WeirdGoesPro

joined 2 years ago
[–] WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com 16 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Yep, I don’t get this at all. Is it supposed to be funny somehow? It just seems like a random set of panels. OP, what motivated you to post this?

[–] WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com 28 points 6 days ago (3 children)

My favorite is “I lived through the Cold War”, as though being a veteran of propaganda saturation makes them an authority.

So what? Most books sit on shelves unread until they are recycled by Half Priced Books. Might as well use them until they fall apart instead of display them to look smart.

Chicken soup for the soul, not the organs.

And I hope we’re imagining the same kind of suckerfish.

[–] WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

There are new versions with extremely similar names.

[–] WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com 21 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Or one of those fish that clean the side of the tank in Chinese restaurants.

In my personal opinion, those folks need to lighten up. We’re talking about a completely fictional realm where there is plenty of fantasy diversity expressed in other ways, written by a British man who was born in 1892. Enjoy it or don’t, but there really isn’t much foundation to assume that Tolkien was trying to be racist with his literary choices.

From the Wikipedia article on Tolkien and race:

In his personal life, he was anti-racist both in peacetime and during the two World Wars.

Sure, we can throw in some black characters in new productions of his work, but judging the man by modern standards is just looking for outrage.

They ignored a load of other really massive crimes from Trump’s first administration—why would they have gone after him for this one?

[–] WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com 87 points 1 week ago (2 children)

This is just a glory hole with extra steps.

This is not very well thought out. People survive accidents all the time, far more than they die from them. It is confirmation bias that makes you feel like it is easy to die from one because people only focus on the bad ones. Normal injuries and close calls fly under the radar.

Go on, kiss the fish!

 

I’ve been trying out Kavita as an ebook software, and I really like it so far, with one exception. Accounts are all local to the app, and there is no ability handle user accounts through their site, similar to how Plex does it. This means that every time I screw up and have to set up again over the years, my users will have to get new invites and make new accounts. When I mess up Plex and have to reinstall, I can just add new permissions for the users already linked to my account, which makes it easy to transition everyone to a new server with minimal impact to my viewers.

Before I fully commit to Kavita, is there any program out there for ebooks that has accounts managed through a central server rather than my local one?

 

My self-hosting experience is primarily with Plex and qBittorrent, but I'm trying to get a digital library set up that will be available remotely. I've been reading about some options, but I'm not sure about what is best to use or how to deploy it.

What is the best way to make Kavita available to remote users safely from a home server?

 

I can’t think of anything more perfect. The prompt text was:

“Aye! listen to the numbers & the words: 4 6 3 8 A B K 2 4 A L G M O R 3 Y X 24 89 R P S T O V A L. What meaneth this, o prophet? Thou knowest not; nor shalt thou know ever. There cometh one to follow thee: he shall expound it.”

This was made using @stablehorde_generator@sigmoid.social on Mastodon.

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