intensely_human

@intensely_human@lemm.ee

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intensely_human ,

I don’t think that’s what “quality” means here. It refers to the competence with which the food is executed.

intensely_human ,

“Where’s the green stuff?”

“We got this purple thing”

“Excellent. Carry on”

intensely_human ,

Yes FOSS is communism, spontaneously arising under capitalism, requiring zero bloody revolutions.

Marx was right about the need for people to be nice and give things to each other, but he was wrong about it being necessary to destroy capitalism before this happened.

intensely_human ,

Communism is a free market scenario, just in gift economy form.

It’s the centrally-planned socialist intermediary system that has produces the hell on earth we associate with fascism in the past.

intensely_human ,

According to Marx communism is a scenario of complete freedom.

It’s the socialist state that is authoritarian.

I think Marx’s idea is to actively burn away the old and then the new grow spontaneously. I think he’s wrong, since the old is a result of spontaneous growth already, but that’s the theory at least.

intensely_human ,

Airlines can treat people like shit because it’s not a free market. If anyone who wanted could start up their own airline, they’d be a lot more consumer-friendly by necessity.

intensely_human ,

We still do. They’re called psychopaths. It’s been a problem for so long that we’ve evolved an instinctual response to it.

intensely_human ,

And Hulkamaniacs

intensely_human ,

Hey man as long as you behave prosocially, it’s none of my business what your emotional life is like.

intensely_human ,

There might be a monster with hurt fee fees in the bushes

intensely_human ,

We killed them with snark

intensely_human ,

something we don't need to do today, but the right wing narrative insists that need to do

People keep saying this, but I really don’t see right wingers arguing for outcasting people.

intensely_human ,

People don’t like it because it’s declarative. It felt cool to be able to just put bash files into certain directories to have them executed on startup. That was elegant, in the sense of “everything’s a file”.

systemd is more of an api than a framework, so it’s a different design paradigm.

I hated systemd until I printed out the docs, for some coffee, and sat in a comfy chair to read them front to back. Then I loved it.

Mostly I hated it because I didn’t know how to do things with it.

Also, “journalctl” is kind of an ugly command. But really, who gives a fuck. It’s a well-designed system.

And if a person absolutely must execute their own arbitrary code they can just declare a command to execute their script file as the startup operation on a unit.

intensely_human ,

You can shut down any computer in ten seconds by holding the power button.

intensely_human ,

Developer cognition is the most expensive resource on any programming project. It is entirely rational to stick to tried and true ways of doing things. A developer’s mind is generally at capacity, and putting some of that capacity into learning new tricks comes at the cost of all the other things that developer can be doing.

And it’s not just a matter of time. Generally speaking, a developer can only do so much mental processing between sleep cycles.

That’s not to say it’s always bad to learn new things. In fact one has to in order to keep the system working in a changing world.

But throwing shade at developers who hesitate to learn new things is foolish. I’d recommend every developer do shamatha and vipassana meditation so that they can more accurately monitor the state of their own mental resources. Those mental resources are the most valuable and most expensive resources on the project.

intensely_human ,

It’s more like you haven’t earned the right for other people to do the work of keeping you alive.

Human life requires work to sustain. Someone has to do that work. The most fair system is one in which that responsibility falls on the person benefitting from it.

ie, to be alive, you must contribute work. Because your life requires work to maintain.

intensely_human ,

I don’t think they do. In our society we don’t really let people die just because they don’t fit in. When there’s someone who can’t take care of their self, we take care of them.

intensely_human ,

I’m talking about basically the entire human civilization, as opposed to a civilization in which people are just permitted to die.

But most of my experience is with the united states. We take care of people left and right, and don’t let them die.

Do you know of a place that isn’t like this? If so, where?

intensely_human ,

I live in reality, and I myself have been given free resources when I’ve been unable to work.

In my country, I have never seen a hungry person who could not obtain food due to lack of fitting in or having money or any requirement other than “oh that person has a stomach and needs food, so let’s feed them”.

That is the reality I see all around me. If you want to call that a “fairy tale”, I challenge you to provide evidence of a person being treated in the way you’re describing. Anywhere other than say a concentration camp or japanese pow camp.

What part of our society is letting people die because they don’t fit in? This is a serious question, because everybody seems to believe what I’m saying is a fairy tale, and yet I see it happening all around me.

How, exactly, are you getting the impression out society is one that doesn’t value the life of people who don’t fit in?

intensely_human ,

If homeless people go to prison in this country, why have I never seen one arrested? Why are they … not in prison but rather sleeping on the street?

I’m not sure what you’re trying to claim here, as what you’re claiming is obviously false based on my day to day experience in the US

intensely_human ,

When was their last general election?

intensely_human ,

What do you figure is centralized about capitalism?

intensely_human ,

No the 1% definitely exists in communism.

intensely_human ,

What ideology is it, again, that champions working class people to take their power back?

That sounds like a free market to me. When people have the power to determine their own fate, and how they engage with others for economic coordination.

When everyone has the ability to choose how they engage, that’s called a free market. The economic system based on free markets is called capitalism.

intensely_human ,

Their revenue model seemed fine with awards. Brilliant model. Value out of thin air. I spent maybe $5/mo on awards.

Seeing the content itself as the product was a mistake for reddit. It’s like charging people for silverware at a restaurant.

Use of the API, just like use of the HTTP servers, drove engagement and engagement drove awards sales.

Just like the use of silverware drives meal purchases at a restaurant. Reddit charging for the API is like a restaurant charging to get the menu texted to you.

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