[-] cabbage@piefed.social 1 points 4 hours ago

Just read it for the first time now.

Wow.

Thanks for the recommendation!

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 13 points 23 hours ago

The official story is that Meta is worried about being sued by people suddenly seeing their content pushed to some random website without their consent if it's enabled by default, so they won't risk enabling it by default. At least not before the fediverse is huge enough that everything you post going everywhere on the internet is the expected behaviour.

Fair enough really. I wouldn't want to be sued for that either, and they obviously cannot expect Congress to understand.. anything.

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 7 points 1 day ago

Love the sound of it! Are you making these on commission or just as a hobby?

I can imagine making bows is an incredibly delicate matter - I don't have time to fall into the rabbit hole of the history of bowed instruments right now, but I can feel myself slipping!

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Judging character and identifying psychopaths are two wildly different skill sets, though arguably one depends on the other.

I'm slowly getting better (more experienced) at identifying psychopaths and narcissists, but holy shit it can be difficult.

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 8 points 1 day ago

That's beautiful!

Will you make a bow as well? Would it be possible to get a presentation of what it sounds like?

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 4 points 3 days ago

They define decentralisation as an even distribution of users? Or did I get that wrong skimming the paper?

This seems arbitrary. Mastodon is a decentralised network, no matter how big Mastodon.social is. Lemmy is equally decentralised, even though there's a dominant actor.

The other hubs in the network don't revolve around mastodon.social/lemmy.world. they connect to each other bilaterally - if the central hubs disappeared over night it wouldn't affect them all that much.

I think the notion that decentralised networks can't have hubs of varying sizes is plain wrong, and a fundamental misunderstanding of what decentralized means.

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 25 points 4 days ago

Pretty deadly for the sherpas though, who have to deal with the shit of the rich idiot tourists going there in massive numbers. So if they want to insist it's extreme, at least there's that.

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 13 points 5 days ago

That's obviously hyperbolic, but it does unleash some fun mechanisms. I think it's fair to assume many Swifties are apolitical - the demography of young voters it's traditionally hard to get to vote. Not more so than previous generations, it's just that they have other things they care about in their lives, unlike the old farts who always vote and always vote red.

This endorsement will inevitably cause some GOP furniture fucker or another to attack Swift in public. And that's when this becomes properly important - you do not want to start a war against Swifties in the current political environment.

But I wouldn't write Trump off before his dead, buried, and millions are doing pilgrimage to piss on his grave. Until then, we've learned better than to overestimate the American electorate.

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 50 points 5 days ago

I have a feeling not many Swifties would vote for Trump anyway, but Swift telling them to register and to go out and vote is probably going to make a dent.

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 15 points 6 days ago

The devs are working hard providing a public service that they make available for everyone. And the product they've developed is pretty impressive, in spite of its shortcomings.

They hold some opinions I disagree with pretty strongly, and I'm not a fan of every decision they make. But they're creating a truly common good, and for that they deserve praise. From a technical perspective, they have created something completely new that serves thousands of users and constitutes a system of huge complexity. They very much do not suck.

Anyone who thinks any person maintaining an open source project "sucks" should feel free to fork the project, fix whatever they're not happy with, and maintain the repository and handle commits and all the shit that goes down in managing a large open source project. After dedicating all this time to people, some random ingrate will inevitably disagree with some minor decision they've made and decide that they "suck".

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 48 points 6 days ago

Yeah. If they pushed it to the bottom of the list, or even removed them from the list but kept the user count, I could kind of understand it. But censoring them completely for being too successful seems like shooting yourself in the foot.

Lemmy.world is doing great and I'm happy for it and all that, but... 20 000 monthly active users does not exactly make them a tech giant that needs to be kept in check just yet. Ideally, instances of 20 000 active users should be quite normal at some point, and having stress tested the software before then should, one assumes, be a good thing.

[-] cabbage@piefed.social 41 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

I gave in to peer pressure and finally got Twitter right before shit completely hit the fan, even though I was already uncomfortable with it. I already had a Mastodon user, but not under my real name.

Then, during the exodus, I created a Mastodon user for academic use. This was a few months before defending my PhD in social sciences.

For a while, I was posting the same content on both platforms. On Twitter I am followed by a lot of people in my field, and many of them are still active. On Mastodon, there's like.. two active people specifically in my field.

Still, whenever I post anything both places, I have gotten more interactions on Mastodon than on Twitter. On Twitter a couple of people see it and boost, and they can be somewhat central in the field. But then it kind of deflates. On Mastodon, I get boosts from the ones there in the field, people in adjacent fields (for example the #rstats crowd), interested people from civil society, commentators, a real variety of people. Hell, the other day I was boosted by a folk singer I've been a fan of for years but that I didn't even know was on there.

Meanwhile, I occasionally check the temperature on Bluesky, and I bridge my posts there. Many in my field signed up while it was invite only. Some of them posted one or two posts back then. I haven't seen any actively since, and nobody from my field has followed my bridged account - but one R stats person has.

I guess they must be on Twitter still, if they are anywhere.

Anyway, point is, my field indeed failed to migrate. But I still achieve more by posting on Mastodon than on Twitter.

9
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by cabbage@piefed.social to c/mechanicalkeyboards@lemmy.ml

I picked up a Ducky One Mini at a flea market yesterday, and after cleaning it extensively it seems to be working pretty well for the most part. I'm using it for writing and coding, so not having dedicated arrow keys will take some getting used to, but other than that it seems neat enough for the price I paid.

However, the alternative graphic button (on the right side of the space bar) is completely unresponsive. Pressing it just makes no difference at all. I used a tool that maps keyboard presses in Linux (xev), and it showed nothing when Alt Gr was pressed (just like the Fn button), so it seems no signal is being sent from the keyboard to the computer.

It could be that this is due to some setting made by the previous owner, or maybe there's something else going on. Maybe I need to update the firmware. Maybe it's broken. I have no idea.

The back-light behind some of the numerical keys is also disabled or broken, but it doesn't bother me much as I'm not a big fan of back-light anyway.

But if anyone has any suggestions what to try for the alternative graphic key it would be much appreciated! For now I have re-routed right super (Windows button) to be read as Alt Gr, but it's not very convenient when writing Latex and using a lot of curly brackets. :)

5
submitted 2 months ago by cabbage@piefed.social to c/music@lemmy.world

This song is also definitely not about anything going right now. No, it's a history song about people long, long ago who found themselves trapped on a ship of fools.

In Yiddish with lyrics by Michael Wex.

Geoff Berner is a Canadian musician and songwriter with a background in punk and klezmer, notorious for writing angry accordion songs about being antifascist and/or jewish.

1

The police stormed the protest camp at the University of Chicago in the middle of the night, leading to a great interview with a student talking about, among other things, the cowardness of following orders.

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by cabbage@piefed.social to c/historyporn@lemmy.world
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cabbage

joined 8 months ago