Knusper

@Knusper@feddit.de

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Knusper,

Well, certainly not everyone agrees that people should be entitled to an opinion here, because we have science on that shit. And science tells us that nature is messy.
Whether we’re talking about psychological gender or biological sex, proclaiming that there’s only two categories is provably false. It’s like proclaiming that all colors are either orange or blue.

I guess, you’re allowed to be wrong. Hell, you’re even allowed to be wrong publicly. But if you are, you’re not entitled to not being corrected.

Knusper,

I’m not sure, what you’re trying to tell me. If someone’s broadly built and muscular, but happens to have a vagina in their pants, they still need a higher dosage than someone who isn’t broadly built and muscular. Well, that’s assuming the medication doesn’t cause trouble with e.g. an uterus (and assuming they’ve got an uterus to go with their vagina).

That’s what I mean with “nature is messy”. Whatever assumption you make about whatever categorization, you’ll find lots of examples that don’t fit. It’s easy to think in categories, but you have to always be aware and accepting that it’s going to be mildly wrong.

And especially a doctor should know what they’re doing, treating people according to their actual needs, not according to some category that may or may not fit.

Knusper, (edited )

Well, it’s dumb data, so we don’t speak of federation (which happens between services), but basically yes.

Anyone can download the data and the TL;DR for your right to using the data is:

You are free to copy, distribute, transmit and adapt our data, as long as you credit OpenStreetMap and its contributors.

As a result, there are also many servers which mirror the data, i.e. provide a separate copy you can download, which is effectively like federation.

Knusper,

Thing is, there’s no rational reason to arbitrarily use groups of 8 bits for transmission over the wire. It’s not just ISPs who use bits, the whole networking industry does it that way.

Knusper,

Nah, the prefixes kilo-, mega-, giga- etc. are defined precisely how hard drive manufacturers use them, in the SI standard: en.wikipedia.org/…/International_System_of_Units#…

The 1024-based magnitudes, which the computing industry introduced, were non-standard. These days, the prefixes are officially called kibi-, mebi, gibi- etc.: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix

Knusper,

Funnily enough, the meme still works. They wanted 0.2 TB, goddammit, not some hugely oversized 1.8 TB hard drive.

Knusper,

Hmm, I have no expertise in this field. I recently read that aging happens, because when cells replicate their DNA a gazillion times, then sometimes they introduce slight inaccuracies or mistakes, which I guess, means tons of tiny chunks of our body will have slightly different DNA from what we got born with…?

From the little I’ve just read about telomeres, it sounds like they help to prevent some of these mistakes. Is that you mean?

Knusper,

Interesting. Yeah, it sounds like the only real way to prevent aging, would be to create a clone of yourself, let that clone grow up until their body is fully developed and then organ-harvest them to replace all of your organs one-by-one, until you’ve eventually ship-of-theseus-ed yourself. Well, and repeat that process every thirty years or so.

Certainly not quite as sexy of a process as some skincare lotions promise…

Knusper,

Yeah, that’s true. Maybe you could pull off two or three cycles without hotswapping the brain, but eventually you’d have to rejuvenate yourself by just teach everything you know to one of your clones.

…which sounds an awful lot like just having children. 🙃

Knusper,

Ültrafast

Wenn beim Angelsächsischen mal wieder das Sächsische durchkommt…

Knusper,

Pictures are probably better than a thousand words here:

Knusper,

I’m no expert either, but yeah, I believe the lazy method of making the curry dish (Indian, Thai etc.) is to use curry paste. Our curry powder barely resembles the taste of the curry dish. In particular, it’s lacking tons of chili. 🫠

Knusper,

Also wenn du mich so fragst, hätte ich gerne so Döner-style Fladenbrot mit Kümmel, Schwarzkümmel und Senfkörnern im Teig. Das dann von innen bestrichen mit etwas Erdnussmus. Dann das übliche Döner-Grünzeug rein, aber kurz scharf in einem Wok angebraten und in Soja-Sauce getaucht. Darüber frisch gemalener bunter Pfeffer und ein guter Esslöffel kaltgepresstes Rapsöl. Und dann Champignons geschnetzelt + ordentlich angebraten und mit Gyros-Gewürzen mariniert noch darin einbetten.

Ich denke, das sollte man gut in so einem Imbisswagen zubereiten können. 🙃

Also habe jetzt natürlich übertrieben. Keine Ahnung, ob das noch gut ist. Aber habe tatsächlich schonmal so Champignon-Geschnetzeltes in einem Fladenbrot gemacht und das war extrem geil. Seither hätte ich tatsächlich gerne mal einen vollwertigen Döner damit…

Knusper,

Well, yeah, to some degree these are just very easy to prepare. To some degree, they’re just the lowest common denominator, though, which is what I’m mainly annoyed by. Lots of these simpler foods could be easily improved by adding some spices, or we could even adopt some of the many street foods in Eastern Asia, to bring in more variety…

Knusper,

I don’t know, if it’s more popular in other regions of Germany, but I’ve only had plain sauerkraut once in my life. 🙃

Only real dish involving sauerkraut around here is Krautschupfnudeln:
https://img.chefkoch-cdn.de/rezepte/1876371305102939/bilder/532029/crop-960x640/krautschupfnudeln.jpg

And well, by roasting the sauerkraut, it caramelizes a little bit and some of the vinegar dissipates, so it doesn’t actually taste as sauer anymore.

Knusper,

I think, what you’re describing used to be a thing, but there’s now a somewhat different, more granular way of rebinding keybindings:

https://feddit.de/pictrs/image/acbcd128-e1ee-4ed7-b2e3-590f78e4143d.png

However, it should be said that these will only apply within KDE applications. If you’re using third-party stuff, like Firefox, GIMP, VLC etc., they won’t apply.

If you really want to go hard on rebinding all kinds of keys for any application, you can also do things like these:

https://feddit.de/pictrs/image/38c87a51-dad8-484f-b63e-c2d84e4c4a9f.png

As cool as both of these are, and as much as I would still generally recommend picking KDE for these kind of customization possibilities, I wouldn’t recommend overdoing either. You won’t be able to use other PCs anymore…

Knusper,

If it helps, the Windows/Linux logic is basically:

  • Ctrl key for triggering actions within an application.
  • Alt key for navigating the UI of an application via the keyboard.
  • Meta/Super/Windows key for triggering actions outside of applications (on the OS level).

Well, and Ctrl, Alt, Shift also serve for alternative characters when you’re typing. And some application or OS shortcuts wildly combine modifiers for more complex keybindings. And of course, some applications just didn’t get the note of how this generally works. I won’t claim, it really follows rules, but yeah, it’s not generally complete chaos either.

Knusper,

There’s a comic, titled “Loss”, which is infamous, because it’s incredibly fucking depressive. People don’t enjoy being reminded of it. And so, of course, it has become an internet culture / meme thing to do precisely that, but in a sneaky way.

In particular, the comic has 4 panels and an arrangement of characters in a certain, recognizable pattern. So, over time, it’s been reduced ad absurdum to just this pattern.

Well, and in the meme above, it becomes apparent that it’s replicating the Loss pattern, when that fourth panel has the DNA flipped on its side. So, the joke is that we have the pattern-seeking brain for recognizing Loss.

Knusper,

And “philosopher” is just Ancient Greek for “lover of wisdom”.

Knusper, (edited )

Interesting, I didn’t know they had cloth wrappers for their Pickelhauben. Is/was that a common thing, to have cloth wrappers for helmets?

Edit: I did the tiniest bit more research and stumbled over what might be the reason, translated from this source:

During WW1, the Pickelhaube became useless. The metal reflected sunlight, meaning the soldiers couldn’t camouflage. The spike would often stick out of trenches, making them easier to spot.

As a result, a new helmet model was then introduced in 1916, but I guess, they had to get creative until those were ready…

Knusper,

I’m not a lawyer, but I’d say that’s a case for implied consent.

Typical example is when you’re shopping and you hand the cashier the money that they’re asking for, then that counts as an agreement to a contract. You don’t have to explicitly say that you’d like to buy the wares for that price.

With the dark mode button, I’d expect the same. You’re very likely cool with them storing your preference, specifically for providing you with dark mode (not for tracking et al). So, pressing the button would presumably suffice as consent for that.

Knusper, (edited )

If those analytics do not process personal data, then you don’t.

At the very least, don’t use Google Analytics. To my knowledge, that’s currently illegal in the EU in general. See, for example: techcrunch.com/…/google-analytics-sweden-gdpr-fin…

Knusper,

Yes. Not necessarily so anyone could use the programs, but so they would at least know the basics of real-world programming.

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