell being exposed to air will self-immolate. It all depends on how it’s packaged… Which we’re learning in the Florida hurricane here… They’re not that well packaged…

    JohnDClay ,

    That’s why they have a thick belly pan. It’s all mitigation.

    hackris ,

    There is nothing hot under the gas tank. Just the exhaust, which is not hot enough to ignite the gas. Also, the car in the picture seems like it was stationary. Please tell me, how anything in a combustion engine vehicle could be hot enough after about an hour.

    CADmonkey ,

    No.

    I’ve worked on too many crappy old cars to belive this. First of all, the gas tank is on the other end of the car from the engine unless you’re driving a Trabant. It’s possible to have a fuel line rupture in the engine bay, but if that happens basically every gas or diesel car has this magical thing that happens - turn the key off, and the fuel pump stops running, so you’re not spraying an entire gas tank on a fire. If the gas tank itself is punctured, you don’t get a fire unless you’re literally lying under it with a lit match.

    I’ve had two motorcycles break a fuel line while running, and one of them had a gravity fed fuel system - so the gas DID keep flowing out of the tank. It didn’t catch fire, and I only noticed when the engine stopped. Another one DID catchtank, when the gas spilled on the hot exhaust (and it was a 24 year old bike, not a nearly new Tesla) and I put it out with the contents of an outdoor ash tray. (sand and rainwater)

    So gas won’t ignite when you puncture the tank without an ignition source. But stick an ice pick (or part of the car you’ve hit) through the battery, and it will light off on its own. I want more EVs, I’d like one myself, but people like you posting easily disprovable things about EVs just look silly and hold everyone back.

    Yummy3343 ,

    Have you never heard of the Ford Pinto

    Fiivemacs ,

    The tank doesn’t just explode when it fails…still needs ignition but ok

    Robin ,

    Batteries don’t explode either. It’s just a really hard to extinguish fire.

    Fiivemacs ,

    They can spontaneously combust, so near close to explode.

    KaiReeve ,

    This is already happening in Florida after the hurricane flooded some Teslas. Apparently lithium ion batteries don’t like salt water.

    An aside: I support EVs and a renewable future. It’s important that we acknowledge and address these issues in this early stage of adoption. Also, call your senator and have them support the Motorcycle Parity Act so I can afford a Livewire S2.

    Barbarian ,
    @Barbarian@sh.itjust.works avatar

    I have issues with EVs. People are acting like this is the cure for climate change when they’re almost as bad for the environment as conventional cars when you include the environmental cost of manufacturing and the energy mix of the grid that powers them.

    Why can’t we be sensible and invest in trains, trams, subways and bicycle infrastructure rather than engaging in techno-fetishism?

    Zetta ,

    Um they are not almost as bad as ICE vehicles. Even including emissions during manufacturing it still only takes a handful of years for most EVs to be more environmentally friendly than an ICE vehicle.

    JohnDClay ,

    Exactly. It depends on your local energy mix, but I think it’s better after like 4 years worst case scenario. Here’s a video we with more info. youtu.be/6RhtiPefVzM?si=tNZr23eRFk41jQ7a

    Cars will still have more emissions than busses or trains, especially electric, so we should invest in those.

    PipedLinkBot ,

    Here is an alternative Piped link(s): piped.video/6RhtiPefVzM?si=tNZr23eRFk41jQ7a

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

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

    bloodfart ,

    It takes at least decade for the carbon from manufacturing to be offset by the lack of emissions from the ev’s daily operation.

    Assuming zero carbon electricity generation used in the ev. Local electricity mix will adjust that number up.

    If you really want to have a bad time: we don’t have enough lithium to replace even half the cars currently on the road, not counting all the other uses for it aside from ev batteries.

    The only two ways out of this are fewer cars or fewer people. When someone suggests the latter path, be sure to ask them who and why.

    JohnDClay ,

    It depends on your local energy mix, but I think it’s better after like 4 years worst case scenario. Here’s a video we with more info. youtu.be/6RhtiPefVzM?si=tNZr23eRFk41jQ7a

    Cars will still have more emissions than busses or trains, especially electric, so we should invest in those.

    PipedLinkBot ,

    Here is an alternative Piped link(s): piped.video/6RhtiPefVzM?si=tNZr23eRFk41jQ7a

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

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

    Fiivemacs ,

    This.

    Uvine_Umbra , (edited )
    @Uvine_Umbra@partizle.com avatar

    Threy don’t assist in producing smog so improved air quality and are much quieter.

    Besides, all of those things are already being produced where they will be profitable.

    Tampa just dropped their tram line project because they couldn’t save enough money. They’re replacing them with buses.

    Brightline is getting ready to open their Orlando line & planning one to Jacksonville & Tampa.

    Like hear me out: what we need is Full Self-driving ride sharing so ppl don’t have to own a car to get anywhere they want. Just call a self-driving taxi & go to work. This would make trains more convenient too (would always have a cheap “rental car” ready at each stop so people are less-incentivized to take the highway) and significantly decrease the amount of cars overall.

    Barbarian ,
    @Barbarian@sh.itjust.works avatar

    While I do agree that smog reduction is a legitimate and major plus, the point about profitability is weird. Are highways profitable? If yes due to increased economic activity, then I can make the same argument for other infrastructure. It’s not about profitability, it’s about political will.

    Self-driving taxis might work if city run, but if privately run it’s going to be Uber all over again, where they come into the market cheaply to kill competition and then spike the price as high as it can go. That would kill any incentive to use the service rather than own your own, for those that can afford it.

    With full self driving, there’s still major legal hurdles involved. If a self-driving car kills someone, who’s to blame? The driver not driving? The programmers? The company? It’s a serious issue that I think will kill the whole concept.

    Uvine_Umbra , (edited )
    @Uvine_Umbra@partizle.com avatar

    First, to highways. Tell me, is rail maintenance profitable? How about for maglevs or retrofitted bus networks?

    It’s an expense, it will always be an expense. That’s an expense that will just have to be paid (as if it would disappear anyways, semi-trucks aren’t about to disappear).

    The service would open up thousands of dollars to people who no longer need to pay for cars & allow those who were economically disadvantaged by not being able to afford one to be able to take advantage. After all, you could pay for a $120 pass per month (no insurance, maintenance, etc.) Or if you drive comparatively little per month like 15 miles (I looked up the info & did some math), they’d be able to do $60 a month or get this: $0.13 cents per mile.

    Another thing, profitability is one of the greatest determinants of political will. Innumerable projects have died once the political will was burned out by the hefty price tag. If uber has shown anything, that will would not die in my idea.

    Second, much regional travel would now happen via train and buses as train networks expand to inter-city lines and buses take up high density locations. The logic is simple: Why do you drive the highway in the first place? It’s usually to drive 45 minutes to 1 hour to a job site or college/ school or that rare shopping trip or even friends correct? Some trips may only take 5 minutes, some may have to go 2-3 hours. My idea allows for more greater carpooling. If the uber computers saw that a location had many people coming together to go to a single location, the vehicle used could swap to a bus of various sizes and the app or via phonecall or whatever menhod of communication, you could choose the carpool option which would allow you to walk up to 5 minutes to a hailed bus which would allow the riders in and take them to a list of nearby destinations. Of course this bus would be manned by a driver, but that would be more than offset by the extensive amount of people taking that bus to the designated area. Unlike uber, the bus driver would be a worker for the company & paid for managing the travels, not usually having to drive themselves if ever. A pretty nice job no?

    As for actual cities (Cape coral is not a city, nor is 90% of the USA), they are going to go the way of ebikes, bus public transport, trams, trains, etc. as before as the place densifies via infill development like today and everyone who wants their suburbs will be happy and those who want dense cities will be happy.

    As for the legal hurdles, that would be easy: Uber would have to pay if their vehicle fucked up, but that would just be another small expense as uber could sue hundreds of thousands of people who would drive like idiots and crash into their FSD vehicles. A FSD car would have a MUCH lower chance of causing an accident versus a human afterall.

    If the car was proven to be in human control mode at that time, it is the responsibility of the driver of the FSD car. They are the one who crashed it afterall.

    If the crash was proven by something like a black box in the car or the log to be because of a software error, it’s the cost to the company who wrote the software.

    Poor maintenance? Uber.

    And to those who own a car? They’d have to share the cost of all the people crashing into FSD cars via insurance fees which would discourage direct car ownership for all but the rich much further.

    That question had very little thought put into it.

    This made me think about people puking in the car, the app & car itself could offer a button to state if the car would be in good condition, needs cleaning, awful, something like that. AND NOTHING WOULD BE CHARGED. This would discourage people to lie, and could even incur a “lying fee” if the vehicle is heavily damaged before the person says the car is good via app to disincentivise lying.

    Finally, to answer your centralization question: the era of easy cheap loans is over, killed by Covid. The old days of deficit spending until the next venture capital investment are dead.

    Regardless, there are 2 directions this could go in my opinion: 1 is being treated like public transportation. The other is apps like Expedia which centralize various local & regional services for travel.

    Yes, there would be big companies that form over all this, but it feels like it would take a lot of capital to enter but it would be in the hundreds of millions, so regional companies could compete in many places alongside the heavyweights for ridership & approval.

    Long story short: Highways are an expense, but they will not be expanded by charging people for taking them, saving lots of infrastructure money and encouraging train usage. From the next city, you could just hail one of the uber cars afterall. The system would save each individual person by giving many of the advantages of a car and allowing buses a chance to regain popularity while socializing maintenance costs and the like to all users of the service. This would make car ownership an expensive luxury item versus the necessity it is today for many people and give opportunities to those economically disadvantaged without them having to move. Best part? Cities would not need it. They would focus on trams, buses, subways, etc to manage their local density while not needing the additional parking.

    A North American solution to a North American problem

    Barbarian ,
    @Barbarian@sh.itjust.works avatar

    A North American solution to a North American problem

    Sorry to be so blunt, but I think that handily sums up your entire comment. US and Canadian city and infrastructure planning seems ridiculously bad, from what I’ve read.

    Uvine_Umbra , (edited )
    @Uvine_Umbra@partizle.com avatar

    Oh I don’t mind the bluntness.

    And believe me, if is, it bloody effing is, but there are many people who just want the suburb way of life to be accessible to them & hate the cost, while others want dense cities.

    This is a way to help both sides get what they want and saves everyone here individually thousands of dollars and as a nation (looking at the USA) potentially 2+ trillion dollars a year while throwing away additional money.

    Why not?

    Rivalarrival ,

    With full self driving, there’s still major legal hurdles involved. If a self-driving car kills someone, who’s to blame? The driver not driving? The programmers? The company? It’s a serious issue that I think will kill the whole concept.

    The same entity that is responsible when an industrial machine malfunctions and kills someone. The same entity that is responsible when a light falls from the ceiling and hits a member of the audience, or a plane’s engine falls off and lands in someone’s house. Responsibility could fall on the engineer who designed the machine, or the installer who put in the lights, or the maintainer who failed to perform required inspections, or the operator of the facility, or the owner of the equipment.

    It really isn’t a complicated issue, it just hasn’t been investigated and brought to the courts yet. The plaintiffs will be pointing the finger at the entity with the most money; the defendants will be pointing at the plaintiffs if they can, and at their co-defendants if they can’t.

    Zetta ,

    All but the highest end EVs will likely switch to a LiFePO4 battery chemistry, this chemistry is much more stable under destructive conditions and are less prone to combustion and thermal runaway.

    nxdefiant ,

    And the only penalty is about a 10% energy density loss. The chemistry also charges / discharges on a very flat curve, which means it’s not sufficient to monitor voltage levels and temperature to know the current charge state, you have to also monitor power-in / out and time and make a best guess, which requires semi regular calibration.

    The upside is that you can always charge to 100% and it has almost triple (I think) duty cycles compared to traditional liOn

    hark , to showerthoughts in Does Consciousness Disappear in Dreamless Sleep?
    @hark@lemmy.world avatar

    There’s still brain activity in sleep.

    Agent641 ,

    Brain activity isnt nessecarily consciousness.

    CeeBee ,

    Right? I’ve met so many of those people.

    Klear ,

    Those have consciousness without any brain activity.

    echodot ,

    But it is life.

    angrystego ,

    It’s not death…

    wesker , to nostupidquestions in What does this icon mean?
    @wesker@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    It means you’re armored and ready for keyboard battle.

    glad_cat , to technology in Why are people hyped about RSS regaining relevance?

    i would love it to return.

    RSS never died though, I have at least 50 web sites that I follow.

    clearedtoland ,

    What do you use as your reader?

    mwguy ,

    Tiny Tiny RSS has been great for me. Popped it on a VPS and it’s been running for years now trouble.

    deweydecibel ,

    I think they mean get popular again, see more robust support and integration, etc.

    gitstash ,

    Damn straight. Feedbin for me.

    It has gotten less useful over time as content went elsewhere, but also I’ve been lazy about moving Substack feeds over.

    somedaysoon ,
    @somedaysoon@lemmy.world avatar

    What are some feeds you all follow? I’ve always been interested in the concept of RSS feeds but I’m not sure where to start for finding feeds that interest me.

    3laws ,

    Ars Technica, BBC and Reuters are big enough that you may find a channel of your liking, that was my starting point.

    What are your interests?

    somedaysoon ,
    @somedaysoon@lemmy.world avatar

    Thanks for replying. Tech, Linux, selfhosting, FOSS, motorcycles, mechanical work, home improvement, tools, shop type things.

    3laws ,

    The OPML I have on my phone is not as complete as the one on my PC, let me get back at you when I can and I’ll share some feeds for tech, Linux and FOSS.

    peanutdust ,

    you can use it to subscribe to youtube, odysee, peertube, podcasts, without an account. i use feedbro to get the youtube rss easy but lately i use freetube.

    eestileib , to noncredibledefense in rest in piss

    Ah, so THAT’S what air defense doing.

    Maddison ,

    Ukrainian planes scary, they likey civilian planes

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