[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 12 points 10 months ago

Quino was a philosopher in disguise. Most of his cartoons reflect reality in such a funny and crude way.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 12 points 10 months ago

I think the new Reddit logo is hilarious. It looks like Snoo has a stubble. What's up Snoo? drinking much?

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 12 points 10 months ago

I mean, I love ska. But a whole eternity of it? It's just way too much.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

:x and be done.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 69 points 1 year ago

You know, most countries that have strike laws forbid this. In Spain, for instance, if the workers are on a strike, the company is forbidden to replace those positions in a strike. Neither with temporary, nor people from other places. And the company cannot fire them. Basically it's a shackle, either you solve your strike or you are out of business.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

- Yes dad! I'm a sissy removed, and I like to watch man like me getting steamrolled by big black hunks!

- I came to ask you if you wanted a slice of pizza... but okay.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 78 points 1 year ago

Exactly! I would add that you can still use "no binario" or "no binaria" in a (somewhat) respectful manner. For instance, you can say "persona no binaria" (non binary person), "comunidad no binaria" (non binary community), because both nouns are feminine, you can use the feminine alteration of "no binario". For masculine I would go with "su género es no binario" (its gender in non binary), since gender is masculine and "su" doesn't imply any gender at all.

Again, not an expert just another fellow native Spanish speaker with a bit of a geekiness about languages.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 17 points 1 year ago

Risotto. I make one with panceta and mushrooms that can't be easier to make. And the principle is to just stir for 20' or so.

Ingredients (serves for 2)

  • Risotto type rice (Arborio, Carnerolli or similar) 150 gr
  • Chicken broth (homemade, if store bought then liquid, never in cubes) 1 lt
  • Onion 1 medium
  • Panceta 200 gr
  • Mushrooms (fresh) 200 gr
  • Olive oil
  • White wine
  • Parmesan cheese (grated or in very small chunks) 50gr
  • Butter 20 gr

Prep

  1. In a pot, put the broth to heat. It's not required for it to boil just to be hot.
  2. Chop the onion in very small cubes, as small as the rice grain if possible (so when you are eating it, you don't feel it)
  3. Chop the panceta in cubes (no bigger than your thumb)
  4. In a big pot, at mid heat, put the panceta to brown and defat
  5. Once the panceta is brown and you have a good fat source at the bottom, remove and reserve the panceta
  6. Put the onion in the pot and use the same fat from the panceta to sauté it. If you need more, you can use olive oil.
  7. Once the onion is almost translucent, put the rice and pearl the rice. From now on, you should always be mixing the rice with a big wooden spoon or similar. Never stop stirring. This will make the rice to let all the starch go, which will make your risotto creamy.
  8. Once the rice is pearled, pour some wine to deglase and keep stirring.
  9. Once the wine has evaporated and you hear the crackling, pour some broth until the rice is submerged, keep stirring.
  10. Once your broth is evaporated and you start hearing the crackling again, put the panceta, the mushrooms and pour some more broth. Keep stirring.
  11. When you see that you are low on broth and hear that the rice is crackling, check on the rice for the cooking point. It should be al dente, meaning that you should be able to bite it and feel some resistance, but it should be very edible. If you still feel it too hard, pour more broth and keep stirring.
  12. When your rice is done, take the pot away from the fire, and put the parmesan cheese with the butter. Stir and mix until it's uniform and creamy.
  13. Serve hot in small bowls or similar plates
  14. Decorate with olive oil, fresh grinded pepper and parsley.
[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 22 points 1 year ago

This is actually something that I've been thinking about Lemmy too. Now Lemmy.World is a good instance, but if I ever need to move, I'll lose a lot, and that's not what Lemmy and the Fediverse as a whole should stand for. We need to allow users to migrate to another instance as a whole. Not just the name, but the messages, posts, replies, everything should be repointed to the new user.

Of course, this brings new and interesting attack vectors on instances for DSoS and for users data. Identity theft would be a real bitch.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 15 points 1 year ago

That actually went full circle, 12 Monkeys style.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 40 points 1 year ago

Sir, this is a Wendy's.

[-] camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world 37 points 1 year ago

In general, password managers are a must-have in today's world. The question is not if you should have one, but which one and why.

As a Software Engineer very conscious about security and privacy, but also with a high practicality sense, I'd say you should opt for whatever you feel more comfortable.

If you don't want to manage anything, then 1password, BitWarden, LastPass or any of those might be right for you. If you are more of the kind to tinker with everything, then you can have your own OwnCloud/NextCloud and use KeePassXC.

I particularly used the later setup, but NextCloud was too much to handle for me, and settled with KeePassXC + Dropbox.

You do you, but use a password manager.

0

Basically this. I have just realized that as a guy whos teens where in the 00's, my musical ear has been groomed by awesome videogames with great soundtracks, like Tony Hawk Pro Skater, Gran Turismo, later Need For Speed and some FIFA. But what's the equivalent in today's time?

I've bought a FIFA and a NFS recently, but the soundtracks are... OK-ish, I guess? I enjoyed the some Rocket League's season, though.

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camelCaseGuy

joined 1 year ago