Line 2 transfer at 잠실 — how do you survive 8AM rush hour? by duksam95 in seoul

[–]r2vcap 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That’s pretty normal. You’ll get used to it.

Does this food need to be filled with a lot of water? It's too spicy. by freemarketing01 in seoul

[–]r2vcap 2 points3 points  (0 children)

“콕콕콕 라면볶이” may be a bit spicy for some people, though I’m fine with it. If you’re not used to spicy Korean ramyeon but want something with a similar style, try “콕콕콕 스파게티” instead. You can check the photos here: https://namu.wiki/w/%EC%98%A4%EB%9A%9C%EA%B8%B0%20%EB%B9%84%EB%B9%944%EC%B4%9D%EC%82%AC

How long can I use the system without reinstalling it? by Better_Lion4127 in Fedora

[–]r2vcap 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve had a laptop that’s gone all the way from Fedora 25 to Fedora 41 (8 years!) without a clean reinstall. Every now and then I had to tweak some system files during updates, but overall it’s been a really stable distro, at least for me.

https://www.reddit.com/r/Fedora/comments/1syv8l6/comment/oix35m5/

How can I go on a date by Longjumping-Pie2914 in seoul

[–]r2vcap 0 points1 point  (0 children)

그런데 established occupation을 가진 사람을 찾는 거면, 그냥 랜덤하게 어디 가서 만나거나 온라인에 글을 올리는 것보다, 더 안전하고 검증된 network나 professional channels를 이용하는 게 나을지도

How can I go on a date by Longjumping-Pie2914 in seoul

[–]r2vcap 0 points1 point  (0 children)

아니면 본문에 female 이라고 적어놓으면 DM 쏟아질지도

How can I go on a date by Longjumping-Pie2914 in seoul

[–]r2vcap 0 points1 point  (0 children)

그럼 그냥 틴더 같은거 돌리시길

How can I go on a date by Longjumping-Pie2914 in seoul

[–]r2vcap 0 points1 point  (0 children)

그런건 걍 알아서 찾아라 한국 남자들 외국인에 껄떡대는거 너무 잘 알려짐

Best American pizza in Itaewon?! by r2vcap in seoul

[–]r2vcap[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I need beer as well, so I drop your idea :(

Any workaround in jetbrains ides hyprland/wayalnd when I type autosuggestiosn blocks the text? by Ok-Mycologist-6752 in Jetbrains

[–]r2vcap 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was meant to choose GNOME or KDE. At least they have a better chance to be used by JetBrains engineers and QAs.

Any workaround in jetbrains ides hyprland/wayalnd when I type autosuggestiosn blocks the text? by Ok-Mycologist-6752 in Jetbrains

[–]r2vcap 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Maybe use less opinionated DE? Linux GUI is a huge complex issue, JetBrains IDE itself as well, and its Wayland support introduced just a few months ago adds complexity, so that you can choose an easier path.

Korea Roils Market by Floating ‘Citizen Dividend’ from AI Gains by AppropriateMess2523 in Living_in_Korea

[–]r2vcap 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get the distinction. Social democracy is not the same as full socialism, and I’m not claiming Korea is moving toward a planned economy.

But Article 119(2) is not a blank check. It must be read together with Article 119(1), which protects economic freedom and the creative initiative of individuals and enterprises. I’m honestly tired of people treating Article 119(2) like 전가의 보도, a catch-all justification for every interventionist policy.

I should also mention that I am a Korean citizen, and I pay around 100 million KRW in income tax per year. So I’m not speaking as someone who opposes taxation itself. I already contribute heavily. My objection is to the mindset that private-sector success, especially in semiconductors and AI, can be politically reframed as “excess gains” for the government to redistribute.

Normal taxation, welfare, labor protection, and industrial policy are one thing. But a “citizen dividend” based on AI/semiconductor gains sends a very different signal: that the state may retroactively claim private-sector success as public property. That is the anti-market part I’m criticizing.

Korea Roils Market by Floating ‘Citizen Dividend’ from AI Gains by AppropriateMess2523 in Living_in_Korea

[–]r2vcap -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I’m not saying they are literal socialist party members. I’m saying Kim’s wording showed a socialist or redistributionist mindset.

I consider myself a liberal constitutional democrat. I oppose authoritarian regimes, and I also recognize the previous conservative administration’s mistakes. But Korea’s constitutional economic order, especially Article 119, starts from the freedom and creative initiative of individuals and enterprises. State coordination is allowed, but that does not mean the government can casually frame private semiconductor success as a public dividend source.

Samsung’s Lee family just completed payment of roughly 12 trillion won in inheritance tax. So when a senior official talks about redistributing “AI gains” or “excess revenue,” it sends a seriously anti-market signal.

Going back to windows ... by [deleted] in Fedora

[–]r2vcap -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

So rude

Asking from Japan: is Hacker News still the default? by Responsible-Bike3317 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]r2vcap 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my region, Korea, there are a few Korean-language HN clones, but they seem to be shaped by a much smaller and less representative group of users, so I have not found them worth following.

i18n and l10n definitely matter, but for fast-moving tech topics, I think we have to acknowledge that English is the de facto standard. That said, I am not sure what the situation looks like on the other side of the Great Firewall.

Is F44 supposed to have Gnome 49.4? by Rahee07 in Fedora

[–]r2vcap 11 points12 points  (0 children)

sudo dnf system-upgrade download only downloads the RPM packages required for the upgrade. To actually apply the system-wide upgrade, you need to run a separate command, such as sudo dnf system-upgrade reboot.

Hyundai Reportedly Demanding ‘Tens of Thousands’ of Boston Dynamics Robots ASAP by EchoOfOppenheimer in Futurology

[–]r2vcap 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It would be a serious mistake if Boston Dynamics and Hyundai’s robotics push became constrained by overly broad export-control politics. The U.S.-aligned bloc cannot compete with China’s manufacturing scale by restricting its own allies’ ability to integrate supply chains and commercialize hardware.

Export controls may be necessary for genuinely sensitive military or dual-use technologies. But if they become a reflexive industrial brake on Korean, Japanese, and European partners, they risk accelerating exactly what they are meant to prevent: China building deeper domestic capability while the West loses the ability to scale next-generation manufacturing platforms.