Jamie

joined 2 years ago
[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 6 points 2 years ago

Yup, I haven't seen one of my friends in person in years because he's in the army. Another one lives right here in town but has a whole family to take care of, but every single time he's asked me to do anything with him has been a bad time, and I kinda feel bad about it. The rest of my friends have mostly either moved elsewhere or I've just not kept in touch.

So yeah, even people that I kept in touch with for some time after I got out of school have basically not been in my life for some time now. I've got a few friends that I usually hang with online, but all my school mates have basically gone their separate ways.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 12 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I had a teacher send me to the vice principal's office who tried to scream my bad handwriting into good handwriting. Like, I didn't do anything actually wrong, I just had bad handwriting. I would say the screaming she got in return was deserved.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 42 points 2 years ago

I had a teacher in third grade send me to the vice principal's office because my handwriting was, and is, terrible. His idea of dealing with a 9 year old whose handwriting is bad was apparently that if you scream at them hard enough, their good handwriting will just come out. They apparently decided to not inform my parents of this event, so they were quite surprised when I came home and started apologizing because I got in big trouble at school.

Well, my dad went up to the school and showed them he could scream, too. Sent the teacher to the staff room in tears, and the vice principal suddenly lost his volume when he's faced up against a 6'2 farmer instead of a 9 year old. Neither of them tried anything like that again.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 17 points 2 years ago (2 children)

The user never had much choice to begin with. If I write a program using version 1.2.3 of a library, then my application is going to need version 1.2.3 installed. But how the user gets 1.2.3 depends on their system, and in some cases, they might be entirely unable unless they grab a flatpak or appimage. I suppose it limits the ability to write shims over those libraries if you want to customize something at that level, but that's a niche use-case that many people aren't going to need.

In a static linked application, you can largely just ship your application and it will just work. You don't need to fuss about the user installing all the dependencies at the system level, and your application can be prone to less user problems as a result.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 10 points 2 years ago

My instance is currently at 19GB after running for about 3 months.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Weird

Edit: I guess I can't post the HTML even in code blocks. RIP.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 2 points 2 years ago (4 children)

The only thing I really miss is doing data calculations in Google because I have shitty Internet and I want to know how many hours I've gotta let this thing download before I get my bandwidth back.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 8 points 2 years ago (1 children)

A lot of my dreams "zoom out" and turn out to be me playing a game, usually if too many fantastical elements are happening in it. Most of my dreams are relatively grounded, so my brain tries to explain itself when they aren't, I guess.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 7 points 2 years ago (1 children)

It's not the popular authors that would be getting ripped off, it'd be the small ones. Corps would have people scouting books en masse, find one worth taking without a reputation to back themselves up, then present their own version and crush any momentum you might gain against their millions of dollars in marketing.

[–] Jamie@jamie.moe 74 points 2 years ago (12 children)

The original intent was good. You make something, you can legally ensure people can't just copy your work and slap their name on it for profit. People could make creative works without fear of someone else ripping it away from them.

Then Disney just kept bribing politicians to extend it to a ridiculous degree so they wouldn't lose Mickey to public domain until they moved his likeness into their trademark, which lives as long as it's being used actively.

And then you have DMCA, where everyone is guilty until innocent and that whole can of worms, and DRM which is technically illegal to circumvent no matter how much time or what reason. Corporatization and the Internet turned that relatively simple and good ideas into an utter mess.

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