• 0 Posts
  • 14 Comments
Joined 3 months ago
cake
Cake day: December 18th, 2024

help-circle

  • It does feel like a whole bunch of analogies coming true: giving a former alcoholic a hard drink, waking a sleeping dog, tugging Superman’s cape, poking a bear, hurting John Wick’s dog…

    Europe has had a nice long run of peace, maybe we shouldn’t feel too bad about them slacking a little bit on the defensive front. They needed it, and have done a lot with it.


  • Usually it’s wise to placate the people you screw. One of my favourite sayings is, “Friends come and go, enemies accumulate.” You don’t want too many, especially those who have little to lose.

    Building good will after the fact is very wise, even if it only buys a grudging acceptance. The prestige is also a major bonus in smoothing over business dealings.

    Getting a bad rep leads to cautious or worse terms in deals, if not being outright bypassed in favour of a competitor.




  • There’s magic and then there’s complexity in tech (at least this is how I think about it).

    Video calling, pure magic, simple to use with major benefits.

    Complex business management software that requires a degree to use? Complexity almost for complexity’s sake to lock an organisation into a support contract.

    Web stores? Usually magic, especially with refined payment processing and smooth ordering. Can verge into over complex coughAmazoncough.

    Internal network administration (Active Directory) and cloud tech, often complexity for complexity’s sake again.


  • This comment sent me on a deep thought train. These places are populated by those that remained, while others left and became the sophisticated urbanites that broadened their horizons. My father was one of those people that left, he left the day after his mother died and joined the military, a common enough story. He was quite the teacher, and it made me the person I am today.

    My father often also pointed out those who had also left, who had also done well. There’s a selection bias there but I feel like having a mix of both a rural and urban experience is extremely helpful in human development.

    Those that stay… well my father was often disappointed to hear how poorly things went out there, but with no family remaining there he never returned. Abused, poorly supported (though sometimes it seemed not for a lack of trying), with an evaporative cooling effect removing the best and brightest as they went to urban areas seeking better lives, and perhaps resentful they didn’t get to leave. The crab bucket effect is in full play as well, dragging back down many who climb but don’t get out.

    In the end the remainers feel not quite unlike a medieval peasant: A prize for nobility to fight over, an accessory to the land they work, and body that can be drafted when someone threatens to take that prize away.








  • To be 100% honest, probably not, and you may need to confirm with someone who knows Valorant. The big issue is anti-cheat, the detectors in use for major multiplayer games tend to lose their minds when they see Linux as they’re typically only built for Windows. Other than anti-cheat, it wouldn’t surprise me if it played better on Linux. Some of the low level magic has improved a lot in recent years, but official support is mandatory for multiplayer.