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zdc1
Joined 513 karma

  1. Ahh. Maybe because I'm AU-based millennial, but the only "food pyramid" I was aware of was the grains-heavy 90s one that I would randomly see here and there, so that was my point of reference.
  2. Then you need to re-pad everything (clean looking git diff be damned). It's just the reality of dealing with bounding boxes. Maybe we don't notice it in HTML and such since the browser redraws them for us for free.
  3. I was wondering why meat and veg were side by side, rather than vegetables being at the base. The new pyramid is still better than the old one, but not completely intellectually honest...
  4. I have a lightweight version of this. I have one playlist called "Story of my life". If I have a song that is consistently stuck in my head, my go-to to kick off a listening session, or otherwise very notable, I will add it to the playlist. This results in a playlist where I have a song for each "season" of my life. I can pick out a song and will often remember what was happening in my life when I added it, and what their general feeling of the time was.

    This is all separate from my ever-changing genre-specific playlists that I like to maintain and listen to.

  5. I feel that language is the refuge of educated idiots. You can take very simple ideas and wrap them with enough verbose and dense prose such that they take a while before a reader can unpack them and realise there's nothing new inside. It's almost a reflection of peoples' egos rather than their ideas.

    As a counterpoint we have the quote: "If I had more time, I would have written a shorter letter."

  6. I don't know what your experience has been, but I do feel that at some point you will find yourself on or beyond SO's "knowledge frontier".

    The questions you land on will be unanswered or have equally confused replies; or you might be the one who's asking a question instead.

    I've "paid back" by leaving a high quality response on unanswered SO questions that I've had to figure out myself, but it felt quite thankless since even the original poster would disappear, and anyone who found my answer from Google wouldn't be able to give me an upvote either.

  7. There are many modern day bucket shops. Any CFD or "spread betting" product is just your broker taking the other side of your trade (and optionally, offsetting the risk). Prop firm "evaluations" or "accounts" are another popular one on social media.

    Basically anything that amounts to a side-bet rather than a trade recorded on an exchange should (IMO) be avoided, and you're putting yourself in a situation where you and your broker have an adversarial relationship.

  8. I wonder how easy it would be to counterfeit a mammoth tusk
  9. Honestly, nothing's changed. It's more modern; but otherwise all the same.
  10. I think this comes down to the fact that we can keep a mental ledger on the reputations of 50–100 people, so our in-built reputation system breaks down at the current scale.

    You could try building a social credit system to scale things up, but that tends to upset people...

  11. I think that's a bit of a harsh take. People will use what they can get, and they may be assuming the signage was placed there for compliance/legal box-ticking reasons rather than because it will actually make them sick.
  12. I considered a GUI for a small Python project of mine, but couldn't find anything quick, simple, and portable. I ended up opting for a TUI with a few ASCII art boxes.
  13. Thankfully we're at a stage where a 4 year old second-hand iPhone is perfectly usable, as are any M-series Macs or most Linux laptops. Sucks for anyone needing something particularly beefy for work; but I feel that a lot of purchases can be delayed for at least a year or two while this plays out.
  14. Great article. Living and enjoying life is a skill that needs conscious practice and intentionality.

    The title would make more sense as the default settings being "too low" since Low is the setting where when we trade off fidelity for speed, but "too high" has a nice ring to it.

  15. The Portal 2 renders were genuinely surprising. Crazy what we can do in a browser today
  16. I've tried a lot of personal cloud options (ownCloud, a Resilio Sync mesh, CloundMounter + B2) and somehow ended up back on iCloud because of this.

    My next experiment is just to use NFS over Nebula/Tailscale and see how much data I can just host off my NAS, but it's surprisingly been quite a journey for a simple problem.

  17. Covid showed me that the daily ritual of getting up at the same time, getting dressed in proper clothes, and taking a train somewhere all massively helped my mood and level of willingness to engage with life.

    I can see how, in the absence of responsibilities, it's easy to slowly slide into a rut and become a depressed lump of a human that doesn't want to do anything. I also see that as part of the challenge: how do I stay disciplined enough to be happy, without being dependent on a job to force me out of bed?

  18. Agreed. I'm learning Chinese and while apps are lovely, nothing will prepare you for the pure amount of variation in accents across the world. Real world immersion becomes important for your brain to get used to mapping certain sounds to certain words.

    I've also realised it's same for English, except we don't really think about it since we're used to the sounds, but the way we'd say "I went to the market" in daily speech is night and day to how it would be enunciated during an English speaking class (e.g. uh wen tu-th markt vs eye weynt too thee marr-ket). To the unpracticed ear they can just sound like different sentences.

  19. Never heard of Windscribe but their homepage has "Become American" as a feature.

    > Are you sick of not having access to foreign oil? Do you love using advanced weapons to fuck up someone’s day? Obsessed with manipulating your financial records to make yourself look more successful than you are?

    Got a chuckle out of me.

  20. Yes, I've noticed their results are definitely becoming more opaque and driven by what they want to show you. (This is even when there isn't a sponsored option on the map.)
  21. Is this an ad?
  22. Personally, if I could stop working tomorrow I would. I have nothing against work, but I do feel that most jobs aren't particularly meaningful, and so they act as a pacifier that fills in our time so we don't need to confront the question of: what do we do with our time?
  23. Opportunity cost and perspective. We've probably played enough games to know how the cycle goes; there's a little voice in our heads now telling us that it's all just a big pixel hunt and the next few hours will be more of the same (my interest in a game fades once I learn the meta). And then there's so many games these days... so the other question is why not play something more interesting or exciting?
  24. Or use everything via the web browser; but yes, I think apps are the main reason we can't just have a generic Linux phone OS on an open hardware platform
  25. That's heartening to know. I find running Kafka less pleasant.
  26. It's okay. Give it a few years and every writing style will be being used by AI. We'll then be able to use whatever style we like as no one will be able to tell our writing from AI anyway.
  27. Great observation! Not only does ChatGPT produce seemingly human-authored output—humans can also produce ChatGPT-style output.

    If you really want to fly below the radar you can even include instructions to adopt a certain writing style, e.g.: you can tell it to use a Gen-Z style with minimal formatting.

  28. Personally, I've never been able to make async work properly with Python. In Node.js I can schedule enough S3 ListBucket network requests in parallel to use 100% of my CPU core, by just mapping an array of prefixes into an array of ListBucket Promises. I can then do a Promise.all() and let them happen.

    In Python there's asyncio vs threading, and I feel there's just too much to navigate to quickly get up and running. Do people just somehow learn this just when they need it? Is anyone having fun here?

  29. The Atlas Shrugged comments were particularly painful. 10/10.

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