timwa

joined 2 months ago
[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 5 points 1 day ago

Those of us in Eastern Europe long knew that Rutte was an odious piece of shit who blocked Schengen membership to Romania/Bulgaria for years to pander to the racists who elected him, so hopes that he's suddenly turned into a good guy just pretending to lick Trump's ring seem misplaced.

Pictures of pretty windmills and bike lanes do much to whitewash the fact that Dutch politics and politicians are as horrible as anywhere's.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 1 points 2 days ago

Tbf, since they moved to WearOS Galaxy Watch always chews through the battery for a day or two after an upgrade, and then returns to normal. I presume it's doing a load of background app refreshes/optimisations after the update.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 26 points 6 days ago

They're labelled "oxygen removers", so I rather assume that's what they're for. Dessicant is something else entirely.

I own a property & live part of the year in Thailand, and have worked in China for a decade - I don't need grandma to teach me to suck ants. Amazingly, in all that time I've discovered that a single layer of plastic and a bag clip is, in fact, entirely adequate to keep both humidity and ants out of food.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 97 points 6 days ago (5 children)

If this helps Asia get off its addiction to wrapping absolutely everything in about 5 layers of plastic, there may be an upside here.

(For the uninitiated: if you buy a packet of biscuits in Europe, you'll get a cardboard box, maybe one interior wrap of plastic, and the biscuits. The same packet of biscuits in China will see every two biscuits wrapped in its own sealed plastic bag. Each of those will have a small plastic bag of "oxygen remover" for God knows what reason. The bags will all then be carefully nestled into a thick plastic tray. The whole lot will then get another layer of plastic wrapped around it. Everything is like this there (and most of South East Asia in my experience) - it's genuinely nuts.)

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 8 points 1 week ago

This gets repeated a lot - but for avoidance of doubt, practically no normal people use VPNs in China, and the government is very successful at blocking them.

You can set up a brand new, never seen before VPN on entirely new IPs and random ports today, and at 1am tomorrow it'll be blocked. Commercial VPNs are basically unusable. (For a while, Cloudflare Warp was a very nice way around - but they put a stop to that too.)

IF you have a competent government willing to put the work in, blocking VPNs is entitely doable. That "if" is probably our best hope in the west, though.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 2 points 1 week ago

I'm in Romania, and I have never heard of Blik. Maybe it's behind Revolut's instant payments or something?

There is a domestic instant payment solution - RoPay - but I've never actually used it; my bank does occasionally remind me it exists but I've never seen a merchant that accepted it. I would say Revolut's solution I have started to notice - I've used it to pay for flights with WizzAir, for example.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I got a sitewide warning a couple of months ago for suggesting that Trump's inaugural "board of peace" meeting was the apotheosis of the "you have one bullet..." thought experiment. "After reviewing, we found that you broke Rule 1 because you threatened violence or physical harm." I'll wager Trump's secret service guys were absolutely shitting themselves when they read it, so it's probably for the best they took it down tbf.

On the bright side, it was the kick up the backside that was needed to get me to try Lemmy, and I hardly use Reddit at all now.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

When I'm on a plane I still idly think about the possibility of there being a gremlin out there on the wing eating an engine...

(I fly a lot and even learned to fly gliders/sailplanes back in the day, so definitely not afraid of flying, but if I'm ever sat next to William Shatner I'm deplaning. No point taking chances. ;-).)

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 1 points 1 week ago

Since imgur was blocked in the UK I was searching for an alternative way to occasuonally share photos on a Usenet group I'm in. (Text group, not binary, of course.)

I ended up just settling on a Hugo static site. It's not quite drag and drop, but close enough for me - I just drag the photos into a content directory, run a build script and push the repo - argo deploys it.

Because it's just plain old httpd serving static files, in a container, it's about as safe/stable as I can make it.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 15 points 1 week ago (2 children)

That sounds sweetly naive. "Producing innaccurate technical advice, with a confident tone, at scale" sounds like the perfect credentials for a career in consultancy.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

You seem to be under the impression that booking.com provides property management services. I'm not aware of them doing any such thing, but if they do them she should absolutely raise a dispute under her contract for those services. A quick scan of their information page for property owners is pretty clear, though, that it's the property owners' responsibility to get insurance if they need it (they even have some partner links for insurance providers.)

Using booking.com to advertise and resell her business does not change the fact that managing that business is entirely on her. If she doesn’t want to put in the minimum effort, or expense (e.g. insurance) required, she should get out of the business of property letting.

You can hate booking.com for many reasons, but "not running my spare property as a hotel for me so I can just sit back and count the cash" isn't really one of them.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 10 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I hate not to join a pileon, but if the landlady didn't want to deal with the consequences of letting random strangers into her property unsupervised for money, she shouldn't advertise her property for random strangers to occupy for money.

Short term rentals are a business, not a free money machine. Even rent extraction requires slightly more effort than just depositing the cheques - dealing with customers' behaviour is a cost of doing business. If, like most short-term let grifters, she is not capable of handing that responsibly she should get out of it (and good riddance - short term rentals do no good and plenty of harm to society.)

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