JakenVeina

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 88 points 5 days ago

If only it were that easy to snap your fingers and magically transform your code base from C to Rust. Spoiler alert: It's not.

How utterly disingenuous. That's not what the CISA recommendation says, at all.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 days ago

As if the new notepad wasn't already enough of a downgrade.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 6 days ago (1 children)

It actually took me multiple trues to get into Stardew. The whole "track down everyone" quest is intimidating for a lot of people.

Up to you if you think it's worth keeping at it, for the possibility of getting hooked later.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago

I mean, the book of Revelations is indeed a prophecy.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

Did you like the subplot about how slaves who are freed against their will turn to alcoholism?

Yeah, I thought it was really interesting how there were two characters who gained freedom and handled it in completely opposite ways. I thought it was a great way to highlight that simply ending an injustice often isn't enough. It takes effort beyond that to truly reach justice/equity.

Or how when they celebrated Christmas at Grimmauld place, they put little santa hats and beards on the severed slave heads?

The severed heads themselves were clearly established as one of many things that made everyone being forced to live there uncomfortable. So, yes, I liked the touch of the characters decorating them, and the rest of the house, to try and make it less of a reminder of the shitstain of a family that it used to belong to. The characters make quite a few such attempts, throughout the book, often unsuccessfully.

Did you like the HIV allegory character who deliberately tries to infect young boys with his disease?

Yeah, it's a pretty terrifying concept, and a great lesson about how being a victim doesn't make someone good. Anyone can be evil. In fact, victimization often becomes the SEED of future evil.

What about the constant descriptions of “mannish hands” and general authorial misogyny against women who the reader isn’t supposed to like?

I don't see how one instance of the phrase "mannish hands" across seven books equates to "constant descriptions". I can't say that I liked it or disliked it, because I don't ever remember reading it. It wasn't a significant enough detail to remember, just descriptive flavor of what the author was picturing. In retrospect today, yeah, that seems like anti-trans bias subconsciously leaking out, to have a "bad" woman character have masculine qualities. But it definitely doesn't read that way, on its own.

Did you like how Harry was supposed to be the saviour of magical england from a fascist movement, and yet he’s a moderate liberal who never makes an effort to fundamentally change any of the systems of the world, and who wants Hermione to stop campaigning against slavery because it’s annoying?

Given that the books actually give zero picture of how much magical society has changed, after Voldemort's death, I don't see how I can answer that. The only thing we know for sure about the world is that Hogwarts and Platform 9 3/4 still exist. I could give a fuck about what Rowling's expanded on in interviews and musings on Twitter.

I don't recall Harry ever once being against SPEW, that was pretty much all Ron, who does eventually change his mind. What Harry DOES have is the fantastic story arc with Kreacher, where he explicitly recognizes how wrong he was to not see the barbarity of the system sooner.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

The biggest hole in WASM right now is being able to DO anything really useful in it, natively. The only thing you can do natively right now is use the CPU. Can't manipulate the DOM. Can't access local storage or cookies or networking APIs, etc. You can call out to arbitrary JS code, but that's it.

This is great for some of the big JS libraries that have very CPU-heavy workloads they can optimize in WASM and call to from JS. Like frequently parsing and re-parsing HTML. Or doing game physics calculations.

I haven't heard word one about WHEN any of this will be available. Which is particularly troubling, given how long people have been begging for it.

Of course, none of this stops you from using WASM in the real world, to do quite a lot of things. You're just gonna have to deal with JS interop, still, do do anything really useful.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

This really reads to me like the perspective of a business major whose only concept of productivity is about what looks good on paper. He seems to think it's a desirable goal for EVERY project to be completed with 0 latency. That's absurd. If every single incoming requirement is a "top priority, this needs to go out as soon as possible" that's a management failure. They either need to ACTUALLY prioritize requirements properly, or they need to bring in more people.

For the Chuck and Patty example, he describes Chuck finishing a task and sending it to Patty for review, and Patty not picking it up because she's "busy." Busy with what? If this task is the higher priority, why is she not switching to it as soon as it's ready? Do either Chuck or Patty not know that this task is the current highest priority? Sounds like management failure. Is there not a system in place (whether automatic or not) for notifying people when high priority tasks are assigned? Also sounds like management failure. Is Patty just incapable of switching tasks within 30-60 minutes? She needs to work on her organization skills, or that management isn't providing sufficient tooling for multitasking.

When a top-priority "this needs to go out ASAP" task is in play on my team, I'm either working on it, or I know it's coming my way soon, and who it's coming from, because my Project Lead has already coordinated that among all of us. Because that's her job.

From the article...

Project A should take around 2 weeks

Project B should take around 2 weeks

That’s 4 weeks to complete them both

But only if they’re done in sequence!

If you try to do them at the same time, with the same team, don’t be surprised if it ends up taking 6 weeks!

Nonsense. If these are both top priorities, and the team has proper leadership, (and the 2 week estimate is actually accurate) 4 weeks is entirely achievable. If these are not top priorities, and the team has other work as well, then yeah, no shit it might be 6 weeks. You can't just ignore the 2 weeks from Project C if it's prioritized similarly to A and B. If A and B NEED to go out in 4 weeks, then prioritize them higher, and coordinate your team to make that happen.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago

A quality apology consists of 3 things:

  • An explanation of what you did that was wrong, and why it was wrong
  • An explanation of what you're going to try and change about yourself, to avoid the same mistake
  • An expression of remose. I.E. the word "sorry" or "apologize".

Your proposed apology has all those elements, so you're already ahead of most folks. But there are a few suggestions for improvement in this thread that I think are also good.

"if you felt so, I apologize": I don't read this as you apologizing for how the other person feels, since you clarified that earlier. But I think it's fair that others might read it that way, so you're better off eliminating the ambiguity. You're apologizing for what you did, without considering that others might (validly) consider it inappropriate.

"I'll try to control myself around you": similar deal, it should be clear that this is about you, not them. And when it comes to swearing in a workplace, it's pretty-darn common to consider it inappropriate and unprofessional, no matter who you're around. Maybe part of your apology needs to focus on how the behavior is unprofessional, and you simply needed help recognizing that, as you're (possibly?) new to the professional working world.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago

Gee, I wonder who was responsible for those ballots not getting sent out on time?

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Did they, though? Do we know how Nevaeh Crain and Candace Fails voted? Would that somehow make it okay?

The fact thay people who have done nothing to support these policies can still be killed by them is PRECISELY the problem.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago
[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

It's the same game conservatives like to play. They've setup their rules such that whenever they WANT to silence someone, they can find a justification that fits for it.

 

Been getting a lot of instability out of pictrs the last two days. Nothing in the week before that.

By instability, I'm talking 500 errors when uploading images (POST https://lemm.ee/pictrs/image). They seem pretty much random, I can get around the errors by just repeatedly trying to upload the same file until it works. As far as I can tell, there's nothing I'm doing wrong, trying to upload images too large produces a different, and much more reasonable, error. And there's no info at all in the response, except for the 500 code itself.

 

Pencilvania.

 

So, I thought Hexbear defederated from us a little while back, and we, in turn, defederated from them. Why do I keep seeing occasional (new) Hexbear posts in the "All" feed, lately? Did the defederation get reversed? Is it somehow a bug?

 

The site name's a play on "The Onion" so it's gotta be satire, right? I couldn't find an about page to confirm.

 

So the "fails to complete a cycle without erroring out" rate finally seems to have reached 100%, on the Samsung dishwasher that came with the house.

What do I need to know when picking a new one, and/or what models do y'all recommend?

I'll take recommendations about how to fix the current one too, I guess, but I already got advice from an appliance repair man, who basically said "it would need a new control board, I.E. ditch it." The error code it's giving is supposedly about insufficient water or water flow, but the water feed is completely fine, as far as I can tell.

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