dragonfucker

joined 5 months ago
[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Yeah, laypeople using big words from the DSM to try and sound smart is cringe

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 days ago

Just tell them that Eminem is more popular with old white people because his melanin levels are less threatening to their old people sensibilities

[–] [email protected] 7 points 5 days ago (3 children)

That sounds more borderline than narcissistic.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The rate at which new bitcoins enter the economy is controlled. When the processing power of the mining network increases, the difficulty of the mining problem is artificially increased to keep the rate of minting the same. They throw out perfectly good solutions to the problem of creating the next link in the blockchain, to control inflation of bitcoin value.

You'll also notice the difficulty level for this block. The Bitcoin network aims to produce one block every 10 minutes or so. The system is designed to evaluate and adjust the mining difficulty every 2,016 blocks or roughly every two weeks (based on the number of participants). This doesn't always result in a block time of 10 minutes, but it's close.

https://www.investopedia.com/tech/how-does-bitcoin-mining-work/#toc-why-mine-bitcoin

The mining difficulty number represents 2,016 divided by the average time it took to mine one block in the last period, multiplied by the old difficulty level, or:
= Old difficulty x ( 2,016 ÷ average time to mine in the last period )
The lowest difficulty level is 1.0. The higher the number, the more difficult the solution is to find. The difficulty level on Dec. 5, 2024 (measured on December 1) was 102.89 trillion. You might see this published as 102.89T.

They are spending 100 trillion times as many processor cycles on bitcoin mining as is actually required to maintain the network. Every bitcoin transaction could be done at 100 trillionth the current energy cost. The only problem is, it would devalue bitcoins and crash the market like a Venezuelan dollar. So Bitcoin is designed to intentionally flush the energy output of a small country down the toilet to keep itself valuable.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Nah, it's intentionally energy wasteful in order to control inflation.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Miku is 16.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

Well they made it so you only need one copy of the game to play online with a friend, so it seems their money is where their mouth is.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

It happens all over the world. Some cultures put less value on knowledge and more on success, but every culture has selfish lazy rich assholes.

Except the communist ones. They just have selfish lazy assholes of average wealth.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

Are you updating Linux games from Windows??

How does your Windows install open the ext4/btrfs file system your Linux games are stored on?

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 week ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago

Yeah, that's the plot of Batman.

 
8
Tonkatsu sauce (lemmy.nz)
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

If you go to an asian grocery you might be able to find a bottle of tonkatsu sauce. It's the stuff they put on pork katsu and chicken katsu at Japanese restaurants. Put it on some vegan chicken tenders from the grocery, and you've got homemade vegan chicken katsu that tastes just like the stuff they serve at restaurants. Rice optional.

 
 

I started with mint more than 10 years ago because a friend of mine told me it was one, if not the best, distro for newbies (that was a fucking lie). Idk how mint is doing today but back then was kind of a mess and dealing with it wasnt easy, so i dont really know how or why i switched to debian for a while. With debian i had a lot of problems with some software, mostly proprietary drivers for esotic hardware i was running back then due to me buying the cheapest laptops available, so i started distro hopping for a while. Every distro but fedora was debian based so it felt a lot like a more of the same experience and I felt stuck in a loop where i was eventually gonna reinstall my whole system after breaking something i didnt even know existed.

Then one day i found arch. Installing it wasnt as easy as clicking install on the live system’s guy, but just by following the wiki general instructions i didnt have any issues the first time. It felt good. Building the system block by block helped me understand how things work, the package manager was the best i had seen and the newbie corner basically had the solutions for all my screw-ups, even more than ask-ubuntu did. Everybody in the community was super helpful (even some of the devs). Then there was the AUR, with almost every piece of esotic or proprietary software i needed, much easier than adding some random guy’s repositories to apt or enabling backports on debian. Also i found out that i prefer having a rolling release. With arch i learned how to use and maintain my system, and i just stuck with it.

That said, just how some use linux just to brag about it with their normie friends, many many people use arch to brag about it with other linux users (like my friend did), mostly beacause arch has the infamous reputation that it is hard to install, hard to maintain, easy to break. Which is actually not that bad considering that all these people are gonna end up posting in the newbie corner lol.

Truth is that arch is not harder than any other distro. It only comes down to your will to learn and RTFM What i think worked for me was the transparency. Nobody said it was as easy to use as windows, but nobody in the wiki said “dont do this unless you are an experienced user”. Arch is not another fork of ubuntu pretending to be “even more user friendly”, it’s just arch.

I think the problem is about distros like antergos (rip), manjaro, garuda, endevour trying to oversimplify something that only needs you to RTFM only ending up breaking something they tried to automate and hide behind a curtain that wasnt meant to be automated and was meant to be learned to manage, by hand

Drag doesn't have an opinion one way or the other about this, as drag hasn't used Arch. But drag liked reading this comment and would enjoy reading a discussion about it.

 

A meme was posted to c/[email protected] with a partial picture of a driver's licence. The Lemmy users in the comments proceeded to post all the identifying information they could get from the license, including gender, date of birth, and zip code of the person's home. The meme is probably reposted and so this isn't doxxing the Lemmy OP, but that's what the users in the comments seem to think they're doing.

Collecting and disseminating someone's personal information is doxxing even if that information could be found anyway with enough time and knowledge.

 
 

Antacids are the oldest effective medications for heartburn. Chalk (calcium carbonate) has been chewed for centuries to provide some relief and is still popular.

https://iffgd.org/manage-your-health/diet-and-treatments/antacids/

69
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Just found out soap is alkaline. If you run out of antacids and your acid reflux is really bad, can you eat soap to settle your tummy? This post inspired by eating chalk for acid reflux.

EDIT:

 
 
 
 

https://lemmy.nz/post/18610200/13255360

This user describes how most of the women-centered communities on Lemmy were shut down due to harassment of their members.

Another user adds "We need a safe space, but most of the women I know on here don’t have the time or energy to moderate it. And there’s so few of us, it feels like it’s not worth the effort anyway."

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