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chiliedogg, to asklemmy in Tech workers - what did your IT Security team do that made your life hell and had no practical benefit?

And that’s why people use mouse jigglers and keep their computers unlocked 24/7.

chiliedogg, (edited ) to linuxmemes in This truly is the year of the linux desktop

Is it that Linux is getting popular, or that most people don’t buy new computers anymore now that their phone does everything they used it for, so it’s only the enthusiasts still buying?

chiliedogg, to lemmyshitpost in Task failed successfully?

Suicide by cop is a real thing.

chiliedogg, to memes in Funds

People have no idea what things cost. Stadiums are cheap.

150 million dollars in a major city might be enough to open a new Walmart. Forget about a comprehensive transit system.

chiliedogg, (edited ) to asklemmy in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

I think a big part of the mental blocked on both sides is people generally not understanding the difference between fact and faith.

Knowledge is about fact. It’s the realm of science, empiricism, and logic. If it can be understood and known, it belongs here.

Faith is about the unknowable (not the unknown). It’s a choice to believe something without evidence because that evidence cannot exist.

You can’t both believe something and know it.

Understanding that faith and science don’t intersect allows people to hold spiritual beliefs without rejecting knowledge and science. They don’t conflict because they’re entirely separate.

Some people aren’t wired with the mental flexibility to embrace both spiritually and empiricism. Some reject science, while others reject faith, and neither understand the other.

chiliedogg, to comicstrips in "Just Season It" by Mr.Lovenstein

We absolutely genetically modified pretty much all of our food. We just did it by selective breeding.

The only difference with modern GMO is we’ve learned to do it directly much faster. We don’t need a random mutation to add a trait anymore.

chiliedogg, to lemmyshitpost in Funny how it became bathroom use and imaginary things drag queens do...

Same ones who said COVID would magically disappear right after the 2020 election.

chiliedogg, to memes in War is a business and business is good

34: “War is good for business.”

chiliedogg, to lemmyshitpost in Electric eel

Rays are awesome. I always tell my student divers not to approach them, but to enjoy it if they decide to be buddies.

chiliedogg, to piracy in Love devs' attitude towards piracy, TruePianos v1.9.8 (audio VSTi plugin)

Back when Blizzard campaigns were so good you paid for the single-player while the online multiplayer was free.

chiliedogg, to memes in Surprised Pikachu

They won’t make people disable uBlock. They’ll just make it stop working, and people will just think the ads have gotten better or uBlock has gotten worse.

chiliedogg, to lemmyshitpost in 4202 g

At thw current rrate of growth it would be larger than the earth in under 1500 years.

chiliedogg, to memes in The system is broken

Taxes are astronomical because prices are inflated because of buy-to-rent.

Taxes on single-family residential properties should be like 50% of land value annually for third-homes and up or homes owned by non-human entities. Make it so fucking expensive to own extra houses that they get unloaded cheap to people who will actually live in them, and at the same time reduce the taxable value of the land because it’s selling cheap.

chiliedogg, to memes in I'm really getting over the enshitification of the internet.

Which is 100% fine by them.

They’ve created a situation where we HAVE to use ad-blockers for security, so they instead have to sell our data.

If they can’t make money off ads OR selling our data AND we won’t pay to view the content, all we’re really doing is using up their bandwidth.

chiliedogg, to lemmyshitpost in 🎵that's life🎵

It’s different.

It’s way better in some ways - especially if you find a good career in a field you’re passionate about.

But some of the responsibilities of adulthood are a burden that is hard to appreciate until you’re there. And the perspective gained by life experience is also very different, for better or worse.

For instance, I went through a breakup last year at 39 with someone I was fully expecting to marry. It was my first major relationship failure in decades, and as I was being dumped I expected it to crush me.

What ended up hurting the most was that it didn’t hurt that much. I didn’t spiral into depression or fall apart at work. I wasn’t happy about it, but I was fine. A younger me would have been overwhelmed by the emotional toll, but the adult me was able to keep moving forward without breaking stride.

And in a way that’s what hurts. The passion of youth has been tempered by a lifetime of experience that puts everything into perspective.

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