• 5 Posts
  • 16 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 4th, 2023

help-circle
  • As a non-technical user, I think if you have a modicum of technical knowledge it’s easy to switch to Linux. But it still takes time and patience. I’m using Linux now on all of my devices (if you count Android as Linux). There is still a lot of idiosyncracy to the ecosystem but overall it’s usable. I’ve found Vanilla OS to be a great experience overall. I had some troubles with Pop_OS! On my Nvidia GPU, that was because it’s still using x11 and I use a 4k monitor with a 1080p monitor and needed fractional scaling. Haven’t had any issues on Vanilla OS because it uses Wayland. But boy, I had a hard time figuring out what was going on and why my apps were blurry and games weren’t displaying properly. Took a lot of googling and perseverance to figure it out, as I didn’t know what a display server.



  • What I dislike about these threads is that it always devolves into shitting on blue collar workers. Of course pickups are useless city cars but have you all ever met somebody from a town of 1,000 people where every single person works in a blue collar trade? These things do work that you can’t do in a different type of vehicle.

    Threads like this are echo chambers of privilege. Maybe instead of shitting on tradespeople, shit on car and oil companies who enshittify the whole system.

    Also pickups in 2023 that look like this are more powerful and more fuel efficient than more modest looking pickups from 90s or 00s. You may not like the aesthetics of it, but who fucking cares, you’re not driving it, you’re just the one judging someone else for having different taste.








  • This is interesting to me, because my intuition would be that it doesn’t matter whether the calories are going into microbiota or fat, it’s still going to end up as weight in your body (gut bacteria still add mass).

    Also adding to what another person said, the difference here is high fiber vs. low fiber. And I think the discussion around nutrition in general is moving away from weight being a primary determinant of health but a symptom of health. I.E. we shouldn’t be seeking to lose weight but to eat healthily, high fiber, whole foods, less processed junk, exercise frequently, and weight is a trailing measure of our success in that.




  • This is maybe more about being an artist in general, than specifically about writing, but I think intentionally trying to live an interesting life is very important.

    Dave Chappelle talks about how the most valuable thing an artist has is their memories. You gotta go out and make some. It doesn’t matter so much if they are yours or others, but what it does is it makes your work more human and grounded in human experience. Even if you write sci-fi or fantasy, it should be informed by your experience of what it means to be alive in this world.


  • I’ve been recently getting into some older writers from the 70s. It is funny, but it feels refreshing to read voices from a different era. I’m a Gen Z guy, I wasn’t around in the 70s, so I never knew what it was like apart from movies/TV. Movies and TV from that era feel dated, its obvious from the visuals, you can’t get around film grain and visual noise.

    But writing doesn’t age, it remains pristine. It makes it easy to forget that the books are old, except for the fact that the voices of the authors are so different - about 40 years out of touch or so.

    I’ve been reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and absolutely loving it. I read Adventures in the Screentrade by William Goldman and absolutely loved that.


  • I don’t buy this alone as the reason. At the surface level it makes sense, it costs money to socialize outside of the home by going to a coffee shop or bar or what not. But on a deeper level it doesn’t hold up, because when times get tough financially, a great way to reduce costs is to collectivize expenses.

    For example, I know two different groups of friends that are living together as households and sharing costs of living in a way that meaningfully reduces the cost of living. One group has twelve people living in a quadplex. They share groceries, home costs etc. The other is 5 people living in a single family home doing a similar setup. Significantly cheaper than renting a 1 bed or studio apartment and living alone or with 1 or 2 roommates. The other benefit, you feel less alone because you are building a life with many other people. Not just the people you live with, but it also gets easier to invite people to your home because you well… have a home that’s inviting and welcoming. Makes it cheaper to be social, because you can just invite people over.

    My point being that the greater loss in society is an imagination of what kinds of social structures can exist. Very few people even consider communal living a possibility, or what kind of form that can take (you don’t have to find four friends to purchase a home with, that’s just one way to go about it). Living with roommates is common enough because of necessity, but actually sharing costs outside of rent/utilities is difficult. I’ve tried to get my current roommates on board with something simple like food sharing and that’s impossible. There’s a level of vulnerability and loss of convenience that’s very scary for many.