[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 10 points 11 hours ago

The reason why I never wanted a gun in my house is because of looking at the statistics of who is by far the most likely to get shot by that gun. [Either me or my spouse.]

Ah. Same here. Though I can't get a legal one here anyway, because Russian laws make no difference between ADHD, ASD and schizophrenia for the purpose of getting a permit.

I misunderstood that "anti-gun personally", cause not wanting a gun in your own house doesn't mean being anti-gun. One thing is about whether the choice is on your side or on the government's, the other is what would you choose.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 0 points 11 hours ago

Some people choose the pleasure of ridiculing their opponents over being a little bit more certain that they won't regret later when shit hits the fan.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 3 points 11 hours ago

Correction - you should believe them that such will happen when nobody else but them has knives and they are certain they won't get a scratch while it's happening. Until then they'll be very afraid.

The dangerous part is that the fact that they are cowards may over time become more notable than the fact that they really want this.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 0 points 11 hours ago

I mean, when somebody says a threat of such kind in a situation which doesn't yet warrant it, it's clear they are cowards.

Make no mistake - that bloodshed they want to be done by police, national guard and such. Not their own supporters. Cause no person who says such things first wants to be shot back at.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 1 points 13 hours ago

OK, well, that certainly should be illegal.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 1 points 15 hours ago

I'm not sure of that really working, hasn't been tested after all. Shootouts on the streets don't lead to everyone getting shot. So, say, US warns "everybody big" that they are nuking someplace, but don't want to nuke anyone else. If "everybody big" are kinda fine with it, they won't launch nukes in response. That means there's a place nuked and no MAD.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 3 points 16 hours ago

Well, there's a good side to this - at least the recipe of that totally not poisonous green cocktail will be available from logs.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 2 points 16 hours ago

He didn't change policies on many other things too.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 10 points 18 hours ago

As the famous Russian saying goes, "suckers are not mammoths, suckers won't go extinct".

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 6 points 21 hours ago

When I switched to Linux (year 2011), jumping through hoops reduced significantly, because:

running games on builtin Intel cards etc, that is, kinda second-class citizen hardware, was anyways PITA ;

it made my stuff run terribly faster ;

those hoops are not too different in complexity from installing mods for games under Windows ;

for trying to learn programming Linux is much less problematic (have ADHD, so didn't learn much back then, but) ;

the main issue of uninstalling McAffee went away for free ;

I was at school, so didn't have any problems with office suites' incompatibilities and such ;

and also Linux in 2011 was in general easier, don't believe RedHat fanboys and such, it was very nice before PulseAudio, systemd and widespread adoption of GTK3, say, to change colors you just needed a 20-line .gtkrc-2.0 and .Xresources, and your WM's config file, it's 20 minutes from fresh install to feel normal ;

the community was friendlier, somehow back then RTFM was considered acceptable, but people rarely used it, now everybody behaves as if RTFM was very bad, but also too many people use it, sometimes to avoid admitting that they are wrong and a certain thing is absent in TFM.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 8 points 21 hours ago

It's actually simple.

HIG, UX, ergonomics, all that - it doesn't build up. Acceptable complexity of a pretty mechanical normal 80s' UI\UX is the same as of a modern one. Humans don't evolve over decades, they evolve over spans of time which are as good as eternity. They still need the same kind of complexity in tools they use.

A control panel for a loader that a factory worker should be able to use is as complex as a workflow on a computer can be. And that's very explicitly accounting for the fact that loader's or lift's control panel doesn't change every fucking day and the user remembers it, so computer UIs should be simpler than those of lifts and loaders!

You just don't make UI\UX more complex than that. There are things humans can learn to do, and there are things they often can't and they shouldn't.

The issue is that this creates a bottleneck for clueless project managers, UI designers and such. They can't throw together some shit in 30 minutes. They have to choose. They have to test. They don't want that. And no regulation makes them do that, because if a loader has an unclear UI\UX, you might kill someone, while if an email program has that, you'll just get very nervous.

[-] rottingleaf@lemmy.zip 40 points 23 hours ago

I store almost everyfuck in plain text, so what?

Oh, somebody wants to use techbro stuff and expect security.

view more: next ›

rottingleaf

joined 7 months ago