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Play Turing Complete.
If you can finish it without copying solutions wholesale, you’re ready for writing assembly in the real world.
Play Turing Complete.
If you can finish it without copying solutions wholesale, you’re ready for writing assembly in the real world.
I thought that was called pulling a Christopher Walken…
This is solid advice.
Also, the macOS ecosystem is predicated on you being rich enough (or fool enough) to buy it, and everything is nickel-and-dimed.
Subnautica; at the beginning your pod drops into the surface of the ocean, then you open the hatch and you climb out… to see an infinite expanse of blue sea under a blue sky.
That triggered so many memories for me, I had to take a minute. The color grading on that scene was on point.
One of the Quake games has a section where you get captured, then put on a conveyor belt where you see other people in front of you get mutilated, then that happens to you. That scene almost triggered a dissociative episode.
The original ending of Mass Effect 3 brought me to tears because the Clint Mansell music meshed so well with the on-screen segments, it really moved me. That said I also like the remastered ending; the latter is like the last few chapters of Lord Of The Rings, the former is like an American movie ending.
So as long as you got yours, everyone else can get bent?
There’s Marxist-Lenninists, and there’s Lenninist-Marxists, and both groups hate each other… Much like the Monty Python sketch…
I found out that https://www.ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/the-gervais-principle-or-the-office-according-to-the-office/ explains a lot of the dysfunctions that one finds in an office / corporate environment.
Luckily I work in a jurisdiction that would tear the whole C-team a new one if that happened.
Capitalism is relatively good, gives performance & frugality incentives. Unrestrained late-stage capitalism… not so much. Think of it like oxygen. At 21% you’re great (and need it to live), at 90%+ you spontaneously combust.
In part you can see this already - there are a bunch of servers
that most lemmy instances have defederated from. In these cases information flow is one way - f.e. lemmmy.world doesn’t get any updates from foo.baz
, doesn’t provide search results, communities, etc.
Subscription would make sense when the added value you provide is 1) availability guarantees, 2) performance guarantees, 3) membership guarantees, 4) moderation / content filtering options
Man, I’ve been on unix systems since, oh, 1994, but I’ve never messed with my .inputrc … may need to take the dive…
I’m not a fan of the idea of safe spaces
You probably haven’t been in a space where you haven’t felt unsafe.
I like the wild and free frontier internet, and Lemmy was feeling like that.
I would disagree somewhat. Lemmy right now has the same feeling as Reddit during the Digg exodus, but the unwashed masses have already started the Eternal September.
I mean, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WboggjN_G-4 has its roots somewhere …
More like, they de-federated because the moderation load became extreme, so they’re now disconnecting and reasessing.
Reddit OTOH was a good place to discover other things organically (not the enshittification attempt “other people liked that sub” interjections). But the only thing I miss is a way to group my subscriptions.
Currently Lemmy is getting up to speed, and the discussion quality has already started to drop; we’ll see whether communities can police themselves.
Just search Dodge v. Ford Motor Company, the case that enshrined this doctrine…
Well, it’s the Apple subreddit. I’m pretty sure that they only get to keep the name under the control of the company.
Used to be you could get the whole page from Google’s cache…
But they’re much better than the ads and SEO spam in the first page of search results…
You sure this isn’t just anti-rowhammer et al mitigations?