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  • 19 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 13th, 2023

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  • Suburbs can’t be a ponzi scheme

    Genuine question: Why not?

    While the article indeed barely touched on its headline, the way I’ve seen the “suburb infrastructure upkeep problem” described seems indeed reminiscent of a ponzi scheme.

    The way I understand it:

    Suburbs have a relatively low initial cost (for the city) compared to the taxes they generate. However, their maintenance cost is relatively high because Suburbs are huge.

    Thus, US cities have long had a policy of paying the rising cost of their older Suburbs by creating new Suburbs - which is pretty analogous to a Ponzi scheme.









  • Whatsapp is encrypted. The problem is the Metadata they want - i.e. your whole address book.

    I do not agree to Facebook having my phone number, but if you use WA and have my number, they have it, too - even if I don’t use WA myself.

    If you can convince your family to switch, use Signal or Matrix.

    Otherwise, use Shelter on your phone with a limited, WA-ony address book.


  • Well, it works well for some people.

    Once you get used to it, it can be a dang powerful tool. For people doing a lot of config-wrangling on the CLI (i.e. admins working a lot ovet SSH), overcoming the learning curve will pay dividends.

    If you’re working mostly locally and in a GUI environment environment, it’s probably not worth it - there’s a reason most devs use more specialized IDE’s.




  • You’d need to significantly increase overall education (both among voters ans legislators) on how science works to make the latter feasible.

    Scientists are human. Scientists have opinions. Scientists require funding. Scientists disagree.

    Simple example: The heliocentric model didn’t become accepted knowledge because the “earth is the center of the universe” crowd (who *were? scientists) was convinced by scientific argument - they weren’t. It did when they died.

    Science holds a lot of high-likelihood facts. This is what we call the “generally accepted body of knowledge” - we know that the earth is round. We can predict gravity in most circumstances. And yes, we know that anthromorphic climate change is real.

    But there’s also a lot of “game-changing” studies/experiments out there that are still to be debunked without ever making it into said body of accepted knowledge. This is normal, it is how science works.

    Yet it also means that for virtually any hair-brained opinion that is not already strongly refuted by said body of knowledge (flat earth, for example, is refuted), you can find some not yet debunked science to support it.

    Separating the wheat from the chaff here requires insight into the scientific process (and it’s assorted politics and market mechanisms) most people (and voters) don’t have.

    And no, just telling people whether a fact is broadly accepted in the scientific community or fringe science doesn’t work. We tried that with the topic of anthromorphic climate change.






  • I genuinely believe that all the tabooisation around sex is a holdover from the days where birth control wasn’t readily available.

    There was an economic incentive for People Who Own Stuff to control procreation, because this allows them to control who inherits their stuff.

    There was a personal incentive for most people to control procreation to prevent their children of making A Mistake™ by getting stuck with The Wrong Person™.

    Where there’s incentives, they’ll wind up being followed. Story as old as time.

    Cloaking all that in religion is just window dressing so one doesn’t have to admit their true reasoning, but a purely secular pre-contraception society would also have tried to regulate sex.


  • foyrkopp@lemmy.worldtolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldOne-liner
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    2 years ago

    This was actually what got me hooked during university.

    Had to plot about 40 txt files of measurement data, was not looking forward to do it one by one with the GUI-based tool I had.

    StudyBuddy: “Do you have a Linux on this Laptop”?

    Me: “Yeah, set up dual boot a while ago, never really wound up using it.”

    StudyBuddy: Boots up Linux, installs gnuplot, types in a one liner.

    Computer: Brrrrt. Here’s your 40 plots.

    Me: “Okay, I’ve got to start looking into this.”