kbity

joined 2 years ago
[–] kbity@kbin.social 8 points 2 years ago (3 children)

Kbin user here, why are beans everywhere?

[–] kbity@kbin.social 3 points 2 years ago

If you want one for your phone, Feedly is pretty good. On desktop, I use Liferea.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

Seconding Liferea.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 11 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

The TL;DR is "so it doesn't become XMPP" - if a big player from the corporate internet world achieves significant sway over the Fediverse, that gives them a position of power to steer the platform itself, eventually letting them undermine the whole "open-source" and "decentralised" part of it entirely before taking their chunk of the federation private, effectively kneecapping the remaining communities outside the walled garden.

If you've ever heard "the three Es" - Embrace, Extend, Extinguish, best known from the Microsoft antitrust days - that's what we're worried about happening here.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Funny tube rats. Welcome!

[–] kbity@kbin.social 2 points 2 years ago

Oh my goodness, they're so adorable! Don't be surprised if you foster-fail and end up with two (more?) cats living with you.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 38 points 2 years ago (1 children)

For real, the world of Linux gaming owes a lot to Valve and to Proton's contributors. The last five years have taken gaming on Linux from a fiddly nightmare to, in many cases, performance as good as native. There has never been a better time to run Linux as your primary operating system.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 43 points 2 years ago (15 children)

Hopefully no credible Fediverse platform actually federates with their trojan horse. If we let Zuck, or anyone like him, become a major player in the ActivityPub world, pretty soon we're going to end up right back where we started.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 3 points 2 years ago

What you think of them.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

Funnily enough, it seems RTV/TUIR/TTRV still work, at least for now? Possibly since you use your own API key for those. If nothing else, my copy of RTV is still working.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 4 points 2 years ago

Killing two people who are both destined to die in the very near future to save one who will live for a considerably longer period and save a greater number of lives would be the right thing to do from a utilitarian standpoint. Tuvix, meanwhile, is a healthy being who was competent to discharge his duties and posed no threat.

Consequently, while there is an argument to be made that killing one person to revive two others is a net benefit, the burden of suffering on that one person is extreme, and whether or not it is outweighed by the positive nature of the two others returning to live is very much a matter of individual outlook.

It is also worth noting that Tuvok and Neelix as they existed before could be considered "already dead" as a result of their combination into a single entity. Thus you could argue that what actually happened is that Tuvix "died" so that clones of the deceased Tuvok and Neelix could be created from him. Admittedly this is a shaky argument given the whole "do transporters actually kill people in-universe" thing.

[–] kbity@kbin.social 3 points 2 years ago

I would have to assume that credits are a largely bureaucratic unit of account that most Federation citizens will never work with or even hear about, but are used by internal departments of the Federation as a means of budgeting the capacity of things like transport ships, industrial replication facilities and shipyards.

This also allows them to function as a de facto currency for trade with outside powers who have achieved warp travel but aren't yet in a post-scarcity state, or as a way of managing resource usage at the edges of Federation space where infrastructure is still developing and resources need to be priorities for that development.

Basically, the Federation doesn't have "money" as an everyday societal phenomenon, but it does retain the economic capacity to issue something usable as currency when the situation calls for it such as during periods of scarcity (whether localised or across the Federation) or when conducting trade with non-Federation entities such as the Ferengi.

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