sixfold

joined 1 year ago
 

It's the only browser I have installed besides Safari, and my default browser but instead of just opening the link with my default browser, it advertises these other browsers to me and makes me click 'Default browser app' by default. wtf I'll be turning that off, should have never been a feature.

1
The Human Shader (humanshader.com)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

A GLSL shader computed painstakingly by hand by almost 2000 people

 

cross-posted from: https://sullen.social/post/59233

Really great description of the american sprawl. These issues eat away my soul every single day, and this guy wrote about it in 1973.

Some of my favorite excerpts:

The invention of the personal automobile, and destruction of public transportation, was a triumph of capitalist drug-peddling; suddenly, all at once, everyone’s personal mobility became dependent on a single, new commodity, gasoline. Without it, we are unable to function, since urban sprawl and suburbanization now means we can’t even walk to work if we wanted to.

“The typical American devotes more than 1500 hours a year (which is 30 hours a week, or 4 hours a day, including Sundays) to his [or her] car. This includes the time spent behind the wheel, both in motion and stopped, the hours of work to pay for it and to pay for gas, tires, tolls, insurance, tickets, and taxes .Thus it takes this American 1500 hours to go 6000 miles (in the course of a year). Three and a half miles take him (or her) one hour. In countries that do not have a transportation industry, people travel at exactly this speed on foot, with the added advantage that they can go wherever they want and aren’t restricted to asphalt roads.”

You’ll observe that automobile capitalism has thought of everything. Just when the car is killing the car, it arranges for the alternatives to disappear, thus making the car compulsory. So first the capitalist state allowed the rail connections between the cities and the surrounding countryside to fall to pieces, and then it did away with them.

These splintered cities are strung out along empty streets lined with identical developments; and their urban landscape (a desert) says, “These streets are made for driving as quickly as possible from work to home and vice versa. You go through here, you don’t live here. At the end of the workday everyone ought to stay at home, and anyone found on the street after nightfall should be considered suspect of plotting evil.” In some American cities the act of strolling in the streets at night is grounds for suspicion of a crime.

No means of fast transportation and escape will ever compensate for the vexation of living in an uninhabitable city in which no one feels at home or the irritation of only going into the city to work or, on the other hand, to be alone and sleep.

https://lemmygrad.ml/comment/1364150

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/464181

Succinct intuitive introduction to antenna theory.

 

I heard from my brother that people who install high power sound systems often get a high voltage alternator to power it without killing the starter battery. I was thinking about this for my electrical system. I'd like to get a deep cycle house battery and isolation/charging circuit for it. Does anyone have experience doing this kind of conversion? Or recommendations for alternators and charging circuits?

 

Honestly, having some privacy provides so much mental space. It give you the ability live without being as stressed out by fears of what other people might do when they see you. With these black window covers, people don't see someone living in a car, they see a parked car. The feeling of security is immense, and it's so much easier to focus on other things besides the fact that you are in your car.

That said, the covers I made have started to wear out after about 6 months of use, but they are pretty easy to maintain if you keep a can of spray adhesive around. I didn't use the metal wire modification, but I might recommend something stiffish to help give them some better structure, and something around the boarder to help it grip the window frame better. They initially are the perfect rigidity and hold themselves in the windows, but now they have some issues staying in the windows sometimes.