There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

Hot

fluffypaws , to random

books to read instead of harry potter:

  • percy jackson and the olympians by rick riordan
  • all of the other books / series in the riordanverse
  • the scholomance by naomi novik
  • the inheritance cycle by christopher paolini
  • the nsibidi scripts by nnedi okorafor
  • the magicians by lev grossman

boost for visibility and feel free to comment more suggestions!

please also note that not all the recommended books will be suitable for children or teens.

coregaze ,
@coregaze@mstdn.social avatar

@fluffypaws anything by margaret storey, if you can find them- hey @neilhimself could you use your influence to get them reprinted? that would be lovely

neilhimself ,
@neilhimself@mastodon.social avatar

@coregaze @fluffypaws

I've tried hard and failed.

zak , to android
@zak@social.goodanser.com avatar

From @LineageOS install instructions - success is normal, but errors are also fine:

> Normally, adb will report Total xfer: 1.00x, but in some cases, even if the process succeeds the output will stop at 47% and report adb: failed to read command: Success. In some cases it will report adb: failed to read command: No error or adb: failed to read command: Undefined error: 0 which is also fine.

@android

tubaruco ,

yeah its just you

or maybe i didnt understand it…

zak OP ,
@zak@social.goodanser.com avatar

@tubaruco It's from these installation instructions, which say "it might error, but that's fine". Usually error messages mean it's not fine, so I found it fairly amusing.

https://wiki.lineageos.org/devices/sunfish/install/#installing-lineageos-from-recovery

elonjet , to random
@elonjet@mastodon.social avatar

Landed in Austin, Texas, United States. Apx. flt. time 1 h 58 min.

elonjet OP ,
@elonjet@mastodon.social avatar

1,242 mile (1,079 NM) flight from LAX to AUS

~ 992 gallons (3,755 liters).
~ 6,648 lbs (3,016 kg) of jet fuel used.
~ $5,555 cost of fuel.
~ 10 tons of CO2 emissions.

elonjet , to random
@elonjet@mastodon.social avatar

Landed in Los Angeles, California, United States. Apx. flt. time 22 min.

elonjet OP ,
@elonjet@mastodon.social avatar

17 mile (15 NM) flight from LGB to LAX

~ 188 gallons (712 liters).
~ 1,260 lbs (571 kg) of jet fuel used.
~ $1,053 cost of fuel.
~ 2 tons of CO2 emissions.

sydpolk ,
@sydpolk@mastodon.social avatar

@elonjet Great. Let’s hit all of the Southern California airports.

AutieScot , to random
@AutieScot@mastodon.scot avatar

I've seen a fair amount of anecdotal theories that sensory sensitivities get worse with age; however I'm curious as to whether that may be caused by many older autistic people experiencing which also makes sensory stuff worse...

alexisbushnell ,
@alexisbushnell@toot.wales avatar

@AutieScot anecdotal but mine definitely get worse when I'm in burnout - they are incredibly bad right now.

@actuallyautistic

sapiens , to random
@sapiens@universeodon.com avatar

Cantus: A Database for Latin Ecclesiastical Chant - Inventories of Chant Sources | Cantus Manuscript Database
https://cantus.uwaterloo.ca/

"Cantus is a database of the Latin chants found in manuscripts and early printed books, primarily from medieval Europe. This searchable digital archive holds inventories of antiphoners and breviaries -- the main sources for the music sung in the Latin liturgical Office -- as well as graduals and other sources for music of the Mass."

sapiens OP ,
@sapiens@universeodon.com avatar

@matz @medievodons @ClaireFromClare It has been my pleasure to help you out. Specifically for the ancient Italian music (dal Trecento al Settecento), you might already know this one: https://www.itmi.it/

Cordiali saluti.

matz ,
@matz@y.cubalibre.social avatar

@sapiens @medievodons @ClaireFromClare no, I didn't know it. Great, grazie mille!!

icassassin , to random
@icassassin@masto.ai avatar

My first eReader was a Kobo, so it makes sense that my return to recreational reading starts with another Kobo.

Gotta say, the Clara 2E is really, really, really nice.

Guess I gotta start looking into... ? This the hashtag y'all are at?


Kay ,
@Kay@mastodon.nz avatar

@icassassin You can follow the group @bookstodon to get more posts about . Some posts on will be reviews or recommendations. Some posts will also introduce you to good people to follow.

akkartik , to technology

@Judeet88 This thought might help you and me (https://lethallava.land/notes/9gp5hypoklkeflav; https://merveilles.town/@akkartik/105737744499263260) feel good about ourselves, but we still suffer some harm by being part of a society that grew dependent on Youtube. Might not seem fair, but there's a problem here and it impacts us.

@ajsadauskas @pluralistic @technology

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

@akkartik Please do not spam the !technology Lemmy community with content that makes no sense to us. For reference, this is what your post looks like to us:

https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/f5b289f7-547c-4566-9bf0-7257235c9aa6.png

nnschiller , to random
@nnschiller@glammr.us avatar

As a new public librarian, I keep encountering books (Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh or T. Kingfisher's Minor Mage) that read like YA. They have YA characters, are written at a YA level, are targeted to YA audiences.

And yet they are not YA books. In an almost similar vein, I think I grasp that the Romance genre has clear definitions that require more than just romantic or spicy content, but the taxonomic complexities of YA literature elude me. Can someone point me to resources?

lunalein ,
@lunalein@federatedfandom.net avatar

@nnschiller @bookstodon I honestly don’t know if YA is anything other than a marketing label nowadays. Aside: i loved Some Desperate Glory.

ajayiyer , to linux
@ajayiyer@mastodon.social avatar

I am thinking about hosting my own Mastodon server from home on a Raspberry Pi (Pi4 8GB)?

  1. Are there good tutorials out there?
  2. What's the annual cost just to host yourself?

@linux @nixCraft @raspberrypi

kurumin ,
@kurumin@linux.community avatar

I myself am really an enthusiast of new tech. But the high energy use is a huge deal breaker IMHO.

Is that argument not true?

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

The problem isn’t that Bitcoin uses a lot of energy. The problem is that people never consider that energy use in context. Yet any headline about Bitcoin and energy never provides that context, because they are essentially hit pieces designed to elicit anger and clicks. Instead, we have to ask: What does that energy get us? How does that energy use compare to the energy used by other systems which perform the same function? A car which gets 10 miles per gallon would have been a fantastic use of energy in 1953, but today it is seen as wasteful. It does the same underlying thing, but the context matters.

Historically, our currencies have been based on incredibly inequitably distributed resources: precious metals and stable governance. Bitcoin is based on energy, which is the most equitably distributed resource on the planet. It literally falls from the sky, it runs through every river and every gust of wind and is found in the earth’s crust as uranium. Sometimes we get energy from unsustainable places, it sucks that any industry (including Bitcoin) uses it. That is a policy and governance problem, not a problem of our monetary system. You should know that Bitcion miners flock to renewable energy sources and over-provisioned grids. Why? Because they need the cheapest energy possible, which tends to come from renewables. Bitcoin miners are “buyers of last resort”, if there was anybody else to buy that energy, they would have bought it, and miners would have been outbid, because miners can’t afford to pay high energy prices as they must compete with every other miner on the planet. This is why Bitcoin mines typically don’t operate during peak demand hours, which is where most fossil fuels are used. Bitcoin, as “buyers of last resort” can be a part of the green revolution, they make it easier for governments to invest in and over-provision renewable infrastructure, and they make that green energy cheaper for everybody else by ensuring that at least someone will buy it during times of low demand. The problem with renewables is that they produce all day whereas people only actually want energy a few times a day.

Energy use is critical for the security of the Bitcoin network. While schemes that don’t use energy have been proposed, they all suffer from some serious trade-offs that make them unsuitable if we are going to build a global reserve currency, including a tendency to cause centralization and to reward the system’s richest participants. If a way is found to avoid using energy while still providing the same level of security and decentralization, Bitcoin is absolutely capable of upgrading its own network to use that new way.

First, let’s look at what Bitcoin does in exchange for that energy: Bitcoin is an economic network that can be accessed by anybody with a cellphone and a halfway reliable internet connection including the billions of people, with a B, who are “unbanked” because they lack access to stable banking infrastructure. It enables anybody (with Bitcoin lightning) to send money internationally in under a second for pennies in fees. Having a settlement time for transactions of basically zero means that in an economy money can move faster. That means increased efficiency for any industry including the banking industry. It also offers us a way to opt out of an unsustainable inflationary currency environment, that is valuable to people as well. Constantly increasing the supply of money robs the money of value, it hurts the lower and middle classes the most. Bank runs happen, and banks are “too big to fail”, so we have to bail them out, which is how the 99% end up paying for the investment risks of the 1%, the system is deeply flawed. But there is no solution to the bailout problem, if our entire economy will collapse if we don’t do the bailout, we have to do the bailout, right?

Second, let’s look at how much energy that takes. Bitcoin currently does this with less than 1% of global electricity usage. Even if it doesn’t replace banking entirely, even if it only replaces remittance services (think PayPal, Western Union, etc). Think of every Western Union kiosk, branch, etc in the entire globe. Think of their lights, their servers, their call centers. How much energy is that? How much energy is used by SWIFT? PayPal? When you start adding these up, you find that we use well over this amount of electricity on remittance services. And we’re not just waiting electricity and earth’s resources, we’re wasting the most valuable assets of all: time and human capital. We don’t need people manually sending bank wires like it’s 1910. We can have those people doing more valuable jobs.

Bitcoin’s market cap is around 850 billion right now. That is bigger than the entire GDP of Sweden or Israel or Vietnam, it’s in the top 25 countries by GDP. It transfers trillions of dollars of transactions every year. The average trend, year on year, is wider adoption and growth. It solves real problems and people recognize it and use it for that purpose. That’s why big banks, hedge funds, and others invest in it.

There is also the wider discussion to be had about predicating our economies on currencies which grow to infinity and how that may not be a sustainable strategy on a planet with non-infinite resources. A currency which is constantly losing value incentivizes people to spend even if they don’t actually need anything, because the currency is going to become worthless given enough time. This means more production is paid for than we actually need. More resources get used up. A deflationary currency, on the other hand, incentivizes the opposite. In a deflationary economic system, somebody producing a good or service must do more to make you want to buy it. In that environment, might products be more reliable? More repairable? Might they be built more sustainably? One can only speculate, but I personally feel positive about the knock-on effects of moving off an inflationary currency system.

elonjet , to random
@elonjet@mastodon.social avatar

Landed in Long Beach, California, United States. Apx. flt. time 13 min.

yobuko201 ,
@yobuko201@mastodon.social avatar

@elonjet he seriously flew from Hawthorne to Long Beach?! He should've drove a Tesla through one of his tunnels.

sydpolk ,
@sydpolk@mastodon.social avatar

@elonjet You are fucking kidding me. It’s a 23 minute drive according to Apple Maps. Even with a private jet, it would take longer to fly. And you don’t have a car on one end or the other. This dude owns fucking Tesla; he couldn’t use that instead of burning 100+ gallons of jet fuel?

Ricardus , to random
@Ricardus@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

Watching episode 1 of Picard.

MirrorAyako ,
@MirrorAyako@universeodon.com avatar

@Ricardus

Ricardus is hosting a watch party starting with Picard.

Don’t forget to hashtag to follow the conversation. @allstartrek

petertrek1 ,
@petertrek1@universeodon.com avatar

@MirrorAyako @Ricardus @allstartrek

Whoops, I didn't see this until just now. I'll look out for it in the coming Saturdays and try to join if I can. Thanks!

Meowthias , to random
@Meowthias@mastodon.world avatar

It doesn't look like Star Trek: the Motion Picture is on Paramount+, so I will be continuing my DISCO rewatch tonight.

MirrorAyako ,
@MirrorAyako@universeodon.com avatar

@Meowthias

Maybe you can coordinate with @Ricardus who is trying to get a group going for Saturday.

@allstartrek

WanderingPoltergeist , to gaming
@WanderingPoltergeist@kbin.social avatar

I've been enjoying Nexomon- Extinction so far, it's a sassy game that's quite fun to play! The game mechanics work as intended and there were only a few things which I questioned before an NPC provided an answer. Leveling up my Nexomon seems like a potential slog though, I've gotten used to experience sharing in Pokémon games; I must unlearn this behavior. There are cores which can act like an Exp Share, which is nice because there are two party members that don't need to hog a large chunk of experience! I've been juggling those cores around to passively level up Nexomon which were behind in levels while using stronger creatures to tank damage.

I appreciate the game's aesthetics because it reminds me of older Pokémon games, while remaining unique. The setting matches up with the desperate situation this world is currently in as there are settlements and camps throughout the land outside of their one big city. Humanity seems to be close to potential extinction. Nexomon Tamers are responsible for desperately keeping the wild Nexomon at bay so others can labor on in safer surroundings. I'm going to keep playing today and get further in! As the need to know what happens next is strong, I felt that similarly with Coromon too.

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted ,
@EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Thanks for recommending it!

WanderingPoltergeist OP ,
@WanderingPoltergeist@kbin.social avatar

@EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted You're welcome!

Rita89 , to random
@Rita89@mastodon.social avatar

Hello, when I see questions like this on Tumblr, and your answers @neilhimself, I always smile. Then Sandman crosses my mind and I comment as below. But, even if you are only a dream, sir, you make this world worth to live in. ❤️🌍 I would spend hours talking with you about all that you know and want to share, not only about books. Some people, as I can see, often seems to forget you are a man, a human being like us, before to be a famous writer. PS: I love when you reply with sarcastic words. 😎😌

image/jpeg

neilhimself ,
@neilhimself@mastodon.social avatar

@Rita89 thank you!

Rita89 OP ,
@Rita89@mastodon.social avatar

@neilhimself you're welcome! 😘 Have a good night!

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines