[-] gus@beehaw.org 5 points 8 months ago

It's especially disappointing given the mission statement of beehaw. You know, the one they require every user to read when signing up and write a statement about?

... we grew increasingly upset with modern social media. Modern social media has become a breeding ground for hate speech, for trolls, and for bad behavior. We don't want to recreate that environment. We want to explicitly make a nice little corner of the internet where we can hide from racist, sexist, ableist, colonialist, homophobic, transphobic, and other forms of hateful speech.

[-] gus@beehaw.org 4 points 8 months ago

The reward for mining a block is over a quarter of a million dollars these days. $250k / 4k transactions = apx $62.50 per transaction. Around $8 is from the transaction fee from the sender, the other $54 is from the block reward minted out of thin air.

[-] gus@beehaw.org 7 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Swamp coolers.

Fans blow over water to lower the pressure, causing evaporation to occur at room temperature.

Evaporating water absorbs heat from its surroundings without raising the water's temperature as it undergoes a phase change. It absorbs nearly 20 times more heat than it would from being heated from 50 degrees F to 100 degrees.

[-] gus@beehaw.org 5 points 10 months ago

And this bill mandates RTO.

[-] gus@beehaw.org 12 points 10 months ago

Doesn't look like it.

it dictates that teleworkers should travel to their primary workplace at least twice within their pay cycle

[-] gus@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

Have a high yield savings account? Have an investment account? A house with a mortgage? Finding somebody that has none of those is much more rare than somebody who has one of those.

And now you've got: Your standard 1040. Your W-2. Schedule A to deduct the house mortgage, property taxes, etc. Schedule B to report your interest and dividends. Schedule D for capital gains and losses (which still frequently come up even if you didn't make any transactions all year). 1099-INT from your savings account. 1099-DIV from your investment account.

And that's just the super super common stuff that tens of millions of Americans are filling out each year. There's still more and more byzantine steps for other common cases that aren't quite as common as the ones I've listed above. Have split custody of a child? You're going to be reading and reading through multiple pages of instructions to determine 1) if you can claim them as a dependent 2) if you can claim them for the child tax credit 3) if you can claim them for EITC.

And that's not even getting into the number of places where the instructions are basically to fill out long sections of forms two different ways and then only use one of the two based on the final number. All the work and effort for the other one just gets thrown away. But they can't just tell you which way to do it up front because there's no way to know until you get that final number both ways.

[-] gus@beehaw.org 6 points 1 year ago

/r/place was super bandwidth intensive. They managed to turn each individual pixel change into several KB of data.

[-] gus@beehaw.org 11 points 1 year ago

In a recent interview, Zynga’s vice-president of player succcess, Gemma Doyle, referred unabashedly to internal models that identify people who are on course to spend high sums.

Should they reduce their outlay, she told GamesIndustry.biz, the company would “reach out and call them to find out what’s wrong”.

wtf

[-] gus@beehaw.org 12 points 1 year ago

No, it's more like checking out every book from the library, and spending 450 years training at the speed of light, being evaluated on how well you can exactly reproduce the next part of any snippet taken from any book.

[-] gus@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago

Makes you wonder if they're going to just start implementing the version number on every update, sorta like Chrome does these days. Will we see another Windows 95 eventually?

[-] gus@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

Reddit is Fun (RIF) had to rename to "rif is fun" as well

[-] gus@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

Not too surprised. I know PHP has a reputation these days of being old and crufty but at the same time there hasn't really been a killer replacement yet for the same use cases where PHP is/was used. React and Vue are all the rage for frontend work, but their paradigm is all about single page apps which is a bit limiting for something on the scale of Kbin. Other backend frameworks like Django tend to be fairly opinionated and lock you into developing in a certain way without providing a large enough benefit to make it worth it.

IDK maybe there are better frameworks that I just haven't heard of. But whenever I go to start personal projects, the options seem to be Express, Flask, or PHP, all of which have their own tradeoffs. Personally I lean more towards Express or Flask but it's not surprising to see people stick with PHP.

view more: next ›

gus

joined 1 year ago