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

Twitter isn't and never was useful as an organizing tool. Arab spring was a failure. Twitter is actually more useful to the ruling class than not because it gives a way for the masses to expend it's restless energy without changing anything.

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

I use vanilla gnome. Dead simple, no nonsense, gets out of my way. Perfect DE for me.

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

Malicious software that harms your computer’s performance and security, and prevents you from inspecting and modifying the application, is evil.

This is fearmongering. What is always left out of these conversations is exactly how Denuvo is a security risk, which is a tech question of this particular software and not a philosophical one. And I'll be frank with you, I think people vastly overstate how much of a problem Denuvo is as a piece of software.

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

Yes, and you have to weigh the loss of performance and/or privacy on a case by case basis. What bothers me is that people take cases where DRM strongly impacts the experience of the thing, and apply it as a general argument against DRM, when that is not an argument against DRM, but an argument against using that particular piece of software.

I'm kind of tired of DRM headlines in my feed. Whether a game has Denuvo or not doesn't actually matter when purchasing a game. What matters is this: is the game fun? Does the game pass the bar of acceptable performance? Discussions around DRM are mostly a distraction and a diversion from things that actually matter.

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago

It's not evil. DRM as a concept is not evil. There is actually no real philosophical justification for why it is wrong to use DRM to protect your software. Because if you made it, it is yours and you get to decide how other people use it.

The paranoia that surrounds things like DRM show just how laughably selfish and entitled some gamers are.

8

A master class in close reading, and a towering analysis of novelist Thomas Pynchon. Really good piece for being an essay published in a relatively laid-back periodical.

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

So what I’m hearing you say here is: “If smart people believe in magic sky fairy, magic sky fairy must be logical to believe in,” which is about the level of discourse I’d expect from someone unfamiliar with the concept of critical thinking. Thanks for being an object lesson.

This is such a bad reading of the comment that I can only imagine you're acting in bad faith. You have made the assumption that reason will inevitably lead people to the same conclusions about the world, but that is not true, and that is what the OP is bringing up. How is it that many people, when presented with the same sets of facts, and using the same reasonable principles, can come to differing conclusions? This question should keep you up at night, but instead it seems you're only interested in saying "those other people are dumb, I am smart."

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

As someone who's been there done that, this is the worst time to try and get into academics in the humanities. English departments are downsizing everywhere. There's an incoming "demographic collapse" coming to higher ed by 2026 - i.e. birth rates went down between 2008-2011 by a large degree and that cohort is 25-30% smaller than previous years. A lot of small, tuition dependent colleges are going to fold. In preparation, non-essential departments are cutting people like crazy. STEM and business are money makers, English and History aren't.

Best thing you can do with a creative writing degree is go into corporate communications/marketing. Find a gig at an agency and do creative writing on the side.

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

As someone who's been there done that, this is the worst time to try and get into academics in the humanities. English departments are downsizing everywhere. There's an incoming "demographic collapse" coming to higher ed by 2026 - i.e. birth rates went down between 2008-2011 by a large degree and that cohort is 25-30% smaller than previous years. A lot of small, tuition dependent colleges are going to fold. In preparation, non-essential departments are cutting people like crazy. STEM and business are money makers, English and History aren't.

Best thing you can do with a creative writing degree is go into corporate communications/marketing. Find a gig at an agency and do creative writing on the side.

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 4 points 1 year ago

This was beautiful. Thank you for sharing.

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

Okay but what I'm getting at is why does OpenSIL make them hardware irrelevant? I'm not a programmer, I don't know why a firmware library matters at all in this case, can you explain that to me?

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago

I'm confused, why does OpenSIL matter to this announcement?

1
submitted 1 year ago by SlamDrag@beehaw.org to c/food@beehaw.org

New Hoffman video dropped. Not sure if we have any 3rd wave coffee lovers in this community. I've been an avid AeroPress user for about two years now and it will be interesting to see where the company goes, though it will likely not affect me as this thing feels nigh indestructible and I can likely use it for ten years with no issues.

[-] SlamDrag@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

Technology isn't an end in itself, it is subordinate to the need to solve problems. I don't see how we can have relevant technical progress if tech groups don't consider "social issues" (in quotes because I'm abusing that label to include a lot of things in my head). Although maybe we're thinking about this at different levels of scale.

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SlamDrag

joined 1 year ago