Audio engineer and systems administrator.

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  • 16 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • Nobody is going to make you vote one way or another, but please recognize the following:

    The United States is currently a two party system. It sucks. We need to push for more ranked choice voting, as well as direct popular vote.

    However, until we’re able to achieve something that makes this parties viable, we will continue to have issues with the right wing getting undue influence in our politics.

    Vote with your heart, but make sure that you’re okay with another Trump presidency of you decide not to vote for Biden.

    Keep in mind as you do so that more than one state had enough votes for Jill Stein that if they had gone to Hillary, Trump never would have become president.

    We should have viable parties outside of the two not great to horrible parties we have now. But that’s simply not the way our government works as it stands now.

    Last thing: you’ve become a single issue voter. This is the lefty equivalent of only caring about abortion and ignoring literally everything else. Politics is complicated, and I personally find single issue voters incredibly shortsighted and lazy.


  • There are serious concerns regarding potential genocide, and Netanyahu has always been a problematic, right-wing leader that flirts with authoritarianism. I would agree with you on that front, and it’s perfectly fine to draw parallels to other authoritarian regimes.

    However, it shouldn’t take much to realize to that accusing a Jewish nation of being actual Nazis is not only insensitive, it’s antisemitic.

    We can criticize Israel for very real issues. There is absolutely no reason to invent new ones.



  • I think this is a cultural difference. In the US it’s not uncommon for common sense health regulation to get ignored - such as the amount of sugar in soda - because people cause an uproar about freedoms being taken away.

    But if you say it’s about the health of sweet, innocent children… well then suddenly it’s a lot more palatable for the public.

    So here in the US, you can want everyone to stop smoking, but make the case that it is for the benefit of children in order to help achieve that goal.







  • Then there’s my employer, who is giving us WFH for the foreseeable future. They might even sell our office building and move our datacenter.

    We do a monthly small-team in person, and the occasional all-staff in-person, but otherwise it’s just “come in if you want, or don’t, lol.” Like, I technically have a desk. It’s just got a couple monitors on it collecting dust, though. I’m only really ever there (aside from the infrequent in-persons) when my rabbit has to go to the vet, which is closer to the office.

    We actually showed more productivity after moving to WFH, so they said ‘let’s just keep it.’ So my only restriction is living in the state, since it’s a publically-funded org.






  • Forgive me, but I’ve been around the Linux/FOSS community for a couple decades and I have never heard someone mention the Freedesktop spec as a requirement to be considered ‘Linux.’ Considering that the Freedesktop spec is mostly targeted towards systems with graphical UIs, would that mean that any headless system running a Linux kernel and GNU userland is not considered ‘Linux?’ Furthermore, that kind of flies in the face of the idea of using Linux as a testing ground for alternative computing ideas.

    Now, there’s been a lot of discussion around fragmentation, and I get the arguments towards enforcing standards, but to me this is a truly bizarre line to draw in the sand. You could just as easily say “Any systems not using SysV are not ‘real’ Linux.” Or any system that gets rid of /usr. Or any system that isn’t POSIX compliant (bye bye, NixOS…).

    Seriously. I don’t get it. Please show me what I’m missing.


  • You could say the same thing about other distros that hide the difficult bits, tbh. Is Endless Linux? What about Elementary?

    The thing about Linux is that it’s extremely flexible, and there’s a lot of choices about interface and user experience.

    So what is it about ChromeOS that makes it not Linux? Is it that it doesn’t have GNOME, KDE, XFCE or the hundreds of other DEs? Is it that you don’t need to use the terminal for anything? I mean, it’s not the kernel or the userland or even the compiler…

    So what is it?