jet

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] jet@hackertalks.com 3 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) (1 children)

I had a Panasonic crystal clear b&w tv until 2004... I loved that TV.

I watched most of star trek in black and white with a high pitched whine only I could hear

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 0 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I've summerized the video for you. So the conversation is accessible to people who don't want to watch it. Please don't just drop video posts without some text to help build the conversation

summerizerMichaela Reigns and Reddit snark communities

  • Michaela Reigns built Save a Fox, rescued foxes from fur farms, and became famous for sharing that work online.
  • Her husband says Reddit snark communities targeted her for years with false abuse accusations, mockery, and obsessive scrutiny until she died by suicide.
  • Reddit reduced the harm to a count of 28 active members in the harassing subreddit and banned it only after public pressure.
  • A small coordinated subreddit devastated a vulnerable creator with no structural protection. Reddit's origin and early failures
  • Reddit started in 2005, brought Aaron Swartz into the early team, added subreddits in 2008, and gave immense control to unpaid anonymous moderators.
  • Open voting did not push truth upward because the platform hosted r/jailbait, creepshots, beatenwomen, and the Fappening until public pressure forced action.
  • The Boston Marathon misidentification turned thousands of users into a false consensus machine that harassed an innocent family.
  • Ellen Pao's attempt to ban harassment communities triggered a revolt and reaffirmed that Reddit communities accept limits only when they approve the line.

Echo-chamber mechanics

  • Voting buries minority views, karma rewards conformity, and power moderators shape what millions of users can see across large parts of the site.
  • Reddit's political tilt grows from moderation bias, liberal-skewing user demographics, and a cycle in which dissent becomes less visible, less welcome, and less common.
  • A University of Michigan study of more than 600 million comments found moderators remove politically opposite comments more often and that this drives echo chambers.
  • A separate content analysis of top political posts found 112 times more left-leaning than right-leaning content, and Pew data places Reddit news users at 47% liberal and 13% conservative.

Monetization and corporate control

  • Reddit turned user labor and moderator labor into a fast-growing public company through ads, AI data licensing, IPO gains, and high executive pay.
  • Google and OpenAI licensing deals turned two decades of user conversations into a high-margin AI training asset while users and moderators received none of that revenue.
  • The 2023 API price increase and the blackout of more than 8,000 subreddits showed that even a platform-wide protest could not force management to yield.
  • Communities feel ownership of Reddit, but the corporation sets the rules, captures the value, and waits out resistance.

Politics, regulation, and platform reach

  • Reddit is dominated by English-language American traffic, so American political dynamics shape much of the platform's global influence.
  • European regulatory pressure, especially the Digital Services Act, pushed major platforms including Reddit toward broader censorship standards.
  • Tencent's investment, the GameStop squeeze, and r/place show how Reddit can coordinate millions of people in financial, symbolic, and political battles.
  • Section 230 scrutiny, harassment liability, user fatigue, and the export of Reddit's biases into AI systems are the major threats ahead. Reddit's current form
  • Reddit remains extremely useful for niche knowledge, technical answers, reviews, and local community organizing.
  • Reddit is also a consensus machine that rewards outrage, protects ideological enforcement, monetizes user speech, and refuses responsibility for the harms produced by its structure.
  • The current architecture stays in place because outrage, engagement, advertising, and AI licensing all benefit from it.
  • The platform promised democratized speech and delivered volunteer rule by a small class of moderators inside a corporation that profits from conflict.

References

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I didn't narrow it down, I suspect it was fdroid

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 4 points 2 days ago (3 children)

I've also had a app refuse to start if another app is installed (not running, just installed). My gos workaround was putting that opinionated app in its own profile.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

meet the general scientific consensus?

sees a lot of conflicting nutrition and medical info

You can't have one without the other. Nutritional research is severely lacking in the literature. any of the cited studies that make the vast bulk of the scientific flotilla are just observational epidemiology... Which is very noisy.

I've done a bunch of reading, a massive amount really, and the only thing everyone agrees about is processed foods are bad... Except not all processed foods (the ones that further some other agenda)

Pick your flavor of opinion and people can suggest good creators in that vertical.

  • whole foods only direct from a farm, no processing at all
  • vegan
  • whole food vegan
  • Paleo
  • minimally processed foods
  • low fat
  • ketogenic

Personally - After all my reading I've settled on keto/carnivore, but to say there isn't consensus is a understatement. There are many people who make their diet their identify and feel personally attacked if you eat differently than them. The best thing I can say for keto is their evidence is consistent, lines up across domains, and individuals following it see immediate improvements in their health metrics

I can recommend the low carb down under YouTube channel for medical lectures on the keto, very clear about the quality and limitations of their evidence.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcTTiHZtNpiqD2EubIO5HFw

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 10 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Also, still can't block communities we've been banned from on the community page. What a joke.

It would be a nice improvement! Currently you can go to settings -> blocks and you can add a block.

Voyager let's you block a community by a long press on the community name

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 5 days ago

800 words and no mention of the main driver of modern blood glucose levels.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Ahh! let's talk about ought!

Since humans store fat, one could see mechanistically we are setup to run on the energy we store: fat

When humans go more then 4 hours without eating glucose (skipping a meal, keto, fasting, or sleeping) they are running on fat, including the brain. If you want to prevent your brain from using fat you need to drip feed glucose all day (which some people try really hard to do), but when you sleep some of that fat will finally get to be used by the brain. One could reasonably argue the default energy of the human body is fat, hence why it's used during sleep.

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/molecular-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnmol.2016.00053/full#h7

Both short-term PET and arterio-venous difference studies in humans show that brain glucose consumption decreases as ketone availability to the brain increases. These results suggest that ketones are actually the preferred energy substrate for the brain because they enter the brain in proportion to their plasma concentration irrespective of glucose availability; if the energy needs of the brain are being increasingly met by ketones, glucose uptake decreases accordingly. This decrease in brain glucose uptake when both ketones and glucose are available supports the notion that ketones are the brain’s preferred fuel.

The body will use glucose when available, because glucose is so damaging to cells - glycation happens rapidly. As soon as any glucose elevations are seen in the blood stream insulin is immediately released to push glucose into fat cells and get blood glucose levels back to the low normal.

However, I'm open to being wrong: Why 'ought' the brain use glucose instead of fat?

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Sure, humans are lipvores we store fat we run on fat, stored fat is often seen as weight.

Regardless if a person is skinny, fat, or in between their brain can run on fat.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 1 week ago (5 children)

I'm not talking about your weight, I'm talking about the fuel source for the brain. The body runs on fat, the brain runs on fat. It can, when available, also use glucose - but the entire metabolic system tries to keep glucose levels low and consistent rather then spiked and high.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 1 week ago (7 children)

Starches and carbs feed the brain.

Turns into blood glucose, which the body can use in the brain, but works as hard as it possibly can to put into fat cells. The brain also runs perfectly well on fat, humans store fat not glucose for long term energy.

 

7 Year old monitor started to have panel issues today, no initiating event. Did the normal trouble shooting, shut every component down, disconnected, swapped cables, updated firmware, changed resolutions, etc... issue persisted.

Took it apart to have a looksie

Getting all the plastic snaps off the back of the monitor was the single longest part of this... very annoying. I miss easy to repair devices.

The PSU has shorts!!

the other side of the pcb is a transformer

some other leaking seen as well

both sides of the PSU in full

the logic board looks fine

I'm tempted to just fix the shorted pads and test the voltages... I probably should replace the transformer

Lots of chatter on youtube about the thunderbolt ports dying on this monitor, but I don't think that is applicable to me. At least the PSU shouldn't look like this even if its not the core problem.

Any insights or suggestions from those you have rescued erstwhile monitors? This is the first monitor that has ever fully died on me. I melted a laptop screen sitting too close to a fire.. heh, but it was still usable.

 

Diagrammatic Pieces define the pieces moves on the item itself. This removes the need to memorize the moveset to the symbol needed in many forms of chess

Western Chess - Maple Landmark

Wooden Pieces with the moves written on the bottom (so you have to lift them up to see)

Maple Landmark Image

Japanese Chess - Dobutsu Shogi (in the greenwood)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C5%8Dbutsu_sh%C5%8Dgi

Cute animals with the moves indicated by dots around the edge of the piece, probably the best diagrammatic set I've seen

Dobutsu shogi image

Japanese Chess - Kumon Study Shogi set

Very similiar to dobutsu shogi, but with the original character written in the middle instead of a cute animal. The wood feels good in the hand

Study Shogi image

Eastern chess sets will often have "westernized" pieces, that are different non-language characters symbols, but still require people to memorize a symbol lookup table.

I'd love to find diagrammatic options for Chinese Chess (XongQi), but I haven't seen any - do you know of options?

 

TLDR: Is it crazy to put a big TV on the floor for a couch battle station so that my eyes at couch height are at the top of the TV on the floor?

Context: I got a good price (buddy doing a clearance sale) on a 100" (254cm) hisense tv, so I want to setup a couch battle station.

I've always been near sighted, and I want to use this as a opportunity to move my display farther away from me. So put the 4k TV on the ground on the other side of the room, sit on the couch with a wireless keyboard / mouse and be productive.

When I'm sitting on the couch my eyes are about 120cm (~50in) from the ground, and putting the TV on the ground puts the top of the screen at 131cm (88in).

Anyone else doing a on-the-ground tv setup?

What quality of life add-ons can you suggest?

 

Sometimes I read papers in the sauna, sometimes I just think. What do you do?

I would be interested in anybody's recommendations of sauna proof devices, i.e. to listen to podcasts

 

In my community, I'm basically the only one who uses the sauna. However, today, somebody else was using the sauna, or at least it looks like they used it. The bucket had water in it, and the temperature had been raised to 100 c. Normally I only do 80° c, but I thought f*** it, if they can do it I'll give it a shot.

Man, that is a wildly different experience! I could only last 13 minutes, not my usual 20. My toes and my ears were burning towards the end, which I normally don't get ever on 80°. Toward the end I was slapping my knees in my back like a crazy person just to keep the minutes going.

 

Along the lines of just-in-case or emergency tools/supplies - What do you consider necessary or just nice to have?

 

For years, Vice President JD Vance came to know Charlie not merely as an ally, but as a beloved friend. Today, Vance takes up the microphone for his fallen friend and hosts The Charlie Kirk Show. Vance and others at the White House share their memories of the man who has become an immortal American hero and Christian martyr.

VP Vance hosts the Charlie Kirk show, I found this talk extremely compelling both for its staunch appeal to free speech, but not condemning those who disagree. It's worth watching - in full - regardless of political ties.

TLDW: It's both a remembrance of the departed, and a condemnation of the celebration of violence against someone who would debate anyone.

Note - I'm not a conservative, very far from it. I however was very disturbed by the recent assassination, and I've been trying to parse the rhetoric, I thought it is very relevant to this community. What I found most alarming is that people are actioning violence using only vague references about what someone said, rather then what they actually said - a very sad game of political telephone inciting violence. This has to stop. Honestly, the us vs them mentality is very much part of the problem (a thing which JD Vance falls into in this very video).

summerizer

Summary of the video (approx. 2h05m)

  • Host & setting

    • The program is The Charlie Kirk Show, hosted by Vice President JD Vance, broadcasting from his office in the White House complex.
    • Early remarks are delivered to a live audience; he states, “Mr. President, … this room is 100% with you,” and references that “today is our 2-year-old’s birthday.”
    • Framing: “America’s future is a series of choices,” describing a “slow-motion national decline.”
  • Charlie Kirk tribute & context

    • Multiple segments memorialize Charlie Kirk, repeatedly stating he was killed by an assassin’s bullet and discussing not letting the assassin “silence Charlie’s movement.”
    • He says an FBI investigation is underway and that they are “on top of this.”
    • Guests and staff share personal stories about Charlie’s impact (including TPUSA events and community building).
  • Guest segments (as identified in the video)

    • Stephen Miller — introduced as White House Deputy Chief of Staff and a friend of Charlie.
      • Discusses the aftermath of the assassination and broader political themes (speech, movement, elections, students/TPUSA).
    • Panel of White House staff / friends
      • Mentions include Taylor Budawich (identified as a White House deputy chief of staff), Kayn Door (referenced alongside staff roles), and Andrew Kulv (described as deputy communications director and a longtime friend of Charlie).
      • Topics include teamwork inside the White House, campaign/election activity, and mentions of Arizona and Pennsylvania.
    • Caroline/Carolyn Levit — introduced as the White House Press Secretary.
      • Shares experiences at the press podium, says she prays before briefings, and speaks about the president’s and Charlie’s influence.
    • Tucker Carlson
      • Reacts to the assassination context and larger movement themes.
    • Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
      • Introduced as Secretary of Health and Human Services.
      • Notes coming from a prominent Democratic family; discusses COVID-era censorship he says he experienced and why that was a national concern.
    • White House Chief of Staff (later segment)
      • Joins to discuss governing and campaign-related themes; battleground states are referenced.
  • Issues & claims discussed

    • Free speech / censorship
      • Repeated emphasis on protecting speech, especially in light of COVID-era censorship claims.
    • Elections & movement
      • Recurrent focus on organizing, student outreach (TPUSA), and continuing Charlie’s mission.
  • Closing notes & tone

    • Spiritual elements are present, including a recitation of the Lord’s Prayer (“Our Father…”).
    • The program reiterates moving forward with unity, campus engagement, and honoring Charlie Kirk’s legacy.

 

I can now sleep without the air conditioner running. I live in a very hot and tropical climate, it's often 32c at night. I've been consistently using the sauna daily for 4 months and I now realize I'm never turning on the air conditioning anymore.

I just had a friend stay with me and they asked how I could stand the heat, and it clicked! (Being a good host I turned on the ac for them)

 

Wtf is going on with kraken?

https://status.kraken.com/incidents/rzd4fm71v33m

Currently we have paused Monero (XMR) withdrawals.
Deposits are unaffected and still require 32 confirmations (~1h) before crediting.
We are actively monitoring the situation and will provide more updates as they become available.

The last update was 2 days ago, basically it's been down for a week.

1
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by jet@hackertalks.com to c/cars@lemmy.world
 

I see this gets some attention on reddit every year or so, I have been doing my own survey and here is what I've found for modern cars

Big Vehicles - No console

Small Vehicles - No console

Big Vehicles - Knee room

  • Toyota Landcruiser 70 Has a very small console far away from knee box. Roomy.
  • Subaru Forrester Has a annoying console, but gives more room then other console suvs, so 70% knee room
  • Hyundai Ioniq 5 Console can be moved back credit
  • Volvo xc30 console is retractable 75%, clear of the knee box. There is a floor console, it does poke into the ankles a little. Very wide seat

Small Vehicles - Knee Room

  • Suzuki Swift Very small console, doesn't block knees, but kinda pokes at ankles.
  • Wuling AIR/Binguo EV - Very low console legs can go over, but slight risk of shifting gears
  • Aion UT Floating half console for cup holding, leaving knee box clear.

What car without a console or lots of knee room do you know about?

 

This video is a little silly. On the other hand, the thing it reviews is also a little silly, as well as impressively epic. Lord of the Rings is not a history book - it just feels like one.

Summerizer

Summary

The video presents a humorous yet insightful exploration of fortress design inspired by the legendary Helm's Deep, blending medieval military architecture lessons with personal anecdotes and modern ergonomic insights. The speaker outlines strategic architectural features crucial for creating an impregnable mountain fortress, emphasizing practical defensive elements like drawbridges, moats, crenellations, and portcullises. These components are carefully chosen to thwart siege tactics such as battering rams, ladders, and mass cavalry charges. Alongside the fortress design discussion, the speaker shares a candid personal experience with back pain caused by prolonged editing sessions, highlighting the struggle to find an ergonomic chair. The solution comes in the form of a highly adjustable office chair, the C7 Morpher by Flexispot, which offers customizable lumbar support, armrests, and seating positions to alleviate discomfort during long working hours. The video concludes with further tactical fortress design advice, focusing on optimizing defensive positions, commanding archers efficiently, and selecting a strategic location that prevents enemies from exploiting natural terrain advantages. The narrative is peppered with humor and practical wisdom, merging ancient military strategy with modern lifestyle challenges.

Highlights

  • 🏰 Strategic fortress design prioritizes defensive features like drawbridges and moats to counter siege equipment.
  • 🛡️ Crenellations and banister rails on battlements improve archer protection and reduce accidental casualties.
  • 🏇 Avoiding tactical errors such as charging through narrow gateways or poorly timed archery commands enhances defense effectiveness.
  • 💺 The speaker’s journey to find ergonomic seating emphasizes the importance of comfort and adjustability during long work sessions.
  • 🔧 The Flexispot C7 Morpher chair offers extensive customization, including adjustable lumbar support, armrests, and seating positions.
  • 🔥 Using precise commands like “loose” instead of “fire” prevents confusion among archers during battle.
  • 🌄 Fortress location must prevent enemies from gaining high ground to avoid rock attacks and siege advantages.

Key Insights

  • 🏰 Fortress defense depends on layered protection: The video underscores the importance of multiple defensive barriers, such as ditches, moats, drawbridges, curtain walls, portcullises, and murder holes. This multi-tiered defense complicates enemy siege efforts by forcing attackers to overcome successive obstacles, thereby buying defenders time and maximizing their chances of repelling assaults. The inclusion of arrow slits and murder holes ensures attackers face continuous threats even if they breach initial defenses, demonstrating the value of overlapping defensive fields of fire.

  • ⚔️ Practical battlefield communication enhances combat efficiency: The choice of command words like “loose” or “release” for archers reflects a nuanced understanding of historical combat dynamics. The speaker highlights that using “fire” could confuse troops not equipped with firearms, showing how clarity and context-specific language can optimize military discipline and prevent unnecessary fatigue or errors during combat.

  • 🛡️ Architectural design must avoid isolated or ineffective defenses: Positioning curtain walls or gates where they defend useless or inaccessible terrain is a tactical blunder. The fortress elements must guard vital assets like the main keep or key access points. Otherwise, enemy forces will ignore these defenses, concentrating their attack on more critical, less protected areas. This insight stresses the importance of strategic placement rather than simply adding more walls or gates.

  • 🏇 Cavalry charges require careful terrain and timing consideration: Charging uphill or through confined spaces like narrow gateways risks catastrophic pileups, which can cause chaos and weaken the attackers’ momentum. The speaker’s advice to avoid starting charges indoors or on steep slopes highlights the logistical challenges of coordinating mounted units and the importance of terrain analysis in battle planning.

  • 💺 Ergonomics significantly impact productivity and health for creatives: The speaker’s prolonged back pain from editing reveals how poor seating can hinder work efficiency and well-being. The trial-and-error experience with various chairs, including an ill-fitting office chair and an unconventional bicycle seat, illustrates the struggle many face in finding suitable ergonomic furniture, especially when body type or gender-specific design considerations come into play.

  • 🔧 Adjustability in office chairs is critical for personalized comfort: The Flexispot C7 Morpher’s multiple adjustable features—lumbar support, armrest height, width, recline, and footrest—demonstrate how tailored ergonomics cater to diverse user preferences and body types. The ability to switch seating positions, such as cross-legged or reclining, promotes movement and reduces strain during long work hours, potentially preventing chronic pain and enhancing focus.

  • 🌄 Fortress location selection is as crucial as design: The speaker advises against situating a fortress where the enemy can easily exploit natural advantages, such as steep valleys or high ground above the fortress. Ensuring that attackers cannot rain down rocks or surround the fortress from difficult-to-defend angles is a fundamental strategic consideration. This insight reflects the broader military principle that geography often dictates the success or failure of a defensive position.

Together, these insights blend medieval military wisdom with modern occupational health concerns, demonstrating how thoughtful design—whether of a fortress or a workstation—can dramatically influence effectiveness and resilience in very different contexts.

 

There is a book called “On Being Certain”, by Robert A Burton who’s a neurologist, discussing how we know what we know. He postulates that the sense of “conviction” has less to do with objective reality and far more to do with “a feeling of knowing.” He also suggests that we are far less self-aware than we think we are.

People see a different viewpoint and their body reactively brings up all the conditioning received from popular advice. Instinctively, they hit the downvote button, thinking that they are rightfully decreasing the noise of a dangerous idea and protecting the less aware.

Most people aren’t interested in debate nor challenging the reality they find themselves in, or even the framing and interpretation of that reality.

Is lemmy supposed to be better then other social media?

How do we make lemmy a more thoughtful place? Or how do we create meaningful spaces on lemmy for thoughtful discussion of opposing views?

view more: next ›