doylio

joined 2 years ago
[–] doylio 1 points 3 days ago

My apologies, he does make that point. I mis-read into your comment that the poor people using credit cards (who pay interest) pay for the rich person's credit card rewards. But it's worse than that, anyone who doesn't use a credit card (which includes many poor people as you point out) are subsidizing the rich person's rewards

[–] doylio 4 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Good video showing how credit card culture basically makes poor people pay for rich people’s luxury.

That's not what the video shows. The real issue is that credit cards are a monopoly which takes ~3% cut on almost all consumer purchases in the economy and adds little value

[–] doylio 5 points 5 days ago

This video is incredible! We need more action on this. Anyone know how one could get involved to ensure there are more reliable indicators of ethical meat

[–] doylio 6 points 1 week ago

And any really unscrupulous actors will just setup their own encryption...

[–] doylio 2 points 1 week ago

Conservatism != racism

Frankly I'd love to see more non-racist conservatives on Lemmy! If we want the fediverse to replace big tech, we can't be a left wing echo chamber

But yeah, you can't be a dick

 

I just had my first experience blocking an instance, and it made my realize now nice the lemmy content curation experience is vs the centralized model.

Recently I started noticing a lot of posts from that I just found annoying. There was nothing inherently wrong with them, they just came from a culture I don't understand and so I found them cringey. Since they all came from one community, realized most of them come from the same instance. I just added that instance to my blocklist and the problem is solved!

Now think about in the centralized model. I would be forced to either just accept that these posts are in my timeline, or block each community and user individually. The instance gave me an easy way to manage my content.

I also appreciate that instances can manage the blocking for their users. So the most horrible stuff I don't even see. But it also preserves free speech, as those users who want to say horrible things can do so in their own instance, and most people will just block it.

Anyway, just impressed again by the fediverse!

[–] doylio 7 points 2 weeks ago

I learned the basics of CS from this course online 7 years ago and it lead to a great career as a software dev. Hat's off to the whole CS50 team for creating such an incredible resource and making it available for free!

[–] doylio 24 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

This doesn't read as batshit as Project 2025. The 4 memos they've posted are:

  1. Build more transport infrastructure
  2. Modernize our healthcare info system
  3. Prioritize high skilled workers in immigration
  4. Cultural programs to encourage Canadian Pride

IMO only the fourth one is somewhat questionable

[–] doylio 1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Certainly cheaper and faster than Western Union, but yeah it's horribly slow by modern blockchain standards

[–] doylio 1 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

The whole point of crypto is you don't need to hold it on an exchange. And there are other real reasons to use crypto today such as cheap & fast international settlement, protecting your assets from authoritarian governments.

I agree there's lots of speculation, and I'm not someone who believes it's likely to replace the dollar, but it's also clear there are legitimate uses

[–] doylio 1 points 3 weeks ago

I agree. I think if Bitcoin falls it will be because development has completely ossified and is unable to react to problems. If quantum computing ever gets going, it will completely break Bitcoin's security model, and they don't seem to have the social coordination to respond to this kind of threat like other blockchains do

[–] doylio 1 points 3 weeks ago (5 children)

I think there are people who genuinely think it has value. It's very popular in places like Argentina, Venezuela and Turkey where the local currency inflates so rapidly people cannot save money. To those people, its value is that it holds value better than their local currency.

There is also a lot of speculation in the space, which makes it very tough to determine how much actual value accrual there is

[–] doylio 2 points 1 month ago

In Canada it's a politically successful strategy to agitate the suburbs

This is true and depressing. But "the gov't will probably undo this" does not mean we shouldn't try

 

I'm going to run my first DW game soon. I've never GM'd a TTRPG before, but I've played a few. Most players haven't played TTRPGs, so I like DW for it's simplicity to learn. I'm very comfortable improvising, but I have a bit of prep and would like some feedback on it.

My current idea is to start where all the characters are in a large jail cell. I'll ask the following to set up the world.

  • Where is this jail cell? What's the city name, vibe, etc?
  • Why have each of you been arrested?
  • Who else is in the cell with you?

Then we'll set up bonds and then the adventure will begin. Based on how things go, they'll either have to do a prison break, or fight in a gladiator style arena. I'll have some enemies prepared for those scenarios. For anything else, I will just wing it.

Does this feel like good prep for the session?

7
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by doylio to c/[email protected]
 

I created a GPT to answer DW questions. In my testing it's pretty good about not getting confused with DnD rules (which regular ChatGPT does). I'm organizing my first DW game as a GM and I'm planning to use it to help me out.

Some good prompts for it:

  • How much XP does a character need to level up?
  • How do I resolve damage from multiple NPCs attacking the character?
  • Suggest 3 monsters the party might encounter in an evil wizard's castle
  • Create some stats for a Giant Chihuahua monster

You do need ChatGPT Plus to use it though

8
Crying during noting (self.meditation)
submitted 2 years ago by doylio to c/[email protected]
 

I've been doing Vipassana meditation for over a year now, but I recently decided to experiment with some other forms. I have been trying the noting technique lately and each time I try it, I end up being overwhelmed with energy in the body, tightness in my chest and throat, and I begin sobbing quite hard. I cut my meditation short today because I was weeping too much.

Has anyone else experienced this? Should I stop this practice?

 

I was introduced to mantra meditation in a yogic setting, so I began with traditional vedic mantras ("Om", "So Ham", "Om Namo Narayanaya", etc)

Recently I've been experimenting with different mantras. Some of my favourites have been: "Be here now" and "Love, Truth"

What mantras do you use?

-4
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by doylio to c/[email protected]
 

EDIT: I know many people have a knee-jerk aversion to anything crypto, but this is not a scheme to make money. I would be happy to see this done with fiat as well, but IMO this is much easier to do with smart contracts.

I am very excited about the possibility of the Fediverse, and the potential for many experiments in instance governance. A problem that all instances must content with is trolling and spam. It seems very difficult to impose a cost on these bad actors without harming honest users as well. Either instances have minimal signup friction and are vulnerable to being overwhelmed with bad actors & defederated (see the recent defederation decision from Beehaw), or they present frustrating barriers such as manual approval or waitlists for folks who just want to have fun

A possible solution comes from the blockchain space, which has been dealing with anonymous bad actors since its inception. Many blockchains and blockchain apps require users to stake some asset in order to gain certain privileges (basically a deposit). If the user is determined to be a bad actor, they lose some or all of their stake.

An instance could be integrated with a smart contract to manage membership could be very effective at dissuading trolls and spammers. A user could stake a small amount of money (say $10) in order to create an account on the instance. This could be done very quickly and would require no manual approval from admins. If the admins determine they are acting poorly, they could ban the user and slash their funds. If an honest user decides they don't want to stay on the instance, they could delete their account and recover their deposit.

(EDIT: An important part of this is that the funds are destroyed when slashed, not given to the admins or mods. This prevents a profit incentive to ban)

I've got a prototype smart contract for this. Would be interested in working with someone on this if there's anyone with experience with the instance management

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