[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 8 points 8 months ago

And yet, android is still not what people mean when they say they're running Linux.

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 5 points 9 months ago

I keep hearing this, but my emby server has been running strong for a few years now without issue. My only gripe with it is the emby premiere ads that take up a lot of home screen space, but I got rid of it with custom CSS that you can put in emby settings, doesn't even show up on the phone app anymore.

I've heard Jellyfin implemented features that emby puts behind a paywall too, but I'm not sure what. Care to fill me in on what I'm missing?

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 6 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

Why is the only possibility for you to either get on the roads or do nothing? The criticism is that road blocking is an ineffective form of protest, not that protest as a whole is stupid.

I work in IoT by the way, and I'm directly involved in programming small computers that increase fuel efficiency in heaters. In other words, if climate change is your primary concern, you shouldn't be inconveniencing people indiscriminately, because there's risk of stopping someone like me who's actually doing something that addresses the problem in a productive way.

I'm hardly close to the most important job that you'd be inconveniencing, just the most ironic one. These protests are certainly inconveniencing nurses on their way to their patients, lawyers on their way to their clients, families coming home to meet up for the first time since Christmas. Not to mention emergency workers being held up during active emergencies. This has all happened, and it's happened way more than any goals achieved by the protests.

So no, we're not all talk. I think most of us here giving pushback are all trying to better the world in our own way, and these protests are a consistent impediment to that, across the board. In fact, I would say anybody who bothers to take the time to say how stupid they think these protests are are doing infinitely more good than road blocking protestors, simply by virtue of maybe getting someone to stop that stupid shit.

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 20 points 9 months ago

I've learned to treat comments that start with "what those people don't understand..." With a little bit more skepticism than others. I find that if your opening move is to imply that not believing your ideas shows ignorance, then chances are really high that you don't have much confidence in arguing your case by its own merit.

Economic pressure can be a strategic move, sure. But, the road block has been largely indiscriminate, and the goal seems to be to create as much disruption as possible. Where's the strategy in indiscriminate disruption? In fact, the corporations you advocate against are probably least hurt by shit like this, because it would be such a comparatively small hit than everyone else.

You are far more likely to inconvenience someone just trying to get by, or someone with something person and time sensitive going on than any corporation you'd like to "pressure". They don't feel this, they don't think about this. You're not disrupting corporate supply chains, you're inconveniencing regular people.

That doesn't even get to the fact that road blockages are extremely dangerous in emergency situations, and you're putting far more lives at risk than your own by going out there.

If you are genuinely interested in taking a structured approach to protests, then I strongly suggest you start thinking of some other methods.

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 12 points 9 months ago

This was my experience with micro usb, and everyone seemed to agree they were total shit. As for USB-C, I've never even heard of someone having trouble with the actual cord. Generally the issue is that there is lint or something in the charge port. I don't think I've ever thrown out a USB-C cord, to my memory.

In short, check for lint, and if that's not the issue then yeah it really might be your phone. Mind if I ask what kind of phone you have?

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 10 points 10 months ago

Not sure what op meant, but there's a lot of angles that I can see it being true. Having a shooting range on personal property is very different in rural Arizona than places with higher population density. The risk is objectively not as large. The space makes it unlikely to hit anything you wouldn't want to target, and it's very ingrained in gun culture to be smart about what direction you fire.

They may have also been referring to accepted risk vs freedoms. Gun people understand that there's a risk to owning guns, but it's an acceptable risk because they value guns, much like how people understand the risk of traveling by vehicle yet still choose to.

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 10 points 11 months ago

This doesn't really address what he said.

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 5 points 11 months ago

Might be a regional thing, I don't think I've ever seen a new church built in my lifetime. The only churches I see closing down are the ones in small towns that don't have the population to maintain it anymore.

I'm curious, do you see a trend in the denomination of these pop-up churches?

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

The middle ages ended in 1453 with the fall of Constantinople, which coincided with the birth of the Renaissance in Italy having already taken place.

The Iroquois Confederacy was founded (most likely) in the 1500s, with the earliest record of the first capital being in 1609.

The United States itself was founded in the 1700s.

Their comment was correct, the Iroquois Confederacy was founded during the age of the Renaissance and our modern conception of America came much later

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

Considering science has only gotten robust enough to prove anything like that far more recently than any good examples of ecological collapse, I'd say this parameter is a little arbitrary.

The best example I can think of regarding ecological collapse is during and after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. Their climate decreased in temperature, which reduces crop yields, which weakened the empire and encouraged migration from northern Europe, which brought their collapse (plus like 12 other things lol).

In 535AD, during Justinian's reign in the east, the first black plague happened following a supermassive volcano that left the sky covered in ash blocking the sun. This was a massively ecologically damaging period of history and it caused the death of countless plant and animal life, along with the deaths of half the population of the Mediterranean.

It's not like people of this age were taking soil samples and references trends or whatever, but they certainly understood how things were going poorly.

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

No, they're suggesting that Nestle is probably acting in bad faith by attempting to close a monopolistic gap rather than genuinely doing something for the betterment of the world

[-] HardNut@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

I'd have a hard time believing that Hitler was super cool with the people who worship a Jew as a god.

Hitler in his table talks: "The dogma of Christianity gets worn away before the advances of science ... Gradually the myths crumble. All that is left to prove that nature there is no frontier between the organic and inorganic. When understanding of the universe has become widespread, when the majority of men know that the stars are not sources of light, but worlds, perhaps inhabited worlds like ours, then the Christian doctrine will be convicted of absurdity."

Good rule of thumb is to never underestimate Hitler's ability to hate a group of people lol

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HardNut

joined 1 year ago