NGnius

joined 2 years ago
[–] NGnius 7 points 3 months ago (1 children)

If the US government didn't work with the US military that would be crazy

[–] NGnius 7 points 4 months ago

I just sat down to do my annual donations, so I've got the list ready to go:

  • local food bank
  • local safe injection site
  • Signal
  • KDE
  • OpenMedia (closest thing to EFF in Canada)

A few places I couldn't afford to donate to this year, in case anyone needs more ideas:

  • archive.org
  • EFF
  • miscellaneous software projects I'm using (mostly Steam Deck plugins because I'm in that community a lot)
  • Gnome

I also give a bit to Tor and The Beaverton monthly.

[–] NGnius 17 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Your first example only works for goods that are completely optional, which is very rarely the case. For example, smartphones. Nobody technically needs one, but almost everyone in western countries has one. If every company that makes a smartphone increases their prices, people will still buy them because they basically need them. I believe this is the principle of inelastic demand (or low elasticity) -- car fuel is a more traditional example.

Your second example doesn't work when the cost of entry into the market is really high. This is very common in high tech. Take semiconductors for example. There's basically one big name in chip manufacturing (TSMC) and a few runner-ups (Samsung, Intel, etc.). The latest node is infamous for being very expensive and low capacity. Why aren't there new competitors constantly breaking in to the market?

UBI is a great idea and will help things, but it's not perfect so we shouldn't expect it to just completely fix capitalism. The best way to fix capitalism is to get governments (which are all in charge of capitalism) to fix it with regulations. UBI will be a major regulation/step in the right direction.

[–] NGnius 18 points 4 months ago

Another classic from NatPo!

While we are ashamed of our cultural traditions, retailers are certainly not ashamed of milking cash from the desiccated corpse of Santa Claus. And so, by being cynical of a traditional Christmas, we have fashioned Christmas into something we should indeed feel cynical about.

NatPo came so close to making a progressive statement, but held back at the last second and blamed regular people instead.

Perhaps we can sneak it back onto the calendar

I wonder who doesn't know when the stat holiday for Christmas is. No need to put it back on the calendar when it's still there...

Throughout the whole article there are only anecdotal reasons why it should be restored. So many of them boil down to "it used to be like this so it should still be like this" too, which is just a silly argument. Maybe come up with some good reasons for it to stay by using a bit of critical thinking, NatPo.

The article could've been a nice little nostalgia trip too, but instead it finished off by saying all of the far-right talking points as though they had some relevance to the rest of the article.

[–] NGnius 4 points 4 months ago

Honestly, I try not to think about them. It's an inherently selfish and self-serving class and they've got enough money to pay people to think about them, so I'm not going to do it for free.

[–] NGnius 8 points 4 months ago

Victims are all SOL, in more ways than one

[–] NGnius 4 points 4 months ago

I like to divide my spending into two broad categories: needs and wants. For example, I need food and shelter to survive, but I only want that really cute blahaj (even though it feels like I need it). Things that I want I can skip, things that I need I cannot. You have to be very honest with yourself for that to work well though.

Of course life is not fun if you're only surviving, so it's OK to treat yourself occasionally with things you want. Just make sure you're saving enough before spending on "wants".

It's also often possible to break down "needs" further, since you may need some functionality (e.g. something to eat, something to hit nails with, etc.) but the specific item is not a need. I will prefer the cheapest option if I don't have any other requirements. I tend to like things that'll last though (they're usually cheaper in the long run), so I'm willing to not cheap out if that's a factor.

I am a very pragmatic and minimalist person though, so I don't think this advice will work for everyone.

[–] NGnius 24 points 5 months ago (2 children)

If you (or anyone else) has any suggestions for emulators/tools to mirror, send them my way. I already have a few on my Forgejo server https://git.ngni.us/mirrors

[–] NGnius 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

You'd think with a name like conservatives, they would be all for conserving the environment...

[–] NGnius 7 points 6 months ago (1 children)

It's a bit relevant... at least the fact that Teslas are electric cars. The car caught fire while people were inside, which was likely made worse by the battery. It's not a big leap to make from reading the headline, since batteries are infamous for catching fire

[–] NGnius 3 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Just FYI forgejo does have federation, but it's disabled by default. No idea how good/stable/complete it is... https://forgejo.org/docs/latest/admin/config-cheat-sheet/#federation-federation

[–] NGnius 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

It'll be interesting to see how the launch goes. Maybe Decky itself will get onto the Steam store one day...

view more: ‹ prev next ›