squaresinger

joined 4 months ago
[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 6 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

For stuff like that I usually put the email address of my former boss.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago

I'm sure Satlink has been extensively trialled for that use too.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago

I use this FOSS keyboard: https://github.com/Dakkaron/Fairberry

It also doesn't have emoji.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 4 points 4 hours ago

It must really suck to work as a Java developer in Greece.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 1 points 5 hours ago

Transitioning from revolution to government is hard. It takes a very different kind of person to lead a successful revolution than to lead a democratic country.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 2 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago)

Gitflow is the usual branching strategy. It's not dialed up to 11, it only specifies precisely what to merge to where and from where.

The real mavericky thing is when someone uses cherrypicking in combination with squash merges thus breaking branch compatibility.

I have been the git specialist in the last few teams, and thus I'm the one who has to clean that up every time. Not because it's hard, but because nobody can be bothered to actually learn git.

Edit: The other thing is to use rebases instead of merges. Yes, they make for a much nicer git history, but they also tend to break everything in the process when the rebase is sufficiently large.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 3 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

The old "I have this great idea for an app! If you build it for me, you can have 10% of the profits!".

And then you ask for the idea, and at first they don't want to give it away with your agreement, and in the end it turns out to be either whatsapp of amazon.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 2 points 8 hours ago

And that likely holds true even if the bike in question is the crappiest old piece of trash.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 1 points 17 hours ago

It's not a form of censorship, it's a form of democracy.

If you are not ok with a downvote reducing visibility, then by extension you should hate upvotes just as much, since they reduce the visibility of everything else.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Yeah, apart from medical costs, the worst a cyclist can do is maybe smash a window of a parked car. The maximum amount of property damage is maybe a few 1000. Nothing that an average person can't pay off within a reasonable time frame.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

Caucausing isn't really comparable to coalitions in my opinion, because all the formalisms are missing.

Bernie Sanders has no actual power within the party, no matter how many people voted Democrats because of him.

Compare the situation to an actual multi-party system with coalitions. Sanders would have his own party and there would be 1-3 other parties that are currently part of the Democratic party. Each of these parties would collect separate vote shares which would lead to some of these parties being larger and others smaller. Voters would have to choice to express which exact political direction they prefer instead of just having a binary choice.

After the election, coalitions would be formed. These coalitions wouldn't have to be along the current party lines, but e.g. moderate republicans and moderate democrats could form a coalition with eachother. This way, coalition-based multi-party systems tend towards moderate compromises, while two-party systems tend towards extremism.

In a multi-party system centrists represent reason and compromise, whereas in a two-party system they represent boring blandness.

In a coalition, each of the coalition partners hold power, because everyone of them can end the coalition. This means, more compromise is necessary and someone like Sanders cannot just be ignored for decades.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

Dass die auch immer erst einen heftigen Personen- oder Sachschaden verursachen müssen um drauf zu kommen das jemand der Gas und Bremse nicht auseinander halten kann nicht hinters Steuer sollte.

Das Gas und Bremse verwechseln leuchtet mir auch wirklich nicht ein. Man drückt die Pedale doch normalerweise relativ sanft. Selbst wenn man so hin im Hirn ist, dass man die beiden Pedale nicht auseinander halten kann, dann sollte man doch denken, dass wenn das Auto nicht macht was man will, dass man erstmal nicht das falsche Pedal durchdrückt.

"Das Auto wird schneller wenn ich auf das Pedal drück statt stehen zu bleiben. Da muss das Auto wohl falsch verstanden haben was ich will, ich drück also erstmal richtig durch, dann wird es schon verstehen dass ich grad die Bremse drücke."

Ab 60 sollte es alle 5 Jahre und ab 70 jedes Jahr eine ärztliche Überprüfung geben. In diesem Alter sind die meisten Leute eh mindestens jährlich beim Arzt, da kann man sowas auch gleich mit machen.

 

I used to print quite a lot of toys for my kids, but I stopped doing that, since it feels mostly like a waste of plastic.

3D printed toys are rarely enjoyable. The toys are usually either not interesting enough (think static, non-movable, single-color figurines like the low-poly-pokemon series), or not durable enough or both at the same time.

My kids liked the printed toys when they got them, but they barely looked at them after like 10 minutes and then they ended up rolling around the house until they broke, usually very soon.

I love 3D printing, I use it a lot for all sorts of things, but toys are just not a very good application for 3D prints, in my opinion. It's just not worth the plastic.

Edit: Just for context: I've been around the block with 3D printing. I started about 7 years ago and I've been the 3D printer repair guy for my circle of friends ever since, fixing up everyone else's printers. I design most of the things I print myself. The reason I am posting this is because pretty much everyone I know who has a printer and kids prints toys all the time, and any time I'm at any event where someone can shoehorn a box of give-away low-poly-pokemon in, there is one there.

IMO, this is all plastic waste and nothing else.

 

And it's crap across the OSes. On Linux laptops don't wake up from sleep, on Windows they keep waking up when nobody asks for it.

In our home office room there's three laptops. My private one running Fedora, my work PC that sadly runs Windows and my wife's laptop also running Windows.

My work laptop and my wife's laptop keep waking up wasting electricity, and my private laptop needs a hard reset to wake it up every second time.

That feature should be stupid simple, yet it doesn't work across the board.

Rant over.

 

This is a short analysis of the official Fairphone 2024 impact report.

Fairphone is kinda cagey about how much money they exactly spend on fair/eco initiatives, giving only very little information on what exactly it spends in these departments.

For a good reason, it is not a lot.

Specifically, these numbers are given in the report for 2024:

  • The workers assembling the phones get $1.20 of "living wage bonus" for each phone assembled. This bonus is spread over all workers in the factory, no matter if they worked on fairphones or not, coming out to a yearly bonus of $60.67 per worker.
  • $3000 was spent on gold fairwashing credits for some artisanal gold mine in Tanzania
  • $13000 was spent on fairwashing credits for 2.5 tonnes of cobalt (that's 20% of the raw world market price of cobalt).

That's everything. They do talk about a few other fair/eco initiatives in there, but if you read about what they are doing there, it's usually very little and mostly marketing speech. We can safely assume that if any other initiatives would cost more than the ones mentioned above, they would have put these values into the impact report.

They sold 103 053 phones in 2024, so the credits mentioned above come out to just $0.155 per phone.

So to account for the rest of their initiatives and credits, let's be ultra generous and assume they paid 10x of that for all of these initiatives and credits, bringing this value up to $1.55 per phone plus $1.20 in living wage bonus, which gives us a total of $2.75 per phone.


To double check how realistic these numbers are, lets look at their use of fair materials using the Fairphone 5 as our example.

On page 42 they claim "Fair materials: 76%", but with the disclaimer "Average across 14 focus materials" next to it.

These 76% do not consider materials that are not "focus materials" (and aren't acquired fairly at all) and it also doesn't take into consideration the different distributions of the materials in the phone. Some materials (e.g. iridium) are only found in trace amounts in the phone, while other materials (e.g. aluminium or plastics) make up a large part of the weight of the phone.

On page 67 they go into more detail. Here they claim that only 44% of the materials by weight are "fair". To make this even worse, 37% of these 44% are recycled. Specifically, the materials they use in recycled form are metals, plastics and rare earth elements. These are materials that are cheaper to recycle than to mine, which means these 37% of "fair" materials cost nothing to Fairphone and might even save them money. You will likely find similar shares of recycled materials in any other phone too.

Of the 7% "fair" materials that are left, only 1% is actually mined fairly, the remaining 6% are fairwashed using credits. As we have seen above, these credits are really cheap (adding maybe 20% to the price of the material).

On top of that comes the fact that the raw materials make up only a tiny fraction of the manufacturing cost of a smartphone. The expensive part is turning a pile of minerals, metals and plastic into chips, PCBs, screens, batteries and assembling all of that. So even if they paid fairwashing credits for all materials in the phone it would likely not cost more than a few dollars.


TLDR: Less than $5 per phone are spent on fair/eco.


So where does the money go? In 2024 they had an EBITDA of just €1 745 840, or €16.94 per phone. That's not a lot at all, so it's not like they are pocketing huge sums of money.

Their main problem is that they are a tiny company with low sales figures that has to outsource almost everything they do. On their website they claim to have "70+ employees". That's barely enough for supply chain management, sales and marketing. They don't have an in-house production and likely not even in-house development. They don't have any economies of scale on their side and they certainly don't produce screens, batteries, chips or PCBs in house, like other major manufacturers like e.g. Samsung can do. Their development cost is spread over far fewer sold units.

All of this costs a lot of money.

So when you pay an extra €200-300 to buy a Fairphone instead of a comparable mainstream phone, you are mostly paying for a boutique manufacturing process that can't benefit from economies of scale.

Which is ok, that's nothing bad to do. Just be aware where that extra money is going.

Buying a Fairphone is hardly fairer than buying a regular phone and it is certainly not more eco friendly than buying an used phone.

 

Not GTA, not Star Citizen, not any game with actual gameplay, story, or anything like that.

Just a freaking Niantic reskin for freaking Monopoly.

I live in the wrong timeline.

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