ilinamorato
@ilinamorato@lemmy.world
- Comment on Why have so many services started using single-factor passwordless authentication in the last little while? 20 hours ago:
They’re offloading authentication to your email provider. It’s basically quick and cheap oauth. I think it’s because they’re trying to avoid being a vector for a data breach.
- Comment on Why have so many services started using single-factor passwordless authentication in the last little while? 20 hours ago:
Most phone OSes now have a “lockdown mode” which temporarily disables biometric authentication until you use a PIN to unlock it.
- Comment on How did we go from being against fake pictures of the moon to accepting things like changing out the entire sky? 1 day ago:
I don’t like the sky replacement stuff and never use it, but I can imagine that it’s because a photo of the moon is a photo of the moon, while a photo with sky replacement is a photo of something else where the sky just happens to be in the background. Pretty substantial difference.
One is a touch-up. The other is just replacing my photo with a better photo.
- Comment on How did we go from being against fake pictures of the moon to accepting things like changing out the entire sky? 1 day ago:
The difference was before, it didn’t make the fuzzy moon a clear moon when they took a photo. It was a misleading ad for a feature the phone didn’t actually have.
No, it did. The “feature” was actually released.
- Comment on Scientists have been studying remote work for four years and have reached a very clear conclusion: “Working from home makes us thrive” 5 days ago:
There are no tools that can sufficiently replace what the office offers: interaction, chance conversation, camaraderie and socialising with the people with whom you’re trying to build The Thing.
I don’t know what kind of magical offices you’ve been working in, but my experience of offices have had none of those things. Interaction is almost exclusively sports-related. Chance conversation is basically just centered around “can you believe this guy?” Socializing actively avoids any discussion of The Thing or its building.
I’m glad you’re having a good time in the office, but none of that stuff sounds like any office I’ve ever worked in. People would walk in, put their headphones on, sit at their desk for three and a half hours, and go get lunch.
And don’t get me started on the whole “overemployment” trend, where people try to hold down two jobs by doing neither well at all. Yet another “perk” of remote work I guess.
I have a lot of trouble believing that’s something that has ever actually happened in any meaningful amount. I remember seeing a few news stories about it, but they all came from dubious sources and sounded like they were written to capture the attention and suspicion of middle managers, but were light on any real evidence. I feel like most of the ones I’ve seen were about the same random guy who got caught basically right away and fired from both jobs.
- Comment on Scientists have been studying remote work for four years and have reached a very clear conclusion: “Working from home makes us thrive” 5 days ago:
If you’re working at home on weekends, it doesn’t sound like you’re leaving work at work.
- Comment on Did it really used to be common for guys to go to a bar every night like in Cheers or The Simpsons? 1 week ago:
Sir Patrick Stewart’s autobiography has a heartbreaking account of his father’s nightly bar visits, and it sounds like he didn’t drink alone.
- Comment on Honestly Bizarre 1 week ago:
Great word, topological.
- Comment on Honestly Bizarre 2 weeks ago:
Hmmm. Since breakfast cereal is demonstrably soup, that makes strawberries, Cheerios, and Reese’s Puffs all vegetables. Good to know.
- Comment on Honestly Bizarre 2 weeks ago:
You’re correct! “Vegetable” is a culinary term. “Fruit” is both botanical and culinary. The “tomato isn’t a fruit” nonsense comes from people trying to conflate the two; if we called botanical fruits “grunkles” we wouldn’t have this problem.
- Comment on Sigh 2 weeks ago:
Not OP, and I can’t relate to the part where he’s incredibly jacked, but the expression of “why does this suck so bad” as the food is falling out of his hands definitely fits the bill.
- Comment on Why doesn't anybody get notified about warrants for their arrest? 3 weeks ago:
Potentially true, but that just makes the idea of a notification less likely.
- Comment on Why doesn't anybody get notified about warrants for their arrest? 3 weeks ago:
I think the big reason is…if they could find you, they’d just come and get you.
Smartphones make it a little bit more possible to actually be unfindable while still technically contact-able, but I believe police departments can still trace you through them. So if you’re in a situation where they can send you a message, they can just come and slap the cuffs on.
Also, you’d have to actually enroll in whatever notification system they set up, and what are the odds that anyone (who’s actually likely to ever be notified) is going to sign up?
And then you get into the problems of privacy (what if someone else enrolls their phone number under your name?) and consistency (What if you change phones or move? What if you get banned from your email provider?)—a lot of crime (well, the kind of crime that the police actually pursue) is committed by people without a steady address; in fact, that’s part of why they’re committing crime. Besides, the reality is that a lot of jurisdictions keep very little information about you on file: your name and address, maybe a phone number, and that’s it. Sure, they could find out more, but there are a lot of governmental entities that consider the postal service the only valid means of communication with citizens.
All of that is a big bundle of trouble with no real upside. If you did something wrong, you probably know to expect a knock at your door.
- Comment on Phones may come without bundled USB cables in the future, if OEMs have their way 3 weeks ago:
Not true. There are a dozen different types of knockoff USB-C. If you buy one that meets spec (basically just not the no-name bottom-of-the-barrel e-waste on Amazon) you’re going to get essentially full functionality (meaning high speed data transfer, power delivery, HDMI over USB, etc); and if you need something more, you’re probably going to know what to look for.
- Comment on do you remember a time when societies were so polarized and shifted so much to the right like today? How long did it last? 3 weeks ago:
Happy to help!
- Comment on do you remember a time when societies were so polarized and shifted so much to the right like today? How long did it last? 3 weeks ago:
Colloquially, “the pendulum” here is probably public political sentiment. It’s commonly understood, whether true or not, that a population swings back and forth between progressive and conservative values; illustrated by a pendulum swinging from left (progressive) to right (conservative). In the US, this is further inflamed by the two-party system, which unintentionally encourages such polarization and swings in political will.
So, in the US for instance, the Gilded Age (far right) gave way to the Progressive Era (far left), which led to the Roaring Twenties and the Great Depression (right), which led to the New Deal (left), which eventually led to Reaganomics (right), which led to Obama (slight left), which led to Trump (super far right).
The original question was asking, how long until this pendulum swings back to the left again. The “65-75” answer, it seems, was talking about WW2 in Europe, when the pendulum swung to the right as Hitler took power, and didn’t swing back to the left until after 65-75 (million) people died.
- Comment on Harsh 3 weeks ago:
Yeah, but if you’re actually aiming for the moon and miss, an orbit is pretty likely. It may not be a good orbit, but consider that you’re most likely to miss because the moon has precessed in its orbit during your transit further than you expected, meaning that you’ll end up coming around the back of the moon and captured by its gravity.
- Comment on Updates that don't tell me what is being updated 3 weeks ago:
Hey, Chime? You can work on your creative writing when the changelog is done.
- Comment on Harsh 3 weeks ago:
Shoot for the moon. If you miss, you’re now in orbit, and that was almost certainly the goal anyway
- Comment on do you remember a time when societies were so polarized and shifted so much to the right like today? How long did it last? 3 weeks ago:
They probably meant “65-75 million,” but hey, even the typo is correct as long as you’re talking about a very specific 65-75 people.
- Comment on do you remember a time when societies were so polarized and shifted so much to the right like today? How long did it last? 3 weeks ago:
I had to look at this three times to figure out whether it was a troll or not, and I’m still not sure. But ok, I’ll bite.
I’m an American citizen, and while I was a pretty angry neocon as a college student in the early 2000s, I settled down into a much more open, responsive, empathetic conservatism by 2008-2010 or so. And for about ten years, my politics didn’t change a bit. I still voted for smaller government, I still voted against wars (super funny in retrospect), I still voted in favor of my values (which also didn’t change).
But in that timespan, the far right worked themselves into a lather about Obama, a fury that I didn’t (and still don’t) quite understand apart from cable news stoking the fire; yeah, I disagreed with a lot of his policies, but I certainly never wished him dead. To everyone else, though, he was the antichrist. And so I watched as friends of mine went down the rabbit hole, getting more and more worked up and rabid. When Trump came down the escalator in 2015, I thought it was a blip, and we (conservatives) would collectively realize how far off the rails we had gone.
Instead, I got death threats. My kids got death threats. From people who used to be my friends, all because I dared say that I didn’t think Trump was a good choice. And, remember, my opinions and values hadn’t changed over the previous decade or so.
Since then, it’s gotten much, much worse. And, in fairness, I’ve seen how much I had been lied to, even before Trump, and moved over to the left as a result; but the right wing has gone so far over the edge that some of the posts I made on Facebook in 2005-2006—at the peak of my conservative rage, the stuff that was basically just Sean Hannity talking points—I’m seeing MAGAs pillorying Democrats making those same points for being “radical woke communists.” I’m not talking about similar viewpoints. I’m talking about nearly identical wording, in some cases.
So, no. This meme is absolutely bonkers, in a way that’s so obviously backwards as to bewilder, and the best way to prove it is to point out that George W(MDs in Iraq) Bush opposed Trump. MAGA has moved the window of acceptable political thought so far to the right that today’s Democrats sound like 2008’s Republicans, yet they’re being called socialists. Some of MAGA’s “centrists” are actively looking to rehabilitate the words “nationalist” and “Nazi.” “Small government,” “personal liberty,” and “values voters” are considered left-of-center ideals. At this point even Ronald Reagan would’ve been considered a “lefty” to this new-look GOP.
- Comment on Don't forget to turn purple and remove your arms 4 weeks ago:
Took me a full year, and I still get panic attacks sometimes when I put it on, but honestly you can do it if you need to. Go see a sleep doc. I was terrified, but I discovered after I got the thing how tired I really was (and I already thought I was pretty tired!)
- Comment on Don't forget to turn purple and remove your arms 4 weeks ago:
It legitimately took me a full year to get used to it. I still have a panic attack every once in a while when putting it on and have to walk around for a few minutes before bed. Anyone can get used to it if you need to.
- Comment on Could a minority in US Senate essentially disolve the federal state? 4 weeks ago:
Anybody “could” do anything. It’s all made up. Government is just a set of rules we all agree to play by, so any group of people could “decide” to stop playing by the rules and start playing by different rules. That’s why the Confederacy happened.
The only question is, do you have the strength (militarily, usually) to back it up. Because, no, legally what you’re talking about isn’t a thing.
Not that there’s an alternative, of course, if no agreement is reached. The government just stops. Taxes continue, the military goes on (at least for two years), but that’s about it. There’s no default state or last good save for us to revert back to.
- Comment on Could a minority in US Senate essentially disolve the federal state? 4 weeks ago:
Constitutionally, it doesn’t matter. Practically, the two year limit has been very generously interpreted.
- Comment on Shortly After Xbox Game Pass Prices Spiked, the Page to Cancel Game Pass Subscriptions Was Overwhelmed 4 weeks ago:
For me, with the Switch 1, I was worried about wanting to play a game but oh no it’s back at home. Happened a bunch of times with my 3DS.
But then I bought a case that had card slots in it, and that concern wasn’t much of a concern anymore. Then the pandemic happened, and I never really left home anyway, which meant it mattered even less. So now I have a few digital games that are super annoying to share.
- Comment on Is Star Trek Discovery that bad? 5 weeks ago:
It’s fine. It’s probably the weakest of the modern Trek shows, but only because SNW and LDS are so good.
- Comment on Borderlands 4 Dev Gearbox Asks PC Gamers to Wait 15 Minutes for Shaders to Compile in the Background While Playing After Reports Indicate Recent Update Causes Stuttering - IGN 5 weeks ago:
Maybe they could add a setting to automatically start up the game in the background after an update. Since shader compilation happens right at startup, that could get the job done.
- Comment on Costco Confirms It's Removed Xbox Consoles, Calling It A "Business Decision" 5 weeks ago:
Very much not true. Accounts from the development team call the dev process “fork and run;” meaning, they made a fork of the operating system. Yes, it diverged over time, but part of the reason that a Windows port of an Xbox game is so much easier is that they’re fundamentally the same OS.
And Android is Linux under the hood. They’ve committed code back to the Linux branch and maintained alignment with the LTS kernel since the start, and even the Linux Foundation calls Android a distro.
- Comment on Costco Confirms It's Removed Xbox Consoles, Calling It A "Business Decision" 5 weeks ago:
Not visually, but under the hood it is Windows. Windows 2000 in the case of the Xbox and Xbox 360, Windows 8 (and later Windows 10) in the case of the Xbox One, One X & S, and Series X & S. Kernels, drivers, APIs, etc. are all shared with the Windows codebase.