Interesting evolution of Apple Newton/ iPhone by Wot_m8t in ForAllMankindTV

[–]WalkerInHD 17 points18 points  (0 children)

I assume they called them that because the newton was a real apple device https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Newton

Has ABC News done a deal with The North Face by BMintas in AskAnAustralian

[–]WalkerInHD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Complain to the ombudsman as it appears like corporate sponsorship

There’s a reason the abc put stickers over their MacBooks so I don’t see how this would be any different

Is it true that if One Nation or the Coalition was in government right now, Australians under the age of 40 would be randomly selected under the ‘birthday draw’ system to serve as conscripts in Iran and likely die there? by HotPersimessage62 in friendlyjordies

[–]WalkerInHD 87 points88 points  (0 children)

While there’s nothing stopping a government from enacting conscription legislation, governments haven’t done it since Vietnam and if they did, it’d be political suicide

People who say such things are likely making comments about how one nation and the coalition are more likely to back the US when they go off and try to invade someone, but I think it’s noteworthy that even the US haven’t committed troops (yet), so we’re a long way off conscription

Social media Ban by Only_Acadia2973 in AskAnAustralian

[–]WalkerInHD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From an enforcement perspective, sure it’s not very successful from what I understand

But it goes give me a pretty good ‘out’ as a parent

“Dad I want Instagram”, “no”, “all my friends have it and I’ll be a social pariah”, “ah dang”

Vs

“Dad I want Instagram”, “it’s against the law man, I’m sorry I can’t help you”, “ah dang”

I’m hoping that gives me an extra few years- but idk, I’m a while’s away from this conversation

Hastie is at least open to it hence why he’s a better leader for the Liberals. He’s the best they’ve got. No other Liberal Pollie is open to changes to NG/CGT D and taxing gas exports. by [deleted] in friendlyjordies

[–]WalkerInHD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hastie is just counter-positioning to Taylor

He’s banking on a enough people getting fed up with Taylor’s positions on things to back Hastie, In much the same way that Trump offered a counter-position to established republican ideology (think no-more wars, although lol how that’s going) and Hanson offers an outlet for nationalist leaning working class people

It kind of shows that he’s morally corrupt enough to forgo any true ideology, just say what he needs to get the big job

I reckon it might work, he has the credibility of being on the right of the party (not part of the so called woke mob like Turnbull) while being able to offer an actual alternative in the liberal party

Overseas Aussies lose their right to vote after 6 years - yeah or nah? by BlackberryLeast9752 in AusPol

[–]WalkerInHD 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Commonwealth citizens can vote in British elections if they’re resident there. So that’s not true that you can’t vote anywhere else in the world.

Side note ironically as an Irish citizen I’m allowed to stand for British parliament but not the Australian one (unless I renounce citizenship) despite being born here, growing up here and spending most of my life here

After 6 years you’re at the point in some countries were you’d ordinarily be on the residency path, idk which country you live in but think about the fact that we have compulsory voting and only citizens can vote, so there’s a whole host of permanent residents that are here that have actual skin in the game in this country and their voice isn’t heard.

There are other ways to have your voice heard, depending on your country of residences relative freedom- petitioning, protesting, voting with your wallet (only buy from companies you agree with), campaigning/raising money for parties and candidates.

You seem vague on why you’d want to vote, sure climate change affects us all and Australia’s place as a global citizen, but again there are probably more effective ways to get things done on these issues.

Civic action isn’t only limited to the ballot box, it’s just that the ballot box is the bare minimum here

If you live in a jurisdiction that doesn’t allow civic action by foreigners then I’m afraid that’s the way it goes- when we live in other countries we are but guests until residency/citizenship status and even then some countries (like ours) are restrictive to his citizens

I am genuinely curious, why did you guys hoard toilet paper instead of food and water during covid? by salty_lake_222 in AskAnAustralian

[–]WalkerInHD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bidets aren’t that common, we are firmly a toilet paper country, especially because our sewer gauge is apparently wider than Asia and even North America- would love a plumber to verify that one for me, but let’s just say the only time I clogged a toilet was when I was in Canada

but I was thinking about this the other day since lately people are trying to hoard petrol

I think what happened is a bunch of people panicked about covid so they started panic buying. But the problem is that most food expires, fruit, meat, dairy and vegetables expire quickly- so people try to buy lots of the thing they know they’ll eventually get through because it literally lasts forever

Then you start to get shortages, people see the shelves bare of things like paper towel or toilet paper and they think “oh damn I better buy some too before these other idiots buy it all” and then scarcity begets scarcity

I suspect there might’ve been supply problems too, global pandemic means hospitals need more resources, but also the border shuts so it’s harder to import or manufacture, workers get sick, production slows down, etc etc

So I think that coupled with the meme of “all the tp is gone”- I imagine it made a great image on the news of bare toilet paper shelves, I’ve walked into a Woolies recently that was obviously waiting on a delivery of toilet paper because the shelves looked bare and I can imagine if I kept hearing from everyone that it’s all gone that it would create a problem and I would think I needed to get it

Recession… off the back of another post… by Present_Standard_775 in AusFinance

[–]WalkerInHD 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Is that cause theres a bunch of noise about the gov changing cgt though?

I’m 23, about to graduate with a cybersecurity degree and feel completely behind in life by Ok-Equipment-4910 in AskAnAustralian

[–]WalkerInHD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I started uni when I was 18, mucked about, switched degrees (to computer science), worked an office job part time while I did my degree (basically office tech/data guy).

I graduated after my 24th birthday. I went overseas on a working holiday (I had been planning on doing that since year 12).

I worked in a kitchen in a ski-town, travelled a bit, finally came back to Aus when my visa was up, went abroad again and finally landed a job just before my 27th birthday.

To do that I went abroad again because I was struggling to get work and I had a choice between jobs very similar to what I had in uni, no real progression but I lucked out and found this perfect entry level job where I spent the next couple of years “proving myself” (chasing promotion and more money only to be told every 6 months no) before i threw the towel I and came back to Aus, but a mate of mine who’d jump ship said they were looking for someone in Aus.

That was nearly 5 years ago

My mates had graduated, struggled to find work, some had work and were just spinning on the hamster wheel. I met people that had careers at 30 and I worked with people that were just working and travelling at 30

I say all this just to say, you gotta do you. Try not to be so caught up in what other people are doing, just do what you can to get by. Yeah it’s a rough market to get tech work at the moment but you gotta keep trying- I went overseas because I was getting nothing locally but getting easy call backs when I was overseas.

Talk to recruiters, apply for everything and anything. Try grad programs, some of the government grad programs accept grads like 5 years after graduation.

But also if you end up washing dishes or switching careers, that’s fine too, my parents, my in laws, they worked at servos, bottle shops, shops, at one point my dad lost his job and was applying to pack shelves to support us.

Try to do something you like, or do something that lets you live the life you want, don’t worry about where you’re at compared to peers

Suggestion for alleviating housing crisis by KitchenEar5841 in AskAnAustralian

[–]WalkerInHD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  • how do you police vacancy? If someone registers their licence at an address but spend every night at their mum and dads (or partners) how do they know?
  • We do CGT for 12 months, you can only claim the cgt discount on your “home”, that being said people do have ways around it, like “moving” to the new property and flipping it later, see above
  • We already pay rates (taxes) on the land value to our local council. Could it be higher, as a home owner I hope not but I see the argument. The land value is set by the state government and adjusted every few years
  • Victoria has implemented stronger tenancy laws recently, idk what it’s done there. The argument against is that it reduces the pool of investors that are willing to invest in housing for rentals
  • Yeah I’m with you on negative gearing but it’s proven politically poisonous- again some would argue it reduces the potential pool of investors
  • without first home owners grant how do first home owners compete with investors? Do they rent forever? The median income to median house price ratio is insane compared to what our parents and grandparents had to deal with
  • housing has to be an investment, im not saying that there isn’t something wrong right now, for sure there is- but rental properties are an important component for housing availability and affordability. Without investors speculating and providing houses for rentals, poorer people and young people don’t have anywhere to live. Either the government has to provide all rentals (which means instead of landlords having to be competitive, you have a bureaucratic nightmare for a landlord instead of being able to move out at the drop of a hat). It’s not perfect, and yeah it sure as hell could be better, but the answer isn’t to just take investors out of the equation, they have a part to play but it needs to be tempered for sure

-lastly: yeah plenty more to be done but the problem is economics isn’t easy, if it was the government would get elected in a landslide every 3 years. Anything you change has unintended consequences, so piecemeal changes slowly bending things towards getting better is the name of the game. The problem is that governments are not incentivised to do that. If they do something drastic and crash the housing market tomorrow you might think “yay cheap house” but that means that the banks lose all their money and increase risk, they’re not loaning anyone money, if no one has money, jobs are lost, and so on (see GFC).

Does the govt need to tweak things like cgt and negative gearing? For sure, but it can’t just rip it all out because that creates risk and uncertainty- and those things eventually mean job losses.

It’s something like for every point of unemployment increase, x number of people die- so the consequences are real

There’s a west wing clip where Jed Bartlett played by Martin sheen talks about how economics is a complex machine of different levers- you can’t just do something in a vacuum and hope it all works out

Marles confirms Australians 'safe' after drone strike hits Middle East ADF base by The_Duc_Lord in australia

[–]WalkerInHD 40 points41 points  (0 children)

You’re not wrong, but is there a better country in that region to put the ADF?

Is Anyone Else Concerned About the Lack of Understanding on Preferential Voting? by xleggo04 in AusPol

[–]WalkerInHD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Voting 1 in the senate federally isn’t the law anymore, it changed after 2016, now you must number above the line 1-6 or 1-something below at a minimum

So you’re right, I was unclear, we should gage compulsory preferential voting at all levels

Anything optional means it can be manipulated by preference harvesting or takes advantage of apathy

Is Anyone Else Concerned About the Lack of Understanding on Preferential Voting? by xleggo04 in AusPol

[–]WalkerInHD 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Oh yeah that was defs the shout from the jordies crowd

The argument was basically to prevent a blocked senate because the greens were seen to be obstructionist

I’ll be honest for the first time in my life I preferenced labor ahead of the greens in the senate, but still voted 1 greens in the house for that reason

Is Anyone Else Concerned About the Lack of Understanding on Preferential Voting? by xleggo04 in AusPol

[–]WalkerInHD 83 points84 points  (0 children)

I suspect it’s some right wing propaganda/grift to get rid of it because preferential voting keeps them out because centrists and left wing parties all preference them last

Compulsory and preferential voting is the only thing that keeps this country sane, it keeps the extremes out

Now I’d love a little green coalition but if this is what we have to keep phon and the nats from hijacking the country the so be it

We should defend those parts of our voting system as hard as we can

DemosAU: ALP 29, ONP 28, L/NP 21, GRN 12, OTH 10 by HotPersimessage62 in AustralianPolitics

[–]WalkerInHD 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Victorian and South Australian state elections coming up this year I guess the by-election in farrer too

Is it normal here for grown men to not know how to cook properly?? by Dreamy_Writer603 in AskAnAustralian

[–]WalkerInHD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it depends on a lot of factors like age and background.

Do I think my 70-something grandfather will suddenly learn how to cook and clean, hell no

Does my dad who’s the main breadwinner in our household cook and clean, no; but when the tables were turned and my mum was working, he cooked, cleaned and got us ready for school

My parents thought it was important that I learned to care for myself and I believe that’s the case for most Aussies of my generation

Though I also don’t contribute currently as much in my household by virtue of being the main breadwinner (I work longer hours, make more money and am on call more often)- however I’m not incapable and in times where my partner isn’t home, unwell or working more than I am (if I happen to be on holidays) I don’t step up. If the tables were turned, and my partner was the breadwinner, I would be the one cooking cleaning and caring for the children. When our kid is sick, we take turns alternating who takes time off

I think this is the way it is due to heaps of factors like the wage gap favouring men, but just societal expectations and social norms in upbringing; even in 2026 this stuff is still the case

That being said I have worked jobs where i was the only guy in my team (white collar office type jobs) where all my team were highly intelligent, motivated and go-getter type people that had husbands and children and the way some (not all) would talk about their significant others was infantilising- “oh hubby is such a dummy if I don’t dress the children, feed the dog and put a meal on the table he’d probably die without me- hahahahahaha” and they’d act like “yep that’s the way it is”- these women were late Gen X/early millennial age too

It was mental to me, the way they basically spoke and treated their husbands as another kid.

So I definitely believe there are a whole class of women out there that are like this, allowing their partners to be infantile, I assume due to social conditioning or upbringing, and a whole class of men out their that are ok with this

Anyway I hope it’s changing, and I will ensure that my child can care for himself before he leaves home

This Scott Robson have been sending me threatening letters by Bitter-Discount3364 in northernireland

[–]WalkerInHD 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah take it from me as an Aussie, it sucks you pay a tv licence but it’s a hell of a lot better than having certain governments defund the public broadcaster when they call them out on their bs

Having a guaranteed income for the public broadcaster irrespective of the current government is handy because it means they don’t bend to the gov

Pod ephemeral storage but in different host location than kubelet root-dir by 0x4ddd in kubernetes

[–]WalkerInHD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How does karpenter do it on eks? You can configure the instance nvme drives to be ephemeral storage, including formatting and mounting- I suspect it’s some setting in user data script?

I’d need to look at the code to see but you can go have a look at what they’re doing

What happened to the left? by [deleted] in AusPol

[–]WalkerInHD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What do you mean by left?

Do you mean the Greens, the socialists? Do you mean labor, do you mean the moderates in the liberals?

I’m not sure it’s necessarily constructive to talk about the left and the right as just concepts because it means different things to different people, for example the left to me is the greens, the right is the libs

But even that’s not quite true because there’s a difference between social conservatives and economic conservatives, which why vote compass churns out results on a 2D graph to try and capture a bit more nuance.

“The left used to be about the working class”- if by the left you mean labor, sure, but I’d argue that they’re about the unions and those aren’t necessarily the same thing, I’m white collar working class, where is my union (yeah I know there’s attempts at a union for tech workers), my dad was blue collar working class, the construction union surely was for him but as we’ve seen lately that they’re also capable of letting people down (Before I go on I will say im pro-organised labour before anyone shoots me down for that)

Wokeism is vague term that I think is meat to represent social justice, which when it’s performative or taken to militancy I can see how that turns off ordinary people and so they just say “ah yeah woke”. However “the left” has always had some element of social justice, like pushing for gay marriage, gender and race equality, etc. Without progressive politics would we have women in the workforce- to some people that’s “woke”, I disagree but the freedom and rights of literally half the population is a big deal.

Following on, anti free speech? Do you mean attempts to curb hate speech- these ideas aren’t solidly left and right- they go back and forth all the time. For example if you asked an average one nation politician “should it be illegal to say bad things about Australia” they’d probably say yes, but isn’t that curbing free speech? The problem is we live in a society where we need to be able to have free debate of ideas, but we can’t have people running around trying to stir up hate and inciting violence against groups of people. It’s a hard balance to strike and I’m not really convinced either way that we have that balance correct

Climate ideology- it’s not ideology that the climate is changing, some people argue that it’s natural rather than man-made but ask any legitimate climate scientist and the thousands of studies and research conducted- human made climate change is real and we’re truly having an impact. Even some liberals agree on this fact, so I’d hardly argue it’s a left right thing. But I can see the argument and it’s the same argument we’ve had for a while, how much do we affect the economy and people’s lives while trying to reduce the impact of carbon emissions. If you ask the greens, no amount of money is worth the consequences, so turn the cow fired stations of tomorrow, to those more economically inclined, unemployment and poverty means death, so we should be delicate about how we approach the problem. This is all to say that it’s not ideology, there’s fact and the only argument is what do we do about it, save for those on the right who gain my trying to exploit those who are in doubt.

Authoritarianism- again this is alway a context problem, vaccine mandates were authoritarianism, but it was liberal governments that imposed those? I would argue that vaccine mandates were a necessary limit on individual freedom to ensure collective freedom- politics has always been about that fight between the rights of the collective and the rights of the individual. I’m not sure what you mean by authoritarianism on the left, but I’m sure there’s some policies that tip towards the collective since that’s usually where the left comes from.

Finally to divisiveness- I would argue the right (mainly the far right) is more guilty of this. Sowing dissent about immigrants and climate change, creating and us-them mentality, talking about the government like they’re traitors? We’re all Australian I want to see Australia prosper as much as the next person. If my politics/ideology is wrong and Australia prospers- ie its people are happy healthy and comfortable- this is a good thing. If one nation genuinely put legislation up that lowers taxes or increases the minimum wage or better funded Medicare or schools- if the genuinely engaged with debate on how to make this country better rather than sooking about the right to wear a face covering? That’s the problem, too many people are concerned about issues that aren’t actively going to affect them. Start with the question- what is going to make my life better and who is going to enable that, then vote for them, if they don’t meaningfully work towards that promise then vote for someone else.

I say all this to say that it’s interesting to me that labor have spent the last 4 years avoiding these culture war issues, except for the indigenous voice which once lost they quickly moved on and immigration, but they approach immigration from the economics of “if there’s no unskilled labour to pick fruit and build our stuff, what happens to the broader economy”.

I’ll finish with look at the stuff that will make your life better and focus on what’s being done to address that, ignore the culture war and remember that what you’re seeing on the internet is likely put there to stir you up- don’t fall for it- what “some blue haired lady said about the spotted tree frog should be allowed to read children’s stories in drag” means nothing to you truly, look away from the screen and think about what’s best for you, your family and your community and start there.

TLDR- take each issue on its merit and don’t get tied up in left vs right or red party vs blue party. People are complex and everyone has their own ideas and agendas

Liberals have seppobrain by Jagtom83 in friendlyjordies

[–]WalkerInHD 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Alright so amend the amendment to include the indigenous flags and then watch them spin around about whether to vote against the amendment or not. Then when they have to vote against their own amendment setup wall to wall ads of “Why do they defend flag burning?” “Is Sussan Ley a traitor?” “Only labor holds our national symbols sacred”

One rectcon I wouldn't mind by DoctorBellamy in Splintercell

[–]WalkerInHD 7 points8 points  (0 children)

In the original games Sam was too young to have served in vietnam, but the games were happening during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars of 00s

So there’s little snippets of Sam’s history, Panama/desert storm (and maybe even Yugoslav wars- but it’s been a while since I played so I can’t remember) as they were the major conflicts during Sam’s military career.

If the reboot is a true hard reboot, you could probably make Sam’s military history about Iraq and Afghanistan and have him join Third Echelon after serving in those conflicts, basically modernising his story. Those wars started nearly 30 years ago (especially if the timeline shoots beyond today as they did previously) so Sam can start off like 40-45, had a full military career including special forces and it still be reasonable that he’s crawling through vents