MsPenguinette
@MsPenguinette@lemmy.world
- Comment on Hello I think you'll love this house. 11 hours ago:
Is this house loss?
- Comment on Elon Musk has another secret child with exec at his brain implant company 1 week ago:
He’s such an egomaniac that reproducing is a kink for him. Imagine being one of those kids and knowing your dad gets off at your very existence while him also caring so little about you other than your genes
- Comment on Seems legit 1 month ago:
Apple doesn’t fall far from the tree!
- Comment on Seems legit 1 month ago:
If it actually drives, I’d pay a few hundred just for the fun of making cyber truck shitposts
- Comment on One Piece Chapter 1112 - Discussion 2 months ago:
Gonna be so angry if we don’t get a full broadcast
- Comment on Humane AI Pin review: not even close 2 months ago:
I don’t often actively root for tech to fail. Even if it’s something g dumb, it can pave the road for something down the road. However, I’m here for the failure of this because it’s been so nebulous.
I don’t know how to explain it, but this kind of feels like when people were trying to make products where the main hook was blockchain and they seemed to have worked backwards from the tech to a product to the problem being the last thing considered.
As far as I can tell, the only advantage this thing has that a smarter smart watch can provide is taking photos and videos. So maybe there is something there that is worth exploring. Who knows, maybe if apple or Google released this with robust integration and a reasonable price, maybe it could have some potential to have a use case. Maybe GoPro might want to explore the form factor? All that said, none of the things that I think have potential has nothing to do with AI which is what they think is feature #1.
- Comment on A TikTok Whistleblower Got DC’s Attention. Do His Claims Add Up? 2 months ago:
This guy comes across to me as someone with major new guy syndrome. Saw and heard things but lacked the technical knowledge and context to be able to actually understand what it was.
- Comment on Roku explores taking over HDMI feeds with ads 2 months ago:
Feel like starting a non profit that solely creates patents for evil ideas with no intention of licensing them
- Comment on ‘Havana syndrome’ linked to Russian unit, media investigation suggests 2 months ago:
If this is real, the real reason they did this was to give people with a predisposition to phychosis a push over the edge.
- Comment on Oodles of noodles: how a global favourite became an economic red flag 3 months ago:
If the entire (cooked) length of instant noodles sold around the world in a single year were laid out in a line, the resulting 6.2bn kilometre giga-noodle would stretch well beyond Pluto and into the depths of space. It is a fact as miserable as it is marvellous.
This is the most insane statistic I’ve ever heard
- Comment on For those thinking of going back to reddit. Gaze upon this comment section and reconsider. 4 months ago:
Yas!
- Comment on Facebook bans ads for award-winning Votes for Women board game’s new Kickstarter, claims it is a “sensitive social issue” 5 months ago:
I dunno. I kind of expected a FAANG company to hide it slightly better
- Comment on Alaska flight incident reveals another feature Boeing didn’t inform pilots about - Federal investigators said that Boeing didn’t make pilots aware that when a plane rapidly depressurizes, the cockp... 5 months ago:
Guess that wasn’t good enough
In June, the FAA announced it will require a secondary barrier between the passenger cabin and cockpit of new commercial planes that are manufactured starting in the summer of 2025.
That was at the end of the article. Not sure why but that pisses me off. Probably cause it seems purely like an act based out of fear rathe than in response to any threat/weakness
- Comment on SR-72: US secret hypersonic jet to allegedly break sound barrier in 2025 | Believed to be a top-secret project of the US Air Force, the SR-72 is touted to reach over 4,000 mph (6,437 kph), making i... 5 months ago:
From my understanding, the most capable spy satellites are either in geostationary orbit or polar orbits.
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Geo orbit gets you constant survalance but in limited areas
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Polar orbit gets you almost anywhere but only periodic survalance while you wait for the orbit to process.
So this can be good for getting somewhere you don’t typically monitor in real time or to get quicker more real time info on a target.
Also, a big threat the government is worried about right now is the physical saftey of space assets. If someone launches a space weapon and takes out a spy satellite, I can see how the government would want a good fallback
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- Comment on Fellow landchads of Lemmy. Don't you hate when this happens? 5 months ago:
One must bring the water to a boil slowly. Now how are you going to have your mortgage paid for? Looks like youll need to delay your Vail ski trip or, heaven forbid, combine it with your Aspen trip
- Comment on How does ears work? 5 months ago:
Think I’ll do a biblically accurate cat girl cosplay next year
- Comment on How does ears work? 5 months ago:
Think I’ll do a biblically accurate cat girl cosplay next year
- Comment on Severe blizzards blanket Moscow in decades-worth of snow, causing chaos on roads 6 months ago:
Yeah, wtf is this post title?
- Comment on My children will refer to me as father. 6 months ago:
you’re my mom, not my dom
This is such a great line but also super niche in situations where it’s appropriate. I think you gotta take the opportunity to drop it next time it appears… you have no choice
- Comment on OpenAI says it is investigating reports ChatGPT has become ‘lazy’ 6 months ago:
Only saved 46%? Get back to work, you lazy AI!
- Comment on Exclusive: OpenAI researchers warned board of AI breakthrough ahead of CEO ouster -sources 7 months ago:
Wonder if AI deciding to destroy humanity isn’t our own fault cause we all talk about how it would be. We gave it the ammo it trained on to kill us
- Comment on GoOn 7 months ago:
IPv6 was a mistake. We should have just added an addition octet
- Comment on A box of DevOps 7 months ago:
I tell people I’m a software engineer but in reality I’m a configure file engineer
- Comment on Sleeping Beauty Trolley Problem 7 months ago:
Best change to get hit by the trolly is to not attempt to flip the switch. So I choose to do nothing
- Comment on lol 7 months ago:
I’m sure the qcumbers ate this up
- Comment on emacs 8 months ago:
{
vi
} = 2 {vim
} = 3 {v=vim
} = 5I’d need to run vi at least 5 times to have a net gain in saving keystrokes. I’m typically in effemerial systems created by the users of our env, so rarely am I going to gain those strokes back
But also, why am I trying to apply logic to this? I’ll often cat a file before editing it. This shit is just illogical idiosyncrasies I’ve picked up over the years. I’m probably creating posthoc justifications for insane things I do cause it’s hard to override muscle memory
- Comment on emacs 8 months ago:
I’ll have to check tomarrow if RHEL and UBI do this.
Did some quick googling and looks like cent has that alias by default but doesn’t do it when root. Which would explain why I do get inconsistent results with vi. I never thought about it in detail besides just knowing that there are some visual changes. Thanks for the info, I’ll be noticing this now that I know!
- Comment on emacs 8 months ago:
I do most of my programming in vscode but when I need a cli editor, I use vi
- Comment on emacs 8 months ago:
I’m in DevOps so I’m in a lot of effemerial systems so in practice, I will run into systems where profile hasn’t been set up. Tho I do like the idea of making sure all systems properly have that aliased cause it’d be serial killer vibes to spend hours of time to make sure that I can save a keystroke.
Tho it’d never make it through PR. Also, wild require explaining to my coworkers that I do this
- Comment on emacs 8 months ago:
I use vi instead of vim cause I’m too lazy to type the extra character. Tho if for some reason, vi tab completed to vim, I’d probably use vim