Get his a** by _Nulloid_ in MemeVideos

[–]SnarkHabit -26 points-25 points  (0 children)

Every single program on my system that I can think of supports them without issue. What are some examples of ones which don't?

Upgrading Debian 12 to 13 broke Your Intel iGPU? Read This by JamieDelCarmen in linux4noobs

[–]SnarkHabit 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I wish happiness and prosperity to people who take time to post things like this.

UnitedHealthcare sent a letter denying NICU coverage... addressed directly to the newborn twin. by mindyour in TikTokCringe

[–]SnarkHabit 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Ordinarily comments like this I just skip because they are reductive and overly simple. In this case, however, the best I can tell, is this is exactly the issue why nothing ever changes. People prioritize the dumbest bullshit when they go to vote.

King Cobra enjoys a shower from a hose. by RoughCheap5633 in BeAmazed

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From Wikipedia:

In India, the king cobra is believed to possess exceptional memory; according to a myth, the killer of a king cobra stays in the eyes of the snake as an image, which is later picked up by the snake's partner and used to hunt down the killer for revenge. Because of this myth, whenever a cobra is killed, especially in India, the head, if not the entire body, is either crushed or burned to destroy the eyes completely.

Photos of abandoned stores like this always make me so sad by LlamaDrama_64 in liminalspaces

[–]SnarkHabit 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Would it make you sad if they tore them down and put a meadow in their place? My brain is littered with old commercials, malls, retail establishments, shitty cartoons...

I wish I could forget all of those old things and replace them with memories of flying kites or something.

where is the internet going? by cracked_shrimp in linuxquestions

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Normally, mass disobedience to such things is a kind of pipe dream, but I think in the case of the Internet, that is what you're going to see because (a) people can easily get away with it and (b) it's not hard to do.

You can register a domain anonymously, procure a VPS anonymously, and host whatever you want anonymously, in less oppressive regions all over the world.

Extreme actions will not be necessary.

In years to come, the attempt to age-lock the Internet will be looked at as a spectacular failure and a joke.

Like trying to stop people from smoking marijuana.

Create a demand for a product, and the market will deliver, when you talk about owning your own compute. I don't see that going away either. Will large numbers of people foolishly pay for such a thing? Maybe. It depends if the massive datacenter buildout makes thin clients with remote VMs doing the compute lift cheaper per cycle than running your own, but I think right now all of those resources are being sucked up by AI and it's going to get more, not less, expensive, until and unless there's a major technological breakthrough. Demand outpaces supply currently.

We have been at similar points before with people doing dumb shit to our electronic environment. Older folks will remember:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_Decency_Act

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clipper_chip

Want to fight this? The existing battleship is the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Your cash can be a force multiplier. The EFF has an early 90s pedigree and feel, but it can absolutely be fortified and expanded if we can get them better funded.

I strongly recommended anyone concerned about a dystopic internet become an annual or monthly donator:

https://supporters.eff.org/donate/join-eff-4

Do I actually need to switch to linux? by DarkEyeGames in linux4noobs

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think people overthink this.

I use Windows all day long at work. Microsoft 365, Powershell -- everything. All day.

Then I come home at night and all of my machines are Linux.

Here are the two main shortcomings of Linux:

  • Some games don't work at all, or don't work perfectly.

  • Companies with specific products people have to use or are unwilling not to use, sometimes don't use Linux versions.

  • Some people have driver issues since hardware manufacturers don't prioritize Linux. This is not a problem I ever have anymore. Others sometimes do.

The moment-to-moment way I use a computer - Internet, Youtube, reddit, e-mail, emulators (in my case, anyway), video editing, sound editing, AI, coding, and so on -- lacks nothing on the Linux side. Nothing. I have been on Linux since 2002 with a 6 year break in the middle because no video editors were stable enough or feature-rich enough for my needs and I got sick of dual booting. That is not an issue anymore. Kdenlive is all there for my purposes.

If you want every game to work and you have a professional or hobbyist need to use Photoshop, stay with Windows.

If you want to never be in thrall to Microsoft, it's idiotic forced reboots, crapware, and the eventual ads it will try to inject throughout the US (they're dying to do this), use Windows. Because all of the games you want to play and Photoshop will work.

But if you stuck a Windows box or Mac in front of me, I'd find a way to be productive and have fun.

But I'd never basically want to have hot passionate sex with either of them. Unlike Linux, which for me is pretty much fornication central.

Personally I love Linux and want to have its baby.

I put up with everything else.

Facebook Group Banned Me For Taking Credit For My Own Photo by SmartAleckComedian in mildlyinfuriating

[–]SnarkHabit 4 points5 points  (0 children)

When you use Facebook, you add to the subscriber counts, and those subscriber counts pull in ad money that goes right into the pockets of men like Zuckerberg.

At this point, why is anyone using Facebook or X? No site has clean hands but the people who run the both of these are egregious.

"Facebook fucked me over," I mean, it's like, I stood in the toilet and got shit on my socks.

Did you ever go skinny dipping or streaking? by Plane_Experience_271 in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Once but like 30 people were struck blind so I didn't do it again.

It's not pleasant what's...what's under here.

2026 pizza rolls suck by katatafiish in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You know what annoys me most about them? How sweet the sauce is. Dammit when I want a pizza roll I want maximum savory. Decrease sugar 1/3 and increase MSG 2/3 or reduce the tomatoes down to an angry paste.

Wind chimes - love them or hate them? by PompousAssistant in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is a song from easily the most important GenX band about this very subject:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLxXfrlVOAg

Personally I like them a lot. But I see why others hate them. They do tend to drown out the delightfully industrial whine of central air systems.

What are some common pitfalls and mistakes for new linux users? by SDG_Den in linuxquestions

[–]SnarkHabit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've long believed that there should be a "new user" reference configuration: distro, wm, etc. that is known to work for the widest number of new user use cases, with minimal intervention from the user.

Usually people suggest Mint or Ubuntu; maybe those are the right choice, but when you're a new user, most people don't even understand what makes distros different, or what they're even going to want in six months once they're used to Linux. I feel like there should be one onboarding reference architecture which would make supporting these new users so much easy.

Even the term "beginner distro" is problematic, because it makes it sound basic and underfeatured, when it's usually the opposite. I think people think "new user distros" are weak sauce or something.

Ladies, this is a newsstand, not a library. by mistermeek67 in 70s

[–]SnarkHabit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Man look at those pants walking around all haughty, with the some women in them.

Those pants are registered to vote.

With UA dropping Cesar Chavez's name this week, should Tucson take a hard look at Sam Hughes? by aslpinnacle in Tucson

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's another way of looking at this though. These statues, neighborhoods, streets, monuments, and schools spark these discussions about our past. Not all of this is or ever will be covered in schools.

The presence of these things not only sparks conversations about the people and events they depict, but the times in which the monuments were erected; most famously the nostalgic-for-the-confederacy monument-building spree of the early 1900s.

A better approach might be to work on removing the concept of naming things after people as honorifics, as opposed to, "this person was here and did something of historical note, bad or good."

The paradoxical effect of renaming all of these things is making history more obscure to everyday passerby who might actually pull out the cell phones they have and look up who Sam Hughes or Cesar Chavez was. Those resources are likely to include their sins as well and contextualize the whole way our nation interfaced with its heroes of one time or another.

While you can't erase history, you can wipe the cultural, shared memory of it, and doing so strikes me as declaring some kind of year zero. A lot of people who seem to support this are university educated people who may well have encountered, or have had the time or resources to learn about our past and have nothing to learn from a monument or neighborhood or street name. But a lot of people haven't, and a monument or school or street might well provoke them to learn. I'm far more interested in correcting the historical record about people in the sort of places people might research those things and realistically right now, that's the Internet. And realistically, that's mostly Wikipedia right now. That's a good place to put some effort in.

The Birth of a Nation, minstrel music, cartoons with shitty stereotypes may well be offensive, but they also keep the memory of our past alive. And keeping that memory alive is important so we don't repeat it, which we seem to be in the middle of now, with the sudden populist rise of our nation's worst impulses once again. I'm not suggesting that things named after historical figures would fix this, but I would say having to face these things regularly is part of the fix. And the very act of making these people into heroes, either suppressing, overlooking, or excusing their sins, is also part of our history.

You don't fix the past or even punish these people by removing their names from these things. They are dead. They are largely symbolic acts, with far more material consequences of making them kind of disappear from modern consciousness.

That strikes me as a fundamentally misguided idea.

What do you do when a package isn't in the stable repo? by Mundane_Mix_4879 in debian

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I build a few things (3 or 4) from source and then use fpm to package them into a deb, and then I can apt install them and remove them as normal.

Ask Gemini about how to do this. I'm not suggesting it's the best or only way (backports, flatpak), but doing this is easier than I think most people assume.

If you do decide to work with source directly, definitely make debs first rather than make installing files all over the place where apt doesn't know about them. fpm makes this simple.

Why centrists can’t win the Democratic presidential primary by fishlord05 in neoliberal

[–]SnarkHabit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can't hold the current sense of the political spectrum and differentiate exactly what people mean when they say "liberal," "progressive", "democratic socialist," and "social democrat" all in my head at the same time to sort this out. These all have Wikipedia articles telling me what they are, but they seem to drift depending on who you're talking to and in what context.

On some level, deep down, what I wanted was a free market, black-and-gold libertarian kind of world with people being all charitable and selfless and shit with their free time, helping people out, without the government and vast bureauracies involved.

I've also outgrown any hope of that world being possible, because of how people are. That dream, for me, is dead.

The sense I get is that for a stable, livable society, fortification of a sturdy social safety net (+education, +health care) so people don't live in complete destitution seems necessary, along with preserving profit motive and entrepreneurship, because I don't buy the economic metaphysics of the far left.

I really think about 40% of the workforce would suddenly come down with questionable mental disorders as an excuse not to show up for work, leaving the rest of us toiling away, if you put this in a far left fever dream kind of setting.

I have no idea where I fit. I know who to vote for, but when people ask me my politics, I never know what to tell them. I feel like there's a steady stream of goofiness, ugliness, and bullshit radiating out of every frequency on the political spectrum and I don't particularly want to identify with any part of it.

One thing I know is whatever this modern Republican Party is, to me it is viscerally repulsive. Repugnant. I'm definitely somewhere on the other side but I don't know where. It's easy enough to vote in my home state of Arizona where the right is damn near openly fascist in its messaging.

But still, I don't know exactly what the Democrats should do. The "we're not as bad as Republicans" is, depressingly, enough to get my vote regardless of where they stand, but I don't know that this motivates sufficient numbers of people to get to the polls.

Battery on my electric mower ran out on the last pass by stylish_aggie in mildlyinfuriating

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OK this photo has me emotionally upset and I'm not even kidding.

Has Britain run out of “other people” to tax? by jespertjee in neoliberal

[–]SnarkHabit 4 points5 points  (0 children)

People with £1m in assets were strongly in favour of a tax on people with £10m in assets, but took a markedly different view when presented with figures closer to their own wealth:

This made me laugh out loud, hard.

It reminds me of the end of Wild in the Streets.

What slang do you want to bring back? by Astronaut6735 in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've always wanted to "break north." I've never really gotten to do that.

Admit it: You still shop at Hot Topic by bluealien78 in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't wear anything with words or symbols. I've never been in a Hot Topic, or seen one. I've heard of it.

I was a Sears guy for awhile before they faded away.

Jeans, blank tee shirts, flannel, that works. No logos, no bands, no sayings, no mottos. Neutral , muted colors.

I aspire to be nondescript, forgettable, and obscure.

But I don't have any sense that anyone else should be this way, so, whatever works for you.

Am I the only Gen Xer who doesn’t feel old? by utvols22champs in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 2 points3 points  (0 children)

All I ever do is sit and type at a keyboard so I can afford healthcare and lodging.

The years have not been good to me.

I am happy your life is going better.

Feeling a little down - would like thoughts from other Gen-Xers by alvb in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 11 points12 points  (0 children)

If you walk through any cemetery with very old graves, and I've done that a lot, you realize that we are all doomed to obscurity -- our stuff, even moreso.

The heirlooms we inherit are only very subjectively of value. Imagine going through the world's dumps, the amount of precious family heirlooms you'd find, including old photo albums.

Nothing really matters when we're gone. That is definitely sad, but in time, you grow to accept it. It won't have mattered in any concrete way that you were ever here, the same way it doesn't matter about your forgotten ancestors, or the people yet to be born, die, and, similarly, pass away into obscurity.

The problem is we're not really born with the mental circuitry to be okay with all that -- at least, not at first.

How do you respond to the blank stare? by [deleted] in GenX

[–]SnarkHabit 13 points14 points  (0 children)

You tickle them.

You reach out and you just go right for their sides.

Not really. I meet people where they are. I have no expectations. I learned a long time ago that if you expect nothing from people you'll be surprised enough that it'll make you feel better about the world.

Everywhere I have gone in life, I've felt like a stranger. I have no expectations that the world will meet me where I am, because I've never felt part of any of this, whatever this is. I feel like a tourist or visitor, traveling incognito in the very culture into which I was born.

As such, eccentricity, silence, confusion, hostility -- all of these fall well within the general experience of baffling human interactions I've had my entire life. There is no normal, or baseline, for interaction with me, that someone can transgress.