31337

joined 2 years ago
[–] 31337 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Lol. Bad joke. What I was getting at is people used to hang out at bars and drink more (alcohol use was worse). More generally, it's a lack of third places and car-based city design. More, and more engaging in-home entertainment/Internet also probably plays a part. Though, it's probably not a completely new phenomenon either, judging from art like Taxi Driver, Catcher In The Rye, etc. So, toxic or even plain masculinity likely makes it harder to make and keep close friends.

I'd bet female loneliness is also rising in modern society as well, due to modern phenomenon. Humans didn't evolve to live like we are. We used to mostly live in small, close-knit tribes.

[–] 31337 2 points 1 month ago

I learned it because I had to write a WPF desktop application, so you could start with WPF tutorials. I was already very familiar with Java, which is very similar, so it wasn't too hard. Last time I used it was in Unity. You might want to find a good free online course for C# to get a good grasp of C#/Java's style of OOP, design patterns, and all that kind of stuff.

[–] 31337 4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

That's really cool (not the auto opt-in thing). If I understand correctly, that system looks like it offers pretty strong theoretical privacy guarantees (assuming their closed-source client software works as they say, with sending fake queries and all that for differential privacy). If the backend doesn't work like they say, they could infer what landmark is in an image when finding the approximate minimum distance to embeddings in their DB, but with the fake queries they can't be sure which one is real. They can't see the actual image either way as long as the "128-bit post-quantum" encryption algorithm doesn't have any vulnerabilies (and the closed source software works as described).

[–] 31337 18 points 1 month ago (1 children)

He's been consistent on these issues for a while. "Open borders? That's a Koch brothers proposal."

[–] 31337 -2 points 1 month ago (4 children)
[–] 31337 21 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I think it's common where meat is sold in open-air markets. I read an article about the practice last year.

[–] 31337 4 points 1 month ago

I just use Joplin, encrypted, and synced through dropbox. Tried logseq, but never really figured out how to use its features effectively. The notebook/note model of Joplin seems more natural to me. My coding/scripting stuff mostly just goes into git repos.

[–] 31337 6 points 1 month ago

I don't think there's is a STEM worker shortage. IIRC, there have been something like 300k tech layoffs in the last couple years. Actual scientists and mathmeticians are extremely underpaid, but a lot of people like doing it, which is one of the reasons "citizen science" is becoming popular.

[–] 31337 2 points 2 months ago

The PC I'm using as a little NAS usually draws around 75 watt. My jellyfin and general home server draws about 50 watt while idle but can jump up to 150 watt. Most of the components are very old. I know I could get the power usage down significantly by using newer components, but not sure if the electricity use outweighs the cost of sending them to the landfill and creating demand for more newer components to be manufactured.

[–] 31337 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

CK2 - 400h

Fallout NV (guessing most of this has been TTW) - 190h

Stellaris - 180h

Xcom 2 - 140h

GTA 5 - 99h

Cities Skylines - 95h

Skyrim - 90h

Civ5 - 85h

Xcom - 83h

The other games I've played are pretty much the standard play-through times. (< 70h)

[–] 31337 4 points 2 months ago

Cool. A few years ago I made similar sensors (but just PIR, LUX, esp8266 board, jumper wires, and some with ultrasonic proximity). Attached them to the wall with those 3m velcro things. ESPHome makes things so easy; didn't even have to write code. Hardest thing was designing and iterating over the case to get the tolerances just right.

[–] 31337 12 points 2 months ago (2 children)

A lot of people seem to use "DEI" as a stand-in for the "n-word."

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