[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 4 points 6 hours ago

Wish my local train union were as militant.

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 1 points 7 hours ago

We need more US-Russia/China ally propaganda, just to fuck with people

158

My country would never commit serious war crimes but they'd teach us about it if they did.

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submitted 3 weeks ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/memes@lemmy.ml
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submitted 1 month ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

I'm sick of having to look up what country an author is from to know which variant of teaspoon they're using or how big their lemons are compared to mine. It's amateur hour out there, I want those homely family recipes up to standard!

What are some good lessons from scientific documentation which should be encouraged in cooking recipes? What are some issues with recipes you've seen which have tripped you up?

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 59 points 1 month ago

To be honest, and it wouldn't work here, but I sometime enjoy the cryptic nature of iceberg memes at the lower ranks. It's like a scavenger hunt.

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submitted 1 month ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/fuck_cars@lemmy.ml
[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 57 points 1 month ago

My instinct is, "please don't allow sleep deprived people to operate an experimental nuclear reactor, even if they want to."

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 61 points 2 months ago

I hope some of you actually skimmed the article and got to the "disengaging" part.

As Electrek points out, Autopilot has a well-documented tendency to disengage right before a crash. Regulators have previously found that the advanced driver assistance software shuts off a fraction of a second before making impact.

It's a highly questionable approach that has raised concerns over Tesla trying to evade guilt by automatically turning off any possibly incriminating driver assistance features before a crash.

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 62 points 3 months ago

People are saying it is Bad News

So, uhh, you want to tell us who is saying it's bad news?

34
submitted 3 months ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

"Everything has a name", if something is made, used, discovered or imagined, there is probably at least one name for it.

The cap at the top of a flagpole ('truck'). A single primary vein down the middle of typical leaves ('midrib'). The coating sheath at the end of shoelaces ('aglet'). The creases across the inside of your wrist ('rasceta'). The protective enclosure of a radar, including the nose cone of most airliner planes ('radome'). The square hole in the top of an anvil ('hardy hole'). The iconic football/soccer ball design, that is, the truncated icosahedron with pentagonal black and hexagonal white panels (Adidas's 'Telstar' design). All those different types of cave mineral deposits like stalactites, flowstone, frostwork and moonmilk ('speleothem').

(Any language is fine)

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submitted 4 months ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Wikipedia defines common sense as "knowledge, judgement, and taste which is more or less universal and which is held more or less without reflection or argument"

Try to avoid using this topic to express niche or unpopular opinions (they're a dime a dozen) but instead consider provable intuitive facts.

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 129 points 4 months ago

Headlines are being headlines, I get it, but Fry was repeating a joke:

“I heard a very good joke yesterday,” the QI host, 67, told Stig Abell on Times Radio on Thursday.

“Someone said, ‘Musk is not a Nazi... Nazis made really good cars,’” he went on, before bursting out laughing.

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 85 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

The Wikipedia page on East German jokes has a few Trabant jokes.

  • What's the best feature of a Trabant? – There's a heater at the back to keep your hands warm when you're pushing it.

  • A new Trabi has been launched with two exhaust pipes – so you can use it as a wheelbarrow.

  • How do you double the value of a Trabant? – Fill it with gas.

  • The back page of the Trabant manual contains the local bus schedule.

  • Four men were seen carrying a Trabant. Somebody asks them why? Was it broken? They reply: "No, nothing wrong with it, we’re just in a hurry."

  • How do you catch a Trabi? – Place a piece of chewing gum on the road.

31
submitted 4 months ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Different local areas have different road rules and different unwritten rules in culture. Or maybe you just have a low bridge. What mistake do non-local drivers make in your area?

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 61 points 4 months ago

You know it's gotten pretty bad when even the anarchist flag usernames are meming about how ridiculous the anti tankie attitude is.

82
submitted 4 months ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/greentext@sh.itjust.works
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submitted 4 months ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/memes@lemmy.ml

DPRK social media innovation when?

57
submitted 5 months ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/fediverse@lemmy.ml

Much of the Fediverse, especially the most popular communities, are continuations or clones of existing communities from twitter/reddit/etc., which makes sense given the history of these platforms as alternatives to those sites.

Are there any original communities which exist on the Fediverse with no similar community on the mainstream alternative service?

94
submitted 5 months ago by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/opensource@lemmy.ml

There were some posts over the holiday season asking for projects to donate to, and for those who have the means to comfortably do so, this is an important gift to consider.

If there's only a limited amount each of us is able to give, I assume there's no point giving it all to, for one example, The Linux Foundation, because a small personal donation is trivial next to the ~$15,000,000 USD they receive from sponsors dependent on them[1]. I understand that funding sources can be a major and profound source of bias[2] and ideally we would be, for example, helping to make Firefox independent of Google, but until we have more collective power, it's not worth letting smaller important projects struggle instead.

So, which important projects should we leave to the sponsors, and which really need our support?

39
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by comfy@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Most online communities have a low barrier of entry and effectively no user onboarding, and end up becoming chaotic messes where content is difficult to navigate. Obviously this is fine for more chatty communities, but is unfortunate in more serious and discussion-focused forums and for content archives. Even on Lemmy, there are communities where formatting rules are completely ignored[1]. This results from a combination of site design, moderation, and user respect for the community (three things notoriously bad on reddit-like sites, and well, most popular sites)

A couple of exceptions to the trend are forums which enforce a barrier of entry and quality control (unfortunately I can't recall any right now, but I would love to hear of some!) and some booru IBs. A booru site is an archive where users upload media without titles and tag it for easy searching. If a booru manages to enforce a decent quality of tagging (and there are mechanical ways to assist with this, such as tag aliases) then the site becomes a well-organized online content community.

Most boorus I've found allow NSFW content, so here are some work-safe examples:


Note: feel welcome to list slow or 'dead' sites!

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 85 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Which is why you told someone this hour that they shouldn't be considered human.

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 93 points 8 months ago

IMO, the worst thing about "Minetest" is that it sounded like it was just a test creation, a prototype or experiment. It's certainly well beyond that now. The announcement introduction mentions people associate it with being a Minecraft clone or alpha release, but even further, to me the name initially gave me the impression it was [still] someone's small hobby project. 'Luanti' is much better.

[-] comfy@lemmy.ml 150 points 2 years ago

pls no more punchlines in the title!

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comfy

joined 3 years ago