Not sure. And not sure I ever thought about it that way. I get the point of decentralization. Ideally, it allows us to avoid what's happened to Twitter and reddit and other platforms. Plus there're are safety considerations (like Beehaw defederating from some less-moderated instances, even if they are larger). Basically, enshittification, in various ways.
But that's not why I'm on the Fediverse. In fact, I'm still using proprietary platforms like reddit and Instagram. I may have come over here in the last year, after reddit's APIgate, but I didn't stay because of the FOSS/decentralized principles. It's mainly because these communities and the people are cool. I don't mind spending my times in these different communities, because they're offering something different from each other.
I guess to me, these are all just tools. Tools to connect people with each other. And so long as I find a tool useful and isn't too awful -- looking at you, Twitter...deleted my 14yo account last year) -- I'll keep using it.
I don't know if that's answers your question, lol.
I have a separate account from Beehaw, which I use on a different Mastodon instance. I created it about a year ago. I also recently created a Bluesky account (I know, I know, proprietary social media...)
So for Mastodon, I've noticed it's harder to find the content I'm interested in. My instance is small, but active, so I find that I mostly interact with the folks there. Which is fine, it's our own little community of mostly political memes and life and work and such. That said, our instance is well-federated, so I do get some interaction with others outside of it.
But on Bluesky, maybe because it's algorithmic, right away I'm seeing content that I'm interested in. Gaming, anime, arts, news, tech. And in some ways, it feels more like Twitter back in 2009, when I initially created my (now-deleted) account there.
90s. Late 90s, as I was in middle school.
Some folks from my last job were in town on Wednesday, so they invited me out to dinner. I say "last job," but I'm now a contractor/consultant for them; no longer a FTE. So I guess they're still my coworkers. It was nice to see them in person. My boss was there, so of course he asked how my new job was going. From my previous post, I'm not sure I'm enjoying it. But I couldn't tell him that.
But I started with, "It's interesting..." And his eyes widened and he got a gleam in his eyes, lol. He thinks that anyone who leaves the company is crazy. And there's some truth to that as I've worked for the company twice. The first time I left...I don't want to say it was a mistake, but it wasn't everything I hoped for. I eventually came back a year and half later. Which he loves rubbing in my face and anyone who contemplates leaving. So I fudged it a bit. And he deflated, lol.
Either way, I'm glad I got to see them, and just spend a fun evening catching up over drinks and dinner. Gordon Ramsey's Hell's Kitchen is excellent.
This weekend, just watching F1 and League of Legends Worlds. Let's go Red Bull and T1!
Mitigations
Just use another torrent client. Deluge and Transmission etc do not have this vulnerability.
Was wondering what the takeaway is here. I updated to 5.0.1. Does that fix all these? If not, guess I'll try a different torrent client.
No worries. Crazy times we live in. Have lived in. Continue to live in. Tiring, indeed.
Major stories from last week, concerning the Washington Post and L.A. Times refusing to endorse a presidential candidate. In both situations, the ownership veto'd the paper's editorial board, which traditionally endorses candidates.
'Washington Post' won't endorse in White House race for first time since 1980s (NPR)
'Los Angeles Times' editor resigns after newspaper withholds presidential endorsement (NPR)
My work is now tracking mouse and keyboard inputs for productivity.
Oof, wtf? I love when these managers turn to IT to "solve" productivity "issues." As if mouse/keyboard tracking can't be faked/fudged. Like does mouse/keyboard movement really prove productivity? I can sit on Tildes or reddit all day and that would see my keyboard/mouse look busy.
Or even if someone is working in like Excel or Word, doesn't mean the work is productive, if it's not being done well or right at all. But again, it'd "look" productive via tracking.
Technology does not fix management issues.
Appreciate the kind words. Here's hoping!
Jfc. Can't, or rather won't, refurbish? That's beyond stupid.
Yeah that'd be cool if the opened it up and recreate it as a platform for people to mess around with it. Like a rPi or Arduino or something. Because in it's current form...pretty much useless. But you're right; they'd have to drop that price point significantly and incentivize people even if it were open.
Trying to finish up Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Spirt of Justice. I think I'm on the last case, so I can move on to the Ace Attorney: Investigations spin-offs after this. I've played all of these in the past on DS/3DS (except AA:I2), but that was years ago so some of these I don't remember the cases and stories. Either way, I'm enjoying it. I don't particularly love Visual Novels, but these kinds I do like.
Picked up Metaphor: ReFantazio over the weekend. Only a few hours in, but it's definitely got my attention. Cool to play a brand new JRPG IP. Definitely looking forward to getting deeper into it. I like that it uses the traditional JRPG turn-based battle system. I don't mind active battle systems (a la FFXV and FFXVI), but I'm definitely a bit of a traditionalist when it comes to JRPGs. Plus I'm often just bad at active battle, ha.
Friends also goaded me into getting the new Factorio: Space Age DLC. Even though I've had the base game for years, I don't really play Factorio, preferring Satisfactory instead when I want to play Factory Sims, but I wanted to play with friends. Plus it's a good chance for me to finally learn how to play this game and play efficiently.
I'm into week 7 of this new job. It's moving by really quick, which is a plus. But I'm having doubts.
It's way more chaotic and unstructured than I expected it to be. Which is weird because, aside from a quick 3mo stint at one place, the rest of my ~19yr professional career has been in small businesses that were often chaotic and unstructured! At my last job, where I did a total of ~17yrs over two separate stints, I was the only IT guy; I was constantly winging it and figuring things out. I practically had no training, supervision, nor oversight when it came to making things work.
I guess I expected that, since this new job is an enterprise-level place, the technical environment I'd be in would be enterprise-level. But it's not. It feels like a small business again. But somehow worse. Just today I was in my first meeting with the supposed networking group, and one guy was going through the laundry list of issues. One being that there are numerous people outside of this team who have the same powers and permissions as this team! And this issue, among others, seems to exist in multiple related areas, including those that I'm supposed to be managing. And there's no one to say "Stop that!"
Plus, I was hoping I'd be able to get trained in some of this. There's a lot of stuff here that I've never touched before. Unfortunately, my role is essentially brand new and the group I'm supposed to be working with and sorta helping to lead was literally created two weeks ago. Along with my practically my own job! No joke, I nor my employers knew what exactly my job was until two weeks ago. Plus, I didn't even think I would be leading in any fashion. I feel like I'm just getting tossed in and being told to figure it out, which is not at all what I expected or wanted.
On the other hand, I wonder if what I'm feeling is just because I'm new. I've only been new to a job three times over the 19yrs. So I'm not used to not knowing about things and not being the "expert." Which is uncomfortable. And when I feel uncomfortable, my default action is to run away.
I don't hate this job. And nearly everyone I've worked with or interacted with so far has been friendly and helpful. When I have questions, they answer to the best of their ability. So it's not like I'm truly in a sink or swim position. Plus, given how things are run here, I don't think there's strong pressure from above to quickly take action to clean things up. Those above also recognize that this whole division or whatever we are is a WIP. Supposedly, my whole team doesn't even officially exist, lol.
Obviously time will tell, and of course, I don't have to stay here forever. But I've definitely been on the lookout. I know these days it's normal to always be looking for the next opportunity. I also can't quit without having something else lined up either, as I just moved across the country, spent a shitload of money to do that, and still have a year on my lease. So quitting without a new job would be very, very, very bad.
I think I just have to take it day by day, week by week, month by month. My goal is to get to 1yr.
Ah well. Tomorrow is another day. And by Friday, it'll be 8 weeks. Only 10 months to go.
6ys is definitely a long time for a phone. Personally, I'm trying for 5yrs on my 13 Pro. It'll be 3yrs in February.
For each iPhone I've had, I've extended the time between upgrades by a year. 4S to 6+ was about 2yrs. Then to the X was 3yrs. And then 4yrs til my 13 Pro. The cost is one of bigger reasons driving me to do this, but I take the opposite opinion: the advances model to model aren't that major to me. I don't need a more powerful/capable camera or a screen with a deeper black or whatever. Aside from calls, messaging, emails, and reading news, and the occasional photo/video -- usually of nothing of great importance -- nothing I do really pushes my phone to its limits.
That said, I'm somewhat considering doing an earlier upgrade because of that satellite connectivity feature. Not that I go off-grid or anywhere with poor reception with any regularity, but I feel like that's a nice safety feature in case of an emergency.
Gasp, that would never happen! =D
I didn't say it since I didn't want to bring US shithousery politics into the thread.
Philippines has gotta stop with these actors and celebrities entering politics. And also the dynasties (sometimes composed of entertainers). How does being on a variety show or a soap opera qualify someone for high office?
So I've played a fair amount of the Settler games, as well as the more recent Anno entries: 2070, 2205, and 1800. I find those games super micromanage-y, especially the Anno games. But not stressful. Like in Anno, you can just kinda keep things on autopilot, not doing very much, and things will be OK (though the AIs might start getting stronger).
Anyway, that's a good take that Frostpunk is more of a puzzle game. I hadn't considered that. If that's the case, that might explain some of my, aversion. Because that parallels somewhat an experience I had with another game: Wargroove. I was looking at Wargroove as a TRPG/SRPG (akin to Fire Emblem or Final Fantasy Tactics), where I have wide latitude to execute my own strategies. So in Wargroove, I kept trying to do my own thing, but kept losing the level. It took me awhile to realize the game wanted me to complete the level its way, not my way. And that's when I realized it was more of a puzzle game and less a strategy game. Which is weird, because I played Advance Wars as a kid. Though maybe it's because I was a kid I didn't realize it was a puzzle game at the time.
It might be with Frostpunk that I'm doing something similar. Expecting a colony manager, a la Banished, but not seeing the puzzle game aspect. I'm making those narrative decisions based on nothing logical. Rather emotional: "Oh these kids are gonna starve! I better do this instead of helping the workers!"
Thanks for this; this was helpful, for real!
I'm about halfway through FP1 (I have the DLC). I want to go back and finish it, but like you said, it just kicks the shit out of you. It's legitimately stressful for me to play it, so I've kinda been like "Ehhh...do I really wanna play right now?"
But I am hoping to eventually complete it. Because FP2 does look interesting.
Late to the party, but I finally picked up Helldivers 2. My friends have had it since it came out, but I was being the "hipster gamer" and didn't get the popular game. Plus, our group has a tendency to do "flavor of the week"/FOMO gaming, where 1 or 2 people buy a new game, convince/guilt trip others into buying the game, we all spend $30-50 on it, play it for like 2 days, then never touch it again. So I was hesitant to get it, lest I get burned again (a la Starfield). Lastly, I'm also not a huge shooter player.
But I wanted to played with the boys, and they were playing it again recently, so I picked it up. And I'm glad I did. Because it's fun. Stupid fun even. Which is right up our alley. Already put 20hrs in over the last week.
The mechanics are simple. The missions are straightforward. And I like that it's a pickup/putdown game. Play a 20-40min round, then come back later or tomorrow. It's not like we're playing hours on end, which is great. We'll play a match or two, then maybe do another before we start signing-off for the night.
Something tells me that Amanda doesn't know wtf she's talking about. Just making it seem more scary than it is, in hope of scaring people straight.
As a recently former Kansas Citian, it is odd that this robot is here. As the article says:
We hear every week these days about more businesses being vandalized or robbed in Kansas City, but when you look at the latest crime map by KCPD, it shows no illegal activity reported at this shopping center.
This part of the metro, in Raytown, doesn't strike me as an area that's high/higher crime. It's a pretty busy area. I've passed through this part of town many times night or day. Shopped in this area from time to time; never thought it was unsafe, since it's a rather suburban area (not saying the city areas are inherently more dangerous; I lived in KC proper).
> Four months after Jackson County voters rejected a Royals stadium proposal in Kansas City’s Crossroads District, and two months after Kansas legislation paved the potential for an alternative path, the vision of downtown baseball endures.
> [...]
> Those conversations have more recently concentrated on studying the viability of a site not prominent in their last exploration: Washington Square Park, which sits just north of Crown Center and east of Union Station. More on that in a bit.
On Friday morning, the National Weather Service reported that the temperature in Kansas City, Missouri, dropped to 54 degrees.
Posting the whole article, since it's so short.
>KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) - It’s not quite pumpkin spice season, but it sure felt like it on Friday. > On Friday morning, the National Weather Service reported that the temperature in Kansas City, Missouri, dropped to 54 degrees. That broke the record low of 55 degrees for an Aug. 9, set in set in 1927. > As of Friday afternoon at 2 p.m., Kansas City had reached a high of just 71 degrees. The record coldest high temperature for Aug. 9. is 73 degrees. That was accomplished in 1991, the NWS reported. > “We may wind up setting a record low and record low high temperature for the date,” the National Weather Service stated. > First Warn 5 chief meteorologist Luke Dorris said Friday’s weather is typical for Oct. 7!
As expected long before competition began, Stephen Curry, LeBron James and Team USA defeated Victor Wembanyama and host France, 98-87, on Saturday in Paris, making it five straight Olympic gold medals for the United States in men's basketball.
> The indelible moment came from Steph Curry, who made four uber clutch 3-pointers in a two-minute second stretch of the fourth quarter to turn away a French uprising. Curry assured his first gold with a ridiculous fall away bomb, silencing the home fans with his "put them to sleep" trademark move.
That was an incredible ending. Final score was 98-87, USA.
CNN senior data reporter Harry Enten breaks down the numbers around JD Vance since his announcement as Donald Trump’s vice presidential pick.
> CNN senior data reporter Harry Enten breaks down the numbers around JD Vance since his announcement as Donald Trump's vice presidential pick.
Donald Trump has selected Sen. JD Vance of Ohio as his VP. Vance swept to national prominence with his bestselling memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.”
> MILWAUKEE (AP) — Former President Donald Trump chose Sen. JD Vance of Ohio as his running mate on Monday, picking a onetime critic who became a loyal ally and is now the first millennial to join a major-party ticket at a time of deep concern about the advanced age of America’s political leaders.
Non-paywalled archive.is link.
> Some Kansas lawmakers want to use STAR bonds to finance new stadiums for the Kansas City Chiefs and Royals. After Jackson County voters rejected a county sales tax for the teams in April, a Kansas proposal would authorize STAR bonds with 30-year terms to pay up to 100% of the cost of building a new stadium across the state line.
> Fully financing a Chiefs stadium could mean issuing $2-3 billion in STAR bonds, and potentially $1.5 billion to $2 billion for the Royals. Never before have STAR bonds of that size been issued. As of 2020, $1.1 billion total in STAR bonds had been issued in total, according to a state audit. The Chiefs-Royals proposal could triple that.
> It is far from certain whether such a massive project could pay for itself solely with sales tax revenue.
> The Missouri Supreme Court on Tuesday tossed the results of a 2022 vote in which Missourians overwhelmingly approved a measure forcing Kansas City to pay more for its police. > The extraordinary decision found that Missouri voters were misled by statewide officials when they approved the measure, called Amendment 4. It calls for a new election to be held in November. > Judge Paul C. Wilson wrote in the opinion that the financial estimates on the ballot question that voters saw in 2022 failed to “concisely and accurately advise voters” of its impact on Kansas City.
These are their exit interviews.
Some softball questions aimed at outgoing House members. Still kinda interesting. Especially when it comes to the Congressional salary question.
If you're not careful, you might think a poll just told you who is going to win
Basic article from Reuters on polling and what things in results mean or don't mean. Not at all in-depth but it is interactive. Always fun to play with sliders and buttons.
> Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey is threatening legal action against Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas after the mayor made comments suggesting the city would benefit from immigrants seeking asylum in cities such as New York coming to work in Kansas City.
A Biden ballot brouhaha as Democrats try to certify the president ahead of convention, but GOP Ohio officials say that's not allowed.
> Ohio officials rejected a plan from Democrats to get President Joe Biden on the November ballot after the party scheduled its convention past a state election deadline.
> Secretary of State Frank LaRose warned Ohio Democrats earlier this month that Biden is at risk of not making the Nov. 5 ballot. State law requires officials to certify the ballot 90 days before an election − which is Aug. 7 this year − but the president won't officially be nominated until the Democratic National Convention on Aug. 19.
> Lawmakers could pass an exemption to the 90-day deadline by May 9, as they did in 2020 when both parties scheduled their conventions too late. But the chances of that are slim: Top Democrats said they're deferring to the Biden campaign and Democratic National Committee, and Republican leaders are unlikely to lend a helping hand.
The Senate has already passed similar legislation, which is awaiting House debate.
> Missouri House Republicans passed a resolution Wednesday that seeks to make it harder to amend the state constitution.
> Lawmakers voted 106-49 to pass the resolution, almost strictly on party lines, with Majority Floor Leader Jon Patterson, R-Lee’s Summit, being the only Republican to vote no.
> The resolution now goes to the Senate, which has already approved its version.
> [...]
> The resolution, if passed by both chambers, would ask voters whether it should be harder to amend Missouri’s constitution through the initiative petition process.
Even though this will likely pass both chambers, it still has to go to a plebiscite.
Hopefully Missourians are smart enough to vote down this attack on our rights. Luckily, voters have been pretty good about things like this (except for the rollback of the lobbying reform "Clean Missouri" act). Still, people need to be aware of this.
The 3/8th-cent sales tax extension would have helped build a new Kansas City Royals stadium downtown as well as fund renovations at Arrowhead Stadium for the Chiefs. Tuesday's vote followed months of intense campaigning from both teams, and a concerted opposition from community and activist groups.
> Jackson County voters handed the Kansas City Royals and Chiefs a major setback on Tuesday, rejecting a stadium sales tax extension that would fund a new downtown baseball stadium and renovations at Arrowhead Stadium.
> Question 1 would have repealed Jackson County’s existing 3/8th-cent sales tax and replaced it with a tax at the same level that extends until 2064. The results mean that sales tax will end in 2031, when the Royals and Chiefs’ leases expire, and can only be used on the existing Truman Sports Complex properties.
> “No” prevailed with 58% of the vote, compared to 42% “yes” votes.
Should be noted that the split was the same in both Kansas City (within Jackson County) and Jackson County (outside of Kansas City). KCEB administers elections in Kansas City (within Jackson Co), while the Jackson County Election Board handles the rest of the county. Turnout was exceptionally high in both jurisdictions; 24% by KCEB [PDF], and 34% for JCEB.
In a redo of their first failed attempt, Republicans pushed through the charges over solid Democratic opposition, making the homeland security secretary the first sitting cabinet member to be impeached.
Gifted link should be non-paywalled (Archive.is link if desired).
> The United States House of Representatives voted narrowly on Tuesday to impeach Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the homeland security secretary, in a precedent-shattering vote that charged him with willfully refusing to enforce border laws and breaching the public trust.
> In a 214-to-213 vote, Republicans barreled past the solid opposition of Democrats and reservations in their own ranks to make Mr. Mayorkas the first sitting cabinet secretary in U.S. history to be impeached.
Gifted link should be non-paywalled (Archive.is link if desired).
> House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) preemptively rejected the Senate’s $95 billion national security package to aid Israel, Ukraine and other U.S. allies, saying in a statement that the package’s failure to address U.S. border security makes it a nonstarter in the House.
Taiwan’s vice president, whose party has emphasized the island’s sovereignty, defeated an opposition that favors reviving engagement with China.
cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/11011730
> [Submitted link is an NYT gifted link,](In a Setback for Beijing, Taiwan Elects Lai Ching-te as President) so should be a free to all to read. > >Taiwan’s vice president, Lai Ching-te, who has faced sustained hostility from China, won the island democracy’s presidential election on Saturday, a result that could prompt Beijing to step up pressure on Taiwan, deepening tensions with Washington. > > > For many of the millions of Taiwanese citizens who lined up at ballot booths on Saturday, the vote centered on the question of who should lead Taiwan in an increasingly tense standoff with its much larger, autocratic and heavily armed neighbor, China. >
Taiwan’s vice president, whose party has emphasized the island’s sovereignty, defeated an opposition that favors reviving engagement with China.
[Submitted link is an NYT gifted link,](In a Setback for Beijing, Taiwan Elects Lai Ching-te as President) so should be a free to all to read. >Taiwan’s vice president, Lai Ching-te, who has faced sustained hostility from China, won the island democracy’s presidential election on Saturday, a result that could prompt Beijing to step up pressure on Taiwan, deepening tensions with Washington.
> For many of the millions of Taiwanese citizens who lined up at ballot booths on Saturday, the vote centered on the question of who should lead Taiwan in an increasingly tense standoff with its much larger, autocratic and heavily armed neighbor, China.
The farm barons of Tulare Lake Basin want to continue pumping groundwater at volumes collapsing the San Joaquin Valley. That puts the region at greater risk of damaging floods — and in greater need of taxpayer bailouts.
cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/10682799
> > Corcoran had been sinking, steadily, for years because of persistent overpumping of groundwater by major landowners in the Tulare Lake Basin that has sent the valley floor into a slow-motion collapse. And the levee raises made in 2017 — a multimillion-dollar effort funded by local property tax hikes and the prison system — were no longer up to the job. Ultimately, the state agreed to pour $17 million into another round of levee engineering in an effort to save the town. > > > Farmers, meanwhile, were frantic as the basin’s phantom lake reemerged for the first time in 25 years and floodwaters surged onto croplands that had not flooded in modern times. The same overpumping that was sinking Corcoran had caused geologic transformations across the basin. What was once high ground suddenly wasn’t; infrastructure critical to drainage had in some cases shifted; water flowed in unexpected ways.
The farm barons of Tulare Lake Basin want to continue pumping groundwater at volumes collapsing the San Joaquin Valley. That puts the region at greater risk of damaging floods — and in greater need of taxpayer bailouts.
> Corcoran had been sinking, steadily, for years because of persistent overpumping of groundwater by major landowners in the Tulare Lake Basin that has sent the valley floor into a slow-motion collapse. And the levee raises made in 2017 — a multimillion-dollar effort funded by local property tax hikes and the prison system — were no longer up to the job. Ultimately, the state agreed to pour $17 million into another round of levee engineering in an effort to save the town.
> Farmers, meanwhile, were frantic as the basin’s phantom lake reemerged for the first time in 25 years and floodwaters surged onto croplands that had not flooded in modern times. The same overpumping that was sinking Corcoran had caused geologic transformations across the basin. What was once high ground suddenly wasn’t; infrastructure critical to drainage had in some cases shifted; water flowed in unexpected ways.
Neighbors of a proposed Blue Springs upscale apartment/mixed use retail complex turned out in droves at a Blue Springs City Council meeting Monday to successfully defeat the project.
> BLUE SPRINGS, Mo. — Neighbors of a proposed Blue Springs upscale apartment/mixed use retail complex turned out in droves at a Blue Springs City Council meeting Monday to successfully defeat the project.
> Homeowners said the high density apartments would have dramatically changed their neighborhood and was consistent with the city’s comprehensive plan for the area north of I-70 at Adams Dairy Parkway and Duncan Road.
Thanks, NIMBYs 🙄