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Dragon Age Creator Slams "Woke" Criticism: "You're an Idiot"
  • I thought I'd never meet a trans person and very few gay people in the agricultural college I attended when I went back to college. Turned out every damn one of the friends I made was somewhere on the LGBTQ spectrum. So as the other person said "as far as you know"

    Acceptance of gay and trans rights has allowed so many people to realize they're not so straight or not so cisgender and that's wonderful. People are finally finding the freedom to be who they are!

  • Warranty runs out at 30
  • Honestly I thought it was appropriate. Aang, a freaking teenager, has an entire mini arc about the moral canundrum of having to kill someone while the fate of the entire world rests upon his shoulders. They also established how strongly it was against his religion to kill anything, and that he's a vegetarian.

    Obviously it was a copout in that they can't show a character being directly killed in a spectacular enough fashion for a series finale on a children's show, but ultimately weakening the big bad evil guy and taking away all of his power, politically, physically and emotionally. That's a great place to end it and so very in character for Aang

  • I live in a constant state of fear and misery
  • This hit too close to home. I'm now in my second forced job change in 3 years, and honestly I'm trying to make the most of it by using this job change to move to a larger city, just like how I used my last job change for a big bump in pay and benefits. It's been a goal to move for better resources for my special needs child, but now it's also about ensuring more resiliencey in my finances because if the next place lays me off I'll actually have no shortage of places to work within a 30 minute commute rather than commuting an hour like I did a year and a half ago and like I'm likely to start doing again soon. This shit makes me seriously wonder how people manage to work at places for 20 or 30 years straight

    Or for the political bent, we need to make layoffs more expensive and tip the balances on mergers and acquisitions to make those far harder. Force companies to pivot to meet a competitor or die

  • Home Depot
  • Elsewhere in the thread someone shared one of the originals where text that's mucked up in the above meme is clear as day. The crazy artifacting must come from some bizarre compression or automated touchup by an editing software. Maybe automated upscaling?

  • The best hill of them all.
  • From what I've seen of my in-laws' Ford vehicles they're generally pretty good, but I honestly prefer what I've seen from the Korean and Japanese manufacturers. They seem to really have the attention to detail down and be far less about spectacle or catering to a type of person I'm not

  • Emotional Support Vehicles
  • Honestly I strongly suspect my car seat challenge was just another example of that car being a poorly designed POS. It had all sorts of bonkers design faults, like water bottle holders in the doors that were simply the wrong size to hold any kind of sealable bottle and too aggressively angled to hold an unsealed container of any kind

    Another example was that the trunk was absolutely massive, but with the places things stuck down into the trunk and the gigantic lip at the bottom fitting anything bulky or awkward was next to impossible. Or the bright screen that used tons of blues in its design language and couldn't be fully turned off while driving, and while it was a touchscreen, the angle to reach over and press anything even as a passenger was so awkward you'd just avoid using the touchscreen at all, but certain common actions required using the touchscreen to access

    But yeah I love small cars, and someday I'll probably import a Kei van or car because I would absolutely rock that, and it lends itself to the joke that you're compensating for something with the super tiny car ;)

  • The best hill of them all.
  • Backup cameras are required by law since I think it was 2015? But the trend of gigantic screen with no physical controls seems to be in a "will they/won't they" kinda situation right now with some manufacturers flirting with the idea, some trying it then reverting, etc.

  • The best hill of them all.
  • My 2019 Kia seems to give the best of both worlds. I've got a small I think 10" display for reversing camera and Android Auto/Apple Carplay/radio and physical buttons and knobs for climate controls, volume, etc. the display is just big enough to be useful for maps, and Kia's UI for the screen on the display is really nice with almost entirely white on black so it's not distracting nor too bright at night and it really blends in when you aren't looking at it while being there and ready for you when you are

  • Thoughts on parental controls?
  • I have mixed feelings on this front. On one hand, a locked down computer encourages either extreme compliance (so no learning how to do new things) or encourages the kid to figure out a bypass which might be far worse than if they had an unmanaged computer to begin with.

    Right now my oldest isn't reading yet so I have controls primarily to enforce a time limit particularly for dopamine-heavy media apps, and to prevent how much she can accidentally do by clicking without a clue of what she's clicking on and just clicking the colored button. I'll play it by ear for how much control is necessary to ensure my kids can develop to be the best adults they can be. The one thing I'm not looking towards is that my oldest is only about 4 years away from the window where I'll need to have "The Talk" with her, because many men in this world suck.

  • Thoughts on parental controls?
  • I've noticed how kids seem to get into far nastier dopamine drip addictions with a tablet/phone than the same kid does with a TV where there's more friction to changing videos. I'll probably do something like this to encourage healthier content consumption habits once mine are old enough to do more that pause/unpause the TV

  • Thoughts on parental controls?
  • As a kid I was effectively given unlimited screentime, and that definitely shaped me into adulthood for better and for worse. My wife has severe insomnia so she often sleeps until 11am, and my 4 year old always gets up around 7:30am so before she started school we setup an old phone with a managed google account with a 2.5 hour screentime limit, and a 30 minute limit for the YouTube Kids app (grandma got her hooked on YouTube of course so no putting that cat back into the bag) to encourage more enriching content (I preinstalled the PBS Kids apps, as well as a number of age-appropriate games) She's at an age where she's extremely impressionable and without locking things down will end up installing things by clicking ads or watching weird stuff she probably shouldn't be watching.

    In the near future my plan is to gift my 4 year old an old ewaste laptop I acquired off a friend and a Minecraft account since she's really been getting into Minecraft when she gets to play on my or my wife's computers, and I'll probably play it by ear for when to raise the parental controls, but right now she's simply not ready for unrestricted internet access. I probably won't limit screentime on the computer other than telling her its time to do something else when she's been on the computer for too long, but we'll play it by ear.

  • Emotional Support Vehicles
  • Currently my family's only vehicle is a Kia Sportage. At the time we had a Chevy Cruze that could not fit 2 rear facing car seats in bases in the back due to terrible design decisions, and also at the time my wife found herself commuting home on unplowed roads during the winter and bottoming out in the car so we went for the smallest most efficient SUV we could find and got it.

    Since then we've not once needed to go out on unplowed roads due to a job change and a deer found itself rapidly in the engine compartment of the Cruze, so I really miss driving a sedan. We're looking at another needs change very soon due to my work laying everyone off so I might be shopping for a sedan or a cute little hatchback very soon...

  • Satellite images suggest test of Russian “super weapon” failed spectacularly
  • Starlink doesn’t monitor the weather, in fact it could actively impede that soon given the amount of frequency noise they’re creating

    Correct, and I wasn't talking about Starlink, I was talking about the various GPS, climate and weather satellites spaceX has launched recently (and that's just the missions I can remember off the top of my head), and their capabilities to continue launching satellites for any purpose at an incredibly cost effective and potentially less destructive manner than with single use rockets

    Plus this isn't just a matter of SpaceX good/bad. SpaceX proved 98 times this year alone that reusable rockets work, something that before them was theoretically possible but appeared to be too technically complex and too costly to be a worthwhile endeavor. Now other space agencies have a proven model to point to when choosing whether or not to invest in their own reusable rocket designs. The US Federal Government could even simply compel SpaceX to license it's designs and software for reusable rockets if it felt so inclined

    Oh and you've moved the goalposts in your Elon-hate because first you were complaining about rockets using fossil fuels instead of being electrically powered and now that I've pointed out how uninformed that is you're complaining about Starlink, which is unrelated to the original point. Yes I agree, Elon is an ass to say the least, and Starlink poses a hell of a danger to the world's ability to continue studying anything in the sky. But let's be honest with ourselves about what we're talking about and the facts of the technologies we're discussing.

    If your argument is simply that "the CO2 emissions from accessing orbit aren't worth the global services that they enable" guess what that's an opinion, which everyone is entitled to. But let's form these opinions based on an accurate understanding of the industry you're talking about

  • Satellite images suggest test of Russian “super weapon” failed spectacularly
  • Bruh, global spaceflight contributes less than 0.01% of global CO2 emissions and enables climate resiliencey through weather and climate monitoring satellites, plus technological skunkworks (many of the challenges in the microclimate of a space station happen to be the exact same challenges of the macroclimate of the Earth, plus there's a proven path of technology developed for space directly improving lives on the ground here on earth)

    If you can build an orbital launch vehicle that doesn't rely on fossil fuels, please do! Seriously that is a greatly needed technology and you'll have earned the wealth and fame that would bring you. But until then I'll take the next best thing which is having a space program and compensating for it's (absolutely tiny compared to basically all other industries) emissions in a larger global climate plan over not having a space industry

  • Satellite images suggest test of Russian “super weapon” failed spectacularly
  • I'd love to see Musk ejected into the vacuum of space and abandoned by one of his own vehicles as much as the next guy, but you can't deny the incredible effectiveness and just how incredible the advances in rocketry that SpaceX has pushed. SpaceX is writing a new chapter in space exploration as we speak, with the introduction of truly reusable rocketry

  • Satellite images suggest test of Russian “super weapon” failed spectacularly
  • The problem with fossil fuels is that they're incredibly energy dense. Gasoline has about 12000 Wh/kg of energy density compared to about 250 Wh/kg for lithium ion.

    Space is hard, and the paradox of launching a rocket is that you need a lot of fuel to fuel an engine for long enough to escape the Earth's atmosphere and achieve orbit. All of that fuel adds weight so you need more fuel to compensate for more weight, which adds more weight meaning more fuel. Burnable fuels have the advantage of depleting as you burn it, so as you get higher your rocket gets lighter and therefore requires less fuel to pilot.

    In case that's not enough challenge, in the vacuum of space there's no great way to propel a vehicle on electrical power alone. Wheels ain't gonna work and neither will propellers, and while solar sails appear to work, they offer such incredibly low specific impulse (thrust basically) that realistically no manned mission that isn't a generation ship can use solar sails

    So in short, space is going to require fossil fuels for the foreseeable future. Hopefully we as a species can find the technology to make a fully reusable and renewable space program at some point, but until then we'll have to burn chemicals get vehicles off of this planet.

    Additionally, right now, until another organization actually builds and launches reusable space vehicles (and can demonstrate the competence and safety record) SpaceX is the world leader in reusability. SpaceX is one of two members of the exclusive "has relaunched a space vehicle" club, shared only with NASA's space shuttle program which ended over a decade ago

  • I just won an auction for 25 computers. What should I setup on them?

    I placed a low bid on an auction for 25 Elitedesk 800 G1s on a government auction and unexpectedly won (ultimately paying less than $20 per computer)

    In the long run I plan on selling 15 or so of them to friends and family for cheap, and I'll probably have 4 with Proxmox, 3 for a lab cluster and 1 for the always-on home server and keep a few for spares and random desktops around the house where I could use one.

    But while I have all 25 of them what crazy clustering software/configurations should I run? Any fun benchmarks I should know about that I could run for the lolz?

    Edit to add:

    Specs based on the auction listing and looking computer models:

    • 4th gen i5s (probably i5-4560s or similar)
    • 8GB of DDR3 RAM
    • 256GB SSDs
    • Windows 10 Pro (no mention of licenses, so that remains to be seen)
    • Looks like 3 PCIe Slots (2 1x and 2 16x physically, presumably half-height)

    Possible projects I plan on doing:

    • Proxmox cluster
    • Baremetal Kubernetes cluster
    • Harvester HCI cluster (which has the benefit of also being a Rancher cluster)
    • Automated Windows Image creation, deployment and testing
    • Pentesting lab
    • Multi-site enterprise network setup and maintenance
    • Linpack benchmark then compare to previous TOP500 lists
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    Ask the Midwest @midwest.social Trainguyrom @reddthat.com
    What is the right plate:family member ratio for a household?

    I'm currently decluttering and reducing to get a handle on my home, and I've come to a conundrum of how many plates/bowls/cups/etc do I actually need? I have 2 young kids that we'd prefer not to have to run to the store at 8pm to buy more plates because someone ruined a plate, but very limited cupboard space (small 120-something year old house with a kitchen that was built in the 50s)

    9
    homelab @lemmy.ml Trainguyrom @reddthat.com
    Revoking the SSH Keys of a Friend Sucks

    I'm just going to be vulnerable for a minute here. I met the first person in real life who had similar server-y linux-y obsessions to me and we'd send eBay links of systems to drool over to eachother. They ended up being a terrible person but hid it from me pretty well until they couldn't anymore and now I no longer have someone to chat with about those things.

    So um, I guess I'm open for applications for the position of "nerdy friend who I nerd too hard with about network infrastructure and Linux packages" now

    Edit: Autocorrect errors manually corrected

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    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)TR
    Trainguyrom @reddthat.com
    Posts 4
    Comments 1.6K