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@icedquinn honestly I don't think anyone here in Central/Eastern Europe would mind that treatment being applied to Russia, we might even make it a holiday.

@trinsec nope, but I did immediately check out of curiosity xD

Congratulations fedi, I've now seen so many twitter-tier "capitalism bad" takes that "capitalism" is now my second filter ever.

@cbecker I'm pretty sure this is basically a plagiarism of an extremely similar post I've seen a year or so ago. Imma look for it when I get back home, someone please ping me if I don't follow up in an hour or so .

@moffintosh @icedquinn you go ahead and allocate enough budget to tear down and rebuild like more than half of densely populated buildings in a major city while at the same time dealing with the nightmare of what to do with their current residents for the time. It's the kind of debt hole that is too big to fill at the moment and at the same time consumes more resources over time just to keep working badly. Typical commie resource allocation stuff, they didn't bankrupt an entire empire because of great foresight.

@icedquinn @moffintosh yeah, and they incurred debt that made us unable to build more for further immediate housing needs. You can only make shit buildings for so long until the costs of maintaining them come back to bite you in the ass. We keep having problems with them, we can't just tear them down and build better ones in their place so they're a constant shitty money sink for subpar living space.

@icedquinn @moffintosh also they were insulated like shit and with the money Poland spent around 1995-2015 to insulate them against cold so that they don't waste insane amounts of energy for heating we could've built another series of actually well constructed buildings.

@icedquinn @moffintosh don't worry, we run into issues with those buildings being constructed like shit, looking like shit and giving everyone living around them depression much faster than that.

Amikke boosted

@thelinuxEXP for NixOS the answer to the immutable question is "kind of", since most of the system that is configured declaratively is linked from the immutable store, but it's not completely read-only by default.
Also there are non-niche manufacturers that provide laptops and/or PCs without OSes, such as MSI.

Amikke boosted

Hey everyone!

I'm working on a video to see what the Linux community (or at least people who follow me) actually use.

So, I created a little form, hosted on my Nextcloud (hopefully it's up to the task...)

It's only up for 2 days, so don't hesitate to share it around, it will help me "touch grass" and see if my preconceived notions are confirmed, or invalidated!

nextcloud.thelinuxexp.com/inde

Of course, it's all anonymous, no personal data, it's just for the purposes of creating the video.

@Hyolobrika @waifu that's the funniest part, it's unpronounceable in Spanish.

Amikke boosted

@Newk @r000t@fosstodon.org solving one problem is better than solving zero problems and at this point most of us are dead tired of being forced to use languages outdated design-wise by 40-50 years by now.

Also with Rust being more readable, structured and overall civilised it's easier to spot suspicious shit happening. It doesn't solve all problems but it's a step in the right direction.

Caution is always advised when adopting new products, especially from previously unknown parties, but if anything Rust makes it easier.

@Hyolobrika chemistry is pretty universal and limits things by a whole lot. Extraterrestrial life might be very different, but it should use a similar system of organic chains of carbon or maaaaybe silicon, and chemistry dealing with them has some common or even unavoidable (side)products.

And then there's things like the ozone mentioned in the video, it's too reactive to naturally stay in the atmosphere for hundreds of millions of years without reacting with everything else or decomposing, so if we find it, something must be producing it, and there's not a lot of possibilities.

Similar thing with energy sources. No matter what kind of life exists, it needs usable energy and we can see signs of unusual absorption of light, heat, reactive compounds etc, like the mentioned foliage absorbing certain wavelengths.

@nblr @ErikUden and they're an awkward solution to the problem, a symlink breaks when the original file is moved and you have to keep track of which is the original file, while hardlinks are evil semi-opaque filesystem magic and require extra PITA when dealing with things like rsync.

Amikke boosted

TIL that some CCTV systems will have a tummy ache if you happen to expose them to a QR encoded antivirus test string.

revk.uk/2020/01/eicar-test-qr.

@icedquinn I'm sure there's a metal genre that would perfectly fit as an extended punchline to this joke.

@freemo I was actually thinking more about my surroundings and the people I got to know or heard about. It may vary between countries a lot. But tbh, if a crushing majority is "not normal" in a certain way, then whatever they are becomes "normal".

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