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How to Make Sure Your Disruptive Protest Helps Your Cause
  • It'll take me a while to respond to this, but it is hilarious you would refer to a voice for decorum and patience as "bully class" in an article/discussion about organizing obstructionists for maximum appeal.

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    How to Make Sure Your Disruptive Protest Helps Your Cause
  • Good point about slave revolts actually. That didn't cross my mind. Voting wouldn't have helped much on that front.

    As for the morally justified angle, that is highly subjective. Your ideals may not align with mine. Does that mean I need to counter-obstruct obstructism I disagree with? That sounds like rapid escalation.

    I did read that article, reflecting on recent perspectives, and as it is written for modern times, it raised concern; to have a outline/playbook to organize obstructionists in this climate is woefully tactless when masses are so easily enraged.

    That said, there are many ways to get your message out. Websites, pamphlets, signs, heck we are Ad ridden everywhere. There is no excuse. Changing laws isn't glamorous, isn't fast, and isn't easy. But the right way has no shortcuts.

    Second, (in the USA) your rights end when they infrige on anothers'. To impose my needs selfishly at the expense of yours is not only infringing your rights, but possibly accruing damages.

    This is not victimless behavior regardless of cause. It absolutely should not be encouraged.

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    How to Make Sure Your Disruptive Protest Helps Your Cause
  • It's easy. Don't do it.

    I support protesting and free speech. I do not support disruption. In fact, it shouldn't even be called a "protest" in the first place. Adding that tries to legitimize theft. (Yes, denied use is legally theft.) You don't always get your way in democracy and throwing a tantrum doesn't work.

    What does is voting and education. It's harder, but the right thing to do.

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    [article] What to do about America’s killer cars
  • 1 in 75? That math seems pretty off.

    40,000 fatalities would be a sample size of 3 million. The USA is 335 million, 110x larger.

    1 in 8,250 is more like it.

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    [meme] Car brains, citing vague "freedom of movement," often say that it should be OK to run over protesters on highways. In turn, it should be legal to set fire to cars parked in bike lanes.
  • Ha, I get it. Lots of stuff here is posted super seriously. It's easy to incite this community where it spills over into others.

    I suppose the joke part of this didn't sink in. I refer to my earlier comment about lack of coffee. :)

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    [meme] Car brains, citing vague "freedom of movement," often say that it should be OK to run over protesters on highways. In turn, it should be legal to set fire to cars parked in bike lanes.
  • Name calling... Check Unsubstantiated claims... Check Fake quotes... Check Rampant escalation of violence... Check

    Yup, quality post we got here guys. I haven't even had a cup of coffee yet.

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    (How) can a modem spy on you?
  • First of all, the ISP controls cable modem firmware. They have all the settings and manage the device. You don't get much control there.

    As for your question, I'd say no, for 2 reasons. First, designing that capability is expensive and modems are built for cheap reliability. Second, any hardware to spy is more useful installed in a data center accessible to their user base. There is not much point installing unnecessary tech to one endpoint.

    As for router, they are beefier CPU-wise. AT&T has in the past prevented users from changing DNS settings and that could lead to lots of tasty data. Deep packet inspection is becoming more prevalent in home routers as is integration with other technologies. (EERO devices for example).

    Make sure to fire up a VPN or something when you need.

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    The Next Major Version of Bluetooth Might Help Your Smartphone Find Things Faster
  • The user may not be aware they have this tracking technology on their phone. The toolkit may be some app developer integrating a 3rd party library for analytics.

    In fact, I was going to mention an app, Exodus, that can reveal these trackers and in scanning my phone, I found 2!. The first is home assistant, which is understandable, but the second is a Health app my doctor office uses! Man, that irks me!

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    The Next Major Version of Bluetooth Might Help Your Smartphone Find Things Faster
  • Uhhh that exact technology has been in use for years. Your phone broadcasts/receivers a beacon at regular intervals while Bluetooth is on. Anyone can pick it up if they are looking.

    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/14/opinion/bluetooth-wireless-tracking-privacy.html

    The process is so streamlined companies bragged your advertising profile is updated before you check out.

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    The Next Major Version of Bluetooth Might Help Your Smartphone Find Things Faster
  • The Next Major Version of Bluetooth Might Help Advertisers Track Your Smartphone Faster

    FIFY

    Let's not pretend this feature didn't trickle down the data harvesting dog-hydrant to us peons solely for our benefit.

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    Hybrid conversion alternator?
  • For drive power?

    An alternator can charge a battery and run accessories, but given 1 horsepower is roughly 730 watts, you really need some high voltage system to keep the magic smoke in.

    Edit: maybe we're talking different things. Honda used to integrate electric motors directly to engines in their early hybrids. Ford, iiiiif I recall, combine engine and electric power in the CVT transmission.

    Both can use the EV motor as a massive alternator, but a standard alternator is simply too small, and attached to the engine too weakly, to generate the power of a hybrid.

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    Hybrid conversion alternator?
  • I'm going to say no, though I don't actually know for sure.

    I imagine any accessory belt driven alternator/generator/motor setup would have practically meaningless value towards torque or economy; limited by the friction available from the belt.

    Edity edit: just saw your vid. Well call me Sally, there is something like that. Yeah, that belt had to be massively upscaled!

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    Hybrid or small turbo 4 cylinder for hilly neighbourhoods?
  • Haha yeah. Don't get me wrong, driven a car with that. What a great experience. And shifting faster then I can is definitely A-OK in my books.

    I just... like the nostalgia of manual. It's tactile; you're meshing with the machine. I do like paddle shifting though.

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    Hybrid or small turbo 4 cylinder for hilly neighbourhoods?
  • It's really not that much of an issue anymore. Some electric can beat out turbo 4's in horsepower, but that battery is like dragging 1/3 of an extra car in the turns. It can do it, but you can feel the weight. That said, you ain't doing laptimes on a hill climb so it may not matter whatsoever.

    Personally, I enjoy those rare things called a manual transmissions, so that limits my selection range, but I feel my next car won't have one.

    I will point out that 3rd party customizing options has been a factor in my decisions in the past. To date, I haven't seen much EV-wise. I'd like to see more of that in the future though.

    Oh yeah, the question ... If you got the cash to throw at it, I may go for fun EV, otherwise turbo 4. There are great cars in both columns.

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    Firefox Just a Puppet for Google
  • Straight up, Firefox isn't search, so that's never going to be competitive. Changing from Google is easy though. That aside though ...

    Comparing Firefox to Chrome is a little complicated as it comes default on pretty much all Android phones. Yes, we can change, but it's still installed and running services in the background if I recall. I really hope the move away from useful extensions takes a toll on chrome and brings users over to Firefox.

    Million dollar salaries are excessive IMHO and rarely justified. I'm with you on that.

    Some things Mozilla does, and doesn't do, have been instrumental in not only bringing awareness, but security for the web and triggering dialogue. That openness is important and not something Google has been known for.

    Google may be covering their butt funding Firefox, but an Internet without Firefox may look much different today.

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    How is it that Germany and Japan can maintain good urban planning despite being home to some of the largest car companies?
  • James May of Top Gear fame actually went into this in an episode of "Cars of the People" season 2 episode 1. Basically, he claims it was actually World War II that set things on that course. Pretty enlightening episode IMHO. Worth a watch for a history lesson.

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    Columbus Blue Jackets forward Johnny Gaudreau dead in New Jersey bike accident
  • Sure, let's blame something that can be done safely because some dumdum tried to do it while drunk. Hmm... there's a piece of the puzzle missing. I wonder what it can be?

    Also, what a bummer.

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    "REM sleep is the next AI"
  • "Who am I?"

    "Why am I here?"

    "When I'm done rolling up this booger, should I eat it or throw it out the window?"

    Linky

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    "REM sleep is the next AI"
  • I sort of already do. It's called dreaming about driving a car.

    I think these folks forgot that random dreams play an important role in information processing. I'd rather not mess with that too much.

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  • First of all, thanks mods for your work. I know spam sucks and ain't easy.

    I'm new to this lemmy thing, but there seem to be a few bots out there that may be able to help or ban spammers.

    Could we maybe look into that and automatically suspend/ban posts that link to amazon? That would seen to put an obstical in this kickback scam going on.

    Just an idea.

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    So we're posting Celicas now?

    This is a project car I've been working on off and on for a while. Yup, there is still much to do (mostly cosmetic) but it drove for the first time since I totally rebuilt the engine...

    ... until the heater core hose burst and sprayed my leg with hot antifreeze.

    It's been a really fun project and hitting this milestone feels great!

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