[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago

Sports nerds vibes

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 7 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Finally I can add to the list:

  • Fix Or Repair Daily
  • Found On Road Dead

and now,

  • Frequently Off Recording Device
[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

Beneath the Mask in my ass

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 4 points 3 weeks ago

"Woman are you going to be able to get the kids"

Lmao this is not how I talk, nor do I have an SO nor kids. Though maybe that's for the best going by autocomplete

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago

The good news: I don't drive anymore

The bad news: I did that shit because I grew up on an intersection with a real bad angle, so the only way to see both directions was to angle the car flat with the road I was turning onto. Then, even after moving, I did it because it gives better visibility.

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Yo, the Elder hot sauce is great, though. I went online to buy more a few months after I saw them, lol

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I do this for the same reasons - and also, snooze emails until two weeks before an event, then a week before the event, then a few days before the day of the event in order to keep reminding myself it's going to happen.

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

That's most of what we do today.

Every web app you use right now - which is most of your day for most users - is just a dumb terminal UI hitting some API on some foreign computer.

Plan 9 uses the file system as a way of interacting with apis. Linux took this idea directly by copying in the/proc filesystem from 9, which are not bytes on a disk but are instead the kernel presenting its running processes in the format of files and directories in your file namespace, and with which you can interact to control those processes.

It also took this idea and created FUSE - file systems in user space - so that you can do the same thing on Linux as a user, but with not quite the same ease you have on plan 9 - and notably, fuse file systems are not naturally network file systems, and so you can't export them as easily to the network as you can with nine machines, where it's implicit.

Last, Linux took the idea of per-process namespaces from 9, setting the stage for all of the docker, snap, etc. tools we use today.

In short, a lot of nine already is mainstream because it's been adopted by Linux. However, using plan 9 and then returning back to Linux feels like putting on bulky gloves, because Linux did not start with these concepts in mind, but bolted them on after.

/Tinyrant

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 46 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

No. This is a result of thinking of natural selection as working towards an "absolute" better and away from an "absolute" weaker, as opposed to pushing in directions that are entirely defined by the situation.

Natural selection is this: in populations that make copies of themselves, and have mistakes in their copies, those mistakes that better fit the situation the copies find themselves in are more likely to be represented in that population later down the line.

Note that I didn't say, at any point, the phrase "SuRvIVaL oF ThE FiTtEsT." Those four words have done great harm in creating a perception that there's some absolute understanding of what's permanently, definitely, forever better, and natural selection was pushing us towards that. But no such thing is going on: a human may have been born smarter than everyone alive and with genes allowing them to live forever, but who died as a baby when Pompeii went off - too bad they didn't have lava protection. Evolution is only an observation that, statistically, mutations in reproduction that better fit the scenario a given population is in tend to stick around more than those that don't - and guess what? That's still happening, even to humans - it's just that with medical science, we're gaining more control of the scenario our population exists in.

Now, can we do things with medical science - or science in general - that hurts people? Sure, there's plenty of class action lawsuits where people sued because someone claimed their medicine was good and it turned out to be bad. But if you're asking "are we losing out on some 'absolute better' because we gained more control of the world we reproduce in," no, there is no "absolute" better. There's only "what's helpful in the current situation," and medicine lets us change the situation instead being forced to deal with a given situation, dying, and hoping one of our sibling mutated copies can cope.

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 2 points 4 months ago

I absolutely loved my apartment, but I pulled myself out of it because it was just far too much money and I knew that nearly all of that money was going into a hole.

Lived with a buddy for 2 years to save up a down payment, and got a house that's nice - but honestly the renovation bit that I couldn't do with an apartment that I really like is that I put solar panels on it. I wouldn't have that option if I was still in my apartment.

And of course I pay people to mow the lawn, so some money still goes in a hole for sure, as it is with paying mortgage interest. But I have way more control now over how much, and whenever I plan to move I can trade a lot of that money going into the mortgage for wherever I go next, or pass it on.

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago

Yep, and notably - add 15 minutes, because that's about how long it takes to fall asleep on average. You can use sleepyti.me as a calculator if you're lazy like me and want to know when to go to bed

[-] marzhall@lemmy.world 4 points 4 months ago

"update doc to reflect reality still more"

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marzhall

joined 1 year ago