[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 26 points 1 year ago

So..... Throw them in jail? Make them accountable? Revoke the companies ability to do business till the records are provided?

Then again, that's just fantasy because the laws don't matter if you're Rick/big enough anymore.

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 20 points 1 year ago

Honestly?

Heat death of the universe.

Our biology is hardwired for tribalism.

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 13 points 1 year ago

Really, victim blaming?

Get out of here with that low quality crap.

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 6 points 1 year ago

That's kinda the root is the problem though isn't it?

It's incredible useful to have hoards of intellectually challenged voters hanging off your every lie.

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 15 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

From a parent perspective, largely because of societal consequences.

Your toddler talking about sex can lead to undesirable social consequences.

Not that I agree with it, but the reasoning is valid, it's a fear of other people and their lack of understanding or nuance. And the potential for them to assume the worst and attack you over something entirely benign.


Now if we're talking about education, there really isn't any good excuse. Maybe it's an extension of the above?

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 10 points 1 year ago

Definitely distopian, corporate power and entrenchment grows every year.

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 9 points 1 year ago

Probably because of the "you can't be sexist against males" standpoint

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 16 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

browsers themselves are easy to make

That's ... a patently false statement.

They are among the most complex, difficult, resource hungry pieces of software out there along with actual operating systems.

There's a lot of open source browsers out there. Are you using them? Probably not

This is also essentially misinformation. I'm sure none of us have heard of Firefox before, or Chromium. Sure Chrome (closed source) is what most people use, but Firefox isn't exactly some esoteric browser.

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I probably come in at ~30-50 searches/day so I never really considered it. But unlimited sounds interesting 🤔

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 11 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Cloud computing is.... Not distributed computing.

We're talking about pushing compute workloads across a distributed set of devices where that workload is linearly scalable by the number of devices involved, compute, storage, failovers...etc scale elegantly. Cloud computing can give you the tools to make such a thing a reality within the scope of the cloud provider, but it most definitely is not distributed computing just by existing.

Also the fediverse is NOT distributed computing either, at least for Lemmy. There is no distributed compute available for Lemmy. You can't have a few hundred users toss up their own compute to handle loads for an instance. Each instance is limited to a single database, and can have webservers behind a load balancer to spread out the compute. And that's about the best you've got. Not distributed, you can't just spin up 100 nodes for a Lemmy instance to handle more load and everything "just works". It's a very "classic" architecture in a way.

A K8 cluster isn't distributed computing until you build a distributed application that can elegantly scale with more and more nodes. And is fault tolerant to nodes straight up dying.

Kafka for example, is an actual distributed application. One which you could run on a K8 cluster, it self-manages storage, duplication, load balancing, failovers, rebalancing...etc elegantly as you add more nodes. It doesn't rely on a central DB, it IS the DB, every node. Lemmy is not.

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 16 points 2 years ago

Or Obsidian? Take actual control over them including rendering if you want to customize that.

Maybe it's a different use case 🤔

[-] douglasg14b@beehaw.org 10 points 2 years ago

This is a pretty disappointing and anemic article.

I thought this was going to dive into some of the practical pragmatic and scientific ways to measure information.

This is quite literally "What is a bit and a byte" 🫤

view more: next ›

douglasg14b

joined 2 years ago