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BetaBlake , in Could an American please prove me wrong?

Ha easy! That’s Genovia, the country Anne Hathaway is a princess of.

cordlesslamp ,

I still fucking remember its goddamn anthem for no fucking reason. Can’t even remember the last time I watched it, but it must be at least 18 years or so.

gazby ,

Read this comment with the SO over my shoulder and we both go in unison 🎵GEEEEENOOOOOVIAAAAAAA 🎵😂😭😂😭

Randelung ,

It’s too similar to the Canadian anthem. Every time that plays my brain goes

Brutticus ,

Hail hail Genovia! A land I didn’t maaake up!

ch00f ,

Famous for their pears

Brutticus ,

The princess is Mia Thermopolis

nifty , in Ballaholic I'm guessing
@nifty@lemmy.world avatar

He’s cheating on his diet, as others mentioned. I feel like you should be able to just talk to your wife about going off diet once in a while…

InternetUser2012 ,

Some people suck though. Dude would probably catch hell from his wife Karen.

nifty ,
@nifty@lemmy.world avatar

Eh someone who gives their SO hell for not sticking to their diet is not necessarily “Karen”, it’s unnecessary to frame it this way

arin ,

Maybe he was unhealthy obese

activ8r , in Could an American please prove me wrong?

This genuinely got me. I’m from the UK, so I know Europe roughly, but looking at the image I spent way to long trying to figure out what it could be until I realised it was a joke… I’m not a smart woman.

bane_killgrind ,

I thought Catalonia finally separated but then the shape was weird…

Nuke_the_whales , in Ballaholic I'm guessing
kewwwi , in Could an American please prove me wrong?
@kewwwi@lemmy.world avatar

that’s the holy roman empire

Evil_Shrubbery ,

Exactly.
You can tell this by it not being holy, not Roman, or an empire.

finitebanjo , in Could an American please prove me wrong?

I’m not good with maps, but show me a picture of the wild grass and maybe I can guess it.

TootSweet ,

I think whoever made this map was on some wild grass ifyouknowwhatimsayin.

SubArcticTundra , in Damn right
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

Well said. More attention should be given to the subconscious perception of important concepts. (Ok now I think about it this sounds quite 1984)

rockerface ,

But we’ll be using it for the good of humanity here… oh

thanks_shakey_snake ,

No no it’s fine it’s just that if we want people to behave and think in certain ways, we can shape that by controlling what language they have available to express certain fuck I’m doing it too, aren’t I?

Excrubulent ,
@Excrubulent@slrpnk.net avatar

1984 was partly about how consent is manufactured using language. It’s a reality that the powerful systems exploit every single day very effectively to drive us towards extinction so the lines keep going up.

There’s nothing wrong with using those tools for good. Too many leftists are so concerned with the substance of the message that they forget how important the presentation is. I’m sure a lot of people think it shouldn’t be important, but because we’re social animals and not analytical engines of pure reason, it does matter.

luciferofastora ,

Too many leftists are so concerned with the substance of the message that they forget how important the presentation is.

I find that to be an issue with many well-meaning people.

For example, I see it occasionally in the FOSS-bubble: It’s great if a given software is ideologically “pure”, independent from capitalist incentives, open source and freely available. It’s great that there are volunteers doing work for the benefit of others.

Occasionally, when someone lists specific tools running on Windows only as reason for not switching to Linux, they get told to use FOSS alternatives instead that just can’t match the proprietary in terms of features or usability. When you point that out, there will often be the customary vocal minority of twats chastising you “It’s volunteer work, you don’t get to demand anything, go implement it yourself” etc.

I hate to admit it, but I’m generally more comfortable around MS Excel than LO Calc. I’ve used LO Writer and Impress for personal and university stuff, because I rarely need more advanced features (and if I do, I’ll probably use TeX anyway), but when it comes to more complex work with spreadsheets, I just find Excel to be smoother in usage. I don’t have enough experience in the field of UX to put a finger on why, nor would I likely have the skills or time to contribute fixes to LO Calc. I can settle for less out of ideology, but is that what you expect from people at large?

The same applies with the transition to Linux in general: I’m technically versed enough that I’m confident I can probably fix any error I encounter. But until the public perception and tooling of Linux gets to the point that even non-techies can easily do the switch, it’s not going to see widespread adoption.

I love FOSS. I love Linux. I want to see them replace proprietary monopolies as much as possible.

But the presentation matters.

Excrubulent ,
@Excrubulent@slrpnk.net avatar

Yup, I had this in mind as another example of the same thing when I was writing my comment.

When you try to explain that the general jankiness of linux is a big problem and a barrier, you get a lot of people very upset and defensive, but it’s just a simple, obvious fact, and only by facing that fact can anybody actually fix it.

I think the reasons for it are perfectly understandable - software is hard, and anyone able to volunteer could make serious money in so many different places. Capitalist enitities have gobbled up the vast majority of the talent for their own projects, even if they make them spin their wheels in bullshit jobs rather than make good software. The only people left to make FOSS are some combo of ideological, stubborn, and incapable of working within capitalist orgs, or just extremely tired because they already do work in those orgs. That’s not to mention the probably-non-zero number of saboteurs and psyops in the community.

Those people either don’t have the time or don’t have the inclination to spend their precious efforts making features for newbies who can’t just CTRL+ALT+T and start hammering out console commands like a 90s movie hacker.

Now that may not be the fault of honest linux devs who are doing good work, but it is linux’s problem. I don’t know what the solution is, but it’s got to be more than just pretending “linux is easy now” then pivoting to “if you’re not an expert you have no business here” the moment anybody points out how wrong they are. These exact same conversations were happening 15 years ago when I started linux, and the experience is still painfully perverse.

luciferofastora ,

only by facing that fact can anybody actually fix it

The first step to improvement is to acknowledge flaws. We can still admit “This is outside our current capacity to fix.”

pretending “linux is easy now”

This might not always be pretense so much as cognitive bias and a bubble effect: If I look at it from my point of view, it has gotten a lot eas_ier_. I underestimate just how advanced even those things I consider basic are for someone not as versed as I am. I’m nowhere near an expert, but I know enough to have lost sight of the floor.

There are plenty of “fire and forget” distros - If I want to, say, install Ubuntu, I create a bootable flash drive with the base image, reboot, follow the installation prompts, easy.

The layperson will ask “What’s Ubuntu? I thought we’re talkink about Linux?” “What does bootable mean? How do I do that?”

Most crucially, from my own experience trying to sell a family member on Linux, “What do these prompts all mean?” They’re scared of selecting something wrong, because they’re not confident that they understand them correctly.

That may be a public image issue: If you’re predisposed to think it’s complex, the brain may lock itself into not trusting its own understanding of semantics. And the elitists certainly aren’t helping with that: If a hundred people reassure you it’s fine and one person says it’s complex, it’s hard to avoid that seed of doubt. Once it is planted, confirmation bias will do the rest.

I don’t know what the solution is

One part of the solution might be a “transition” package, consisting of first a tool to try cross-platform alternatives to tools people already use, second a ready-made VM to try Linux without installing it, using a transition distro, styled to look and feel “like Windows” and built-in links to the host filesystem, and finally a fully automated installer that includes backing up files, settings etc. and putting them in the equivalent Linux soot after installation so you have as little transitory friction as possible.

Which leads us back to the topic of leftist politics and the split between moderates and progressives: Of course I don’t want to compromise on my principles, but we’re not gonna win people over by demanding drastic change with scary words that make it easy to lump in the “Capitalism fucks us over” progressives with the McCarthyist “They want to install a Russian dictatorship!” rhetorics about the radicals and tankies. Radical change is likely to invite radical backlash.

Our best shot at non-violent and lasting change is to make the transition as low-friction as possible, inching people over policy by policy, shifting the Overton Window the way the regressives have been doing for decades, instead of trying to aggressively shunting it over.

Focus less on identity, ideology and terminology, more on individual issues and solutions. Some movements obviously warrant aggressive countering, but we have to pick our battles, or we’ll be spread out on too many fronts. Ideology alone doesn’t win wars; Strategy does.

We should also project unity of vision and determination instead of public infighting and sabotaging what we all want over the things we disagree on.

Presentation matters.

SubArcticTundra ,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

Hmm true

DarkCloud , in Those poor plants

That’s not how knowledge works.

TriflingToad , in 45.

wubbadubba dub is that true?

LodeMike OP ,

:3

Blackmist , in Could an American please prove me wrong?

That would be France’s Testicles.

DeadNinja ,
@DeadNinja@lemmy.world avatar

Francicles…

Evil_Shrubbery ,

Francicles The First
and (slightly more to the north)
Francicles The Second.

ouRKaoS ,

So Italy is trying to kick France in the nuts?

…seems legit. Carry on.

Evil_Shrubbery ,

Right in their stupid onions.

Evil_Shrubbery ,

Its too close to a rich, smug monarchy nearby - better be safe & guillotine those babies off!!

Teknikal , in Could an American please prove me wrong?
@Teknikal@eviltoast.org avatar

That be Australia I know this is a fact as I have an Iq of 172 according to a website quiz I cheated on.

ArtVandelay ,
@ArtVandelay@lemmy.world avatar

Hi Mr President.

Jarix , in Could an American please prove me wrong?

Canadian, some think we are american enough for most situations.

Is it Greece?

Im gonna go check, but thats my answer right now

genfood OP ,
@genfood@feddit.org avatar

Yes it’s Greece 🇬🇷, not bad!

can ,

😅

Jarix ,

Loli need to pay more attention to what community a post is in before i reply

db2 ,

Loli

😬

superkret , in Could an American please prove me wrong?

Esperain

camr_on ,
@camr_on@lemmy.world avatar

Sprance

db2 ,

The birthplace of Esperanto!

SubArcticTundra , in Any Croatians here?
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

Hmm, I’m pretty sure this is the case in most of the Eastern Bloc. Definitely in Poland

deranger , (edited ) in Any Croatians here?

I had a really pleasant drive through Croatia, it didn’t seem too crazy to me. This was more than a few years ago though. Drove from Plitvice Lakes park to Split by way of some rural as fuck road through the woods, eventually getting on some highway, A1 I believe. My expectations may have been altered by the years of driving in Italy.

Going through the tunnel on A1 was a cool experience. One side was green, temperate, and humid, then we cut through a tunnel, the other side was brown, dry, and hot. One minute of driving completely changed the microclimate. This was northeast of Zadar.

Edit: unrelated to driving but my girlfriend and I at the time went driving downstream from Plitvice lakes to find a place to swim. Ended up pulling off the side of the road near a river and walking upstream until we found a spot. We didn’t realize it was behind somebodies house but they came out and let us swim anyways. A super cool experience. We literally wandered into their natural river pool and they didn’t care.

SubArcticTundra ,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

Going through the tunnel on A1 was a cool experience. One side was green, temperate, and humid, then we cut through a tunnel, the other side was brown, dry, and hot. One minute of driving completely changed the microclimate. This was northeast of Zadar.

I know the one you mean! It feels like switching biomes. I went down that motorway with my parents when I was younger and althpugh the views were nice, it felt like it went on for ages.

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