ShrimpsIsBugs

@ShrimpsIsBugs@feddit.de
0 Post – 23 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

Classic "this is why we can't have nice things" moment

5 more...

Wait, I thought the decentralized version of Twitter was Mastodon

I'm a beautiful woman, most men would say "yes" to me

Maybe start with a bit more modesty idk

2 more...

Keyboard manufacturers requirering you to create an account to use your own fucking keyboard

2 more...

The timing doesn't really add up though. ChatGPT was published in November 2022. According to the graphs on the website linked, the traffic, the number of posts and the number of votes all already were in a visible downfall and at their lowest value of more than 2 years. And this isn't even considering that ChatGPT took a while to get picked up into the average developer's daily workflow.

Anyhow though, I agree that the rise of ChatGPT most likely amplified StackOverflow's decline.

I don't think that's a non-issue. If you host an instance an can see everything on it, that's one thing, but if everyone with an instance can see these things from all other instances, that's a different story. That way literally everyone can see all your up and downvotes. That's not the end of the world but that's definitely an issue imo. I can already see people getting canceled not because of an old tweet but because they upvoted something controversial years ago lol.

Same with Nemo

How is working voluntarily without any force or pressure comparable to slave labor lol

I have exactly zero confidence that these or other bad pattern will not emerge as the community grows larger

Yes, usually when in meetings. It's 99% a society/conventional thing, but looking and typing on your phone while talking to someone will often be perceived as rude. Taking notes in your paper notebook though usually will come off as being attentive and interested.

I might be wrong but as far as I understand Google's topics API only gives websites access to information like "here is a user who likes the topics IT and gardening", which is a LOT less than what is possible with cookies. With cookies a website can get information like "here is a user who visited your website yesterday and two times last week. Also they recently visited websites A, B and C, and frequently visits website D. On website D they are logged in as X." They make all your visits to a website and, with third-party cookies, also to other websites connectable. Google's topics do not.

Yes, age alone shouldn't lead to getting blacklisted. But if an instance is two days old, already 50+ accounts from there were banned on your instance for being bots and besides that there was no real contributions coming from that place, this might be a candidate for auto-blacklisting.

Just buy converse and you'll be wearing them in your coffin one day.

1 more...

Well, the thing is that they are right, and that's what hurts.

I don't think it's about laziness, but rather about having deadlines set by management that you can only possible meet by reusing stuff as much as possible - even if you only actually need 5 % of this stuff but got to package everything of it in your application for it to work.

Skin: Make it so I can endure the harshest of elements. Or be impenetrable.

Good look getting a vaccine

I think these problems might be solvable with auto blacklisting instances based on their age, how their users behave and what % of comments and posts of them are flagged as spam

5 more...

Wtf that is ridiculous

It's a nice app, but I'm really wondering who came up with that name and why. That's not how you name something if you want it to be successful.

2 more...

I think I can see their point. As they said, fragile isn't meant as a slur here. If after the tenth time it happens, this kind of thing breaks you, then you're fragile because the nine times before that made you fragile. Which obviously isn't your fault but the fault of the people who were assholes to you.

Wait. What's kbin? I've seen "@kbin.social" a few times here and assumed kbin must be a lemmy instance?

2 more...

The good old "we were first, so we're the only ones who belong here", which always brings up the question, how far we want to go back in time to determine who really was first. There is no answer to this question, hence it's the reason for so many conflicts across the globe and through history.

Good to know! Do you have a link or some place I could follow to stay up to date with the progress on that?