Nahdahar

@Nahdahar@lemmy.world
0 Post – 29 Comments
Joined 12 months ago

I haven't seen it used that way yet, but seems like a clever meta. Honestly community notes might be the only good thing on the entire platform. My favorite is when there are community notes on ads.

The underlying problem is the same, it just became more accessible to copy code you don't understand (you don't even need to come up with a search query that leads you to some kind of answer, chatpgt will interpret your words and come up with something). Proper use of chatgpt can boost productivity, but people (both critics of chatgpt and people who don't actually know how to code) misuse it, look at it as a "magic solution box" instead of a tool that can assist development and lead you to solutions.

Search results have gone to shit since everyone and their mothers started doing this SEO-optimization bullcrap. Google obviously has no reason to fix this situation because it makes them more money when people spend more time looking for something. site:reddit.com was one of the mitigators for this problem...

I'd gladly ditch search altogether and use ChatGPT + browsing support, but that's similarly dogshit because it's working off of SEO-optimized bullcrap results too.

This is fake (like all of these conversation screenshot posts, welcome to the internet, where have you been) and what makes it funny is the fact that it's fake. If a man posted it as "I've got harassed by X and this is my story" the majority would react similarly to you (some ppl would still be haha funny as we can see from actual sh/sa posts and those people can go fuck themselves). But it isn't, we all know it's fake, we all laugh about the absurdity of it and that's it.

Our landlady is pretty cool. If we want to buy something that can be an addition to the flat (like furniture or appliances or something) she gladly pays for it. So far in two years she paid for our coffee machine, rice cooker, balcony table and chairs, living room rug, and a new bed in my room. Downside of course is that if we move these have to stay, but honestly it's such a good place for about half the market value that we're not planning to do it any time soon. And of course if there's any maintenance required, we just send her a photo and a link with a price to a part that needs replacing or supplies that need to be bought and she pays for it, and I guess she's glad she doesn't have to pay for a technician, we just do it ourselves.

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The answer to your question is the indie market. Lots of unique ideas, ton of games that are a product of passion and not profit chasing.

My personal recommendation because I don't see it mentioned a lot is Pathologic 2. Product of decades of work and one of my favorite RPGs where every single choice you make does matter. It's a pretty bleak and heavy game that has about a 30 hour runtime and it's really stressful so it's not for everyone but I personally loved it.

Allegedly.

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In my country literally every company that has shopping carts outside does this, but I always thought it's more against homeless people taking them on a whim.

I'm completely aware of the financial issues YouTube is facing, but they got themselves into this mess (and most other companies as well, who provide a service for "free"). They make users accustomed to a level of service, build a userbase and ride on investments with the expectation that they'll figure out how to make money when they reach mass adoption.

The fact that youtube premium took years to even conceptualize is a massive failure on their part. Or how 1080p+ video wasn't a paid feature to begin with. Making your users get used to a level of service, then making their experience more miserable and selling a solution to the problem they made does not bode well with people who have been on the platform before "things turned to shit".

It also doesn't help that the first course of action was to increase the amount of ads, increase retainment, "enshifficate" the platform in order to increase the time people spend on the site (=more ad revenue). Now I'm at a point that I can't use YouTube without uBlock, sponsorblock, return youtube dislikes and Revanced (includes the latter two extensions for mobile), turning useless features off (or with the case of dislikes, back on) and stopping the bombardment of ads.

Youtube premium would still provide me with a worse experience, so why would I switch? They should figure out how to provide people additional value for their money, and shouldn't have accustomed people to a level of service that they 100% knew wouldn't be sustainable.

When streaming first came in I finally stopped pirating and felt a little bit better about myself. A couple years passed and I'm back to pirating, even built a Plex media server in the meantime.

And of course each teams instance uses 2gb ram each because they're very badly optimized electron apps.

We didn't have a scrum master but a new development leader implemented it in practice and managed it amazingly. He really made sure that time isn't wasted and the meetings were short, concise and everyone loved it after a few months. Work processes improved greatly, they used to be in chaos because management were (and still are) a bunch of imbeciles and supposedly didn't listen to the developers regarding how work processes should be improved.

But then his probation was over with a 3 month period of notice, and upper management started fucking with him because he refused to sign a legally binding contract of responsibility for the entire company's infrastructure which wasn't part of the deal, and was out of his scope (leading the development teams != being responsible for the entire company's infrastructure).

They started going behind his back and slowly destroyed what he had built and after a while he couldn't handle it and resigned effective immediately because they threatened him with a lawsuit regarding something he didn't have anything to do with but was management's fuckup.

This is the whole story affirmed by my coworkers and him, some of it I saw real time but I'm still on probation, looking for another job. This dev lead guy really liked some of our work for and told us if there's an opportunity he would want us to come with him and keep working together, just the company sucked ass. And I'll gladly do it because he was amazing.

Edit: added some context and grammar

I'm kind of a generalist in terms of interest in the IT sector and have a surface level understanding of most things (professionally I'm just a fullstack webdev), one big crater in my knowledge is about how drivers work, really want to do something like this in my free time (next year because I'm pretty much drowning in tasks now). The closest (but still pretty far) to this I've done is write a small service that increases / decreases volume through pulseaudio based on ACPI events (windows tablet volume buttons weren't working properly under linux).

Reading my comment back, excuse my writing style (too many brackets lol).

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Zorin OS became my favorite distro, tried a lot over the years. Consistent, clean design and pretty easy to customize, compatibility is good because it's based on ubuntu. Zorin connect is pretty neat too.

I feel you, my problem is that I switch between languages too much. I'm learning rust right now as a hobby, but I'm technically a frontend dev with years of experience in angular and react, and a couple months ago I have been put on a legacy rails project, which we're rewriting for Angular x Java stack (thankfully my roommate is a Java backend dev, he's been a lot of help) and on top of this I maintain my Cyberpunk 2077 mods written in lua, c++ and redscript (swift-like).

Send help.

I do the same, kind of but I paste them in word and format them nicely, based on my mood. Today I made a very nice initial of my npm publish command, it looks really nice.

This is just another way to keep up the mythical "infinite" growth. Just a little bump as things are starting to stagnate. More money to people = more business = growth.

I think this is the reason why capitalism will keep working properly. Can't keep growing if you can't find more people who can pay for your goods or services.

Or maybe I'm just too naive.

I don't know, I find that in Lemmy I can have better discussions than on Reddit. It isn't the same as Reddit ~5-6 years ago but it's definitely better than post-apicalypse Reddit, or maybe even post-covid years.

In my country it's not a secret how these places operate, I went to a slaughter house as a class trip back in high school + one of our relatives owns a massive chicken and cow farm. The animals' conditions are vastly different here than what I see from these terrifying documentaries.

In my country (in the EU) usually if a service charge is added on top of the order, it's because that particular place doesn't accept tips.

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My problems with telemetry:

Scope: if you provide a service which is a "wrapper" for doing other things, I do not want you to collect usage data. Example: an entire fucking operating system

Opt-out by default (or completely unable to turn it off) even if the service or software I'm using is paid: I want to have the ability to say no. Communicate properly what you collect when I get access to the service, allow me to say no and don't hide it in 300 pages long TOSes. I don't want to become your free UX tester when I already pay for the service.

Telemetry-driven development: I absolutely hate this both as a user and a developer. We see there are thousands of users using a feature, but it's a low % in general, so lead decides we need to remove it from our product. I know that those x thousand people will be annoyed, and so am I when I'm on the receiving end of this.

Another reason that is not universal but service specific is making decisions that purposefully keep you on the platform, over optimizing the interface for maximizing profit.

Is this actually real? Wow.

I disagree, I think it's always just about money. Power hungry-ness comes from the fear of losing your current position, the fear of not advancing and getting left behind. With power they secure the position they have. And it's not just exclusive to the rich. You can see the exact same pattern in a random fucking McDonald's.

If it was more profitable (and possible) to automate 40% of work at any given company (the ratio Gates said in this article), everyone would do it in a heartbeat.

I've tried Fedora 3 times years apart in my life and never had a good experience. The longest time I used a distro was with Elementary OS and Zorin OS, the latter of which I'm currently on.

That's the thing though. How could individuals struggling with addiction maintain clear and rational thinking?

Every time I pirate a ubisoft game I regret it, I never play more than maybe an hour with them and then I have to seed them to get > 1.0 ratio (private site rules). So I just stopped pirating them lol.

Honestly had slight hopes for Avatar because the art team really outdid themselves, but I knew in the back of my head that the actual game would be shit.

A more accurate description would be: she bought herself those things knowing she will never use them and most likely going to be amortized when we finally leave and the next "rentoid" comes in, needing replacement anyway. She doesn't raise our rent despite the market and our contract allowing her to do so.

Regarding maintenance think about issues like replacing broken hinges, changing an amortized shower head, replacing sealing rings in our sink drain etc. So far (in 2,5 years) never had any actual big issue which we couldn't fix ourselves, but if that were the case we would call a technician and send her the invoice.

In our country our situation is a little different. Our government introduced a package which was supposed to help families build or buy homes, giving a large sum of money without having to pay it back, and giving the same amount of money again with extremely low interest rates. This has caused housing prices to double in a few years. But it didn't just affect the housing market, it affected everything that you might buy for a new home (building materials themselves, furniture, appliances etc) because one of the conditions of this package is to renovate, build or buy a relatively newly built house/flat. For example the bed she bought was literally the same I had at home, and its price tripled (I reiterate, fucking TRIPLED) over a couple years. Other factors like the pandemic and the war have also affected the market.

Due to being the #1 country with the highest inflation in the EU (yay!) interest rates also skyrocketed, which makes it pretty much impossible to buy a house/flat anymore with the inflated prices. This has caused an insane increase in the number of people who want to rent, there was a time where barely any flats were available on housing websites. The market reflected the increased demand, people started giving out rooms, renovating old homes to allow parts of it to be rented, people with a lot of money started building apartment houses, etc. And of course the prices (after "rentoids" sucked up the market) were going to be higher to reflect the higher demand.

It seems like a general, global sentiment to me due to the internet and not just on the internet. I think it's the combination of our society being more global than ever, and the vastly increased amount of professions due to technological advancement. There's just way too much information that an average person comes in contact with, our monkey brains weren't designed for this.

You can ask it for source now with browser integration. Previously the browser extension was a separate model with gpt3.5 which was pretty bad, now it's just integrated into gp4. It works a million times better and it's great that it doesn't break the flow of the conversation.