Yeah. That one triggered me.
- 15 Posts
- 444 Comments
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Looking for the Best KDE Distro – Fast, Stable, and Feature-Rich
51·8 months agoSure, Manjaro is known to break on updates. OpenSuse TW is stable AF. Manjaro is a joke compared to most distros though.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Games@sh.itjust.works•Nintendo, Microsoft, and other developers will share accessibility labels about their gamesEnglish
5·11 months agoWhat? Is this a positive step by large companies?
The cynic in me thinks they’ll push to legislate for this so Indies cannot compete and they make more money from MTX hell.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Technology@beehaw.org•Elon Musk’s X obtains $44bn valuation in sharp turnaround
53·11 months agoThat’s a very expensive Nazi bar.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Scrabble players quit game after 400 offensive words banned from listEnglish
11·11 months agoHere in the uk , the P word is probably the most offensive word you could use against a person of Indian descent. Up there with the n word. removed (f word) is also probably the most offensive slur you can use in reference to gay people. It’s correct that they banned them.
Guessing you’re from America where being offensive is cool. Historically people used to justify the n word based on the origins rather than the highly offensive connotations.
UK ain’t woke, just has some acceptance that people from different backgrounds have some value rather than pandering to grumpy white folk who care about nothing but themselves and how inconvenient it is to possibly consider other words.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Free and Open Source Software@beehaw.org•What happened to Organic Maps?
3·11 months agoBest to fork just in case? Ideally to Codeberg.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Donald Trump, who has been on a mission to strip transgender people of all dignity, complains ‘everything is transgender'English
6·11 months agoSame. They were one of the coolest and nicest people I know. I just want them to be happy.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•Duterte flown to The Hague after arrest over Philippines drug war killings
122·11 months agoSome Fillipino’s I’ve talked to have commented that drug problems in their area disappeared but used to be pretty horrible.
I’m not one to defend crimes against human’s, but one cannot discount the level of criminality and the impact it was already having on people’s lives. Whether the tactics were fair or decent is one thing, but another is, did it work? Did it solve a serious problem the country was grappling with? You only have to look at Mexico to realise that if you don’t deal with these things, the level of murder and suffering often skyrockets.
Stardew Valley
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlMto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Over 3.1 million fake "stars" on GitHub projects used to boost rankings
16·1 year agoYes. You corrected a dyslexic. Well done.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlMto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Over 3.1 million fake "stars" on GitHub projects used to boost rankings
4·1 year agoThat is more down to poor marketing. Here on Lemmy or reddit there are big open source communities where you can extol the values of it.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlMto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Over 3.1 million fake "stars" on GitHub projects used to boost rankings
71·1 year agoI never went with a software project from random scrolling. It has no value to me if it doesn’t meet a need I have right now.
No contributor is going to be good that doesn’t use it.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlMto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Over 3.1 million fake "stars" on GitHub projects used to boost rankings
142·1 year agoWhy would it be? Software is good based on it’s use and recommendations from real folk, not *s. Many project not on github
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Socialism@lemmy.ml•Why People Falling Out of Mainstream Liberal Politics Tend to Move Right
2·1 year agoIn what sense are you using AES? Are you referring to the soviet republic and unironically?
My initial vibes here is this place is mostly soviet supporting communists pretending to be socialists. Anything other than glowing praise of communism is showered in down votes. That’s cool and all, but it feels a bit too echo chamber for my liking.
I always assumed the goal was to bring people with you, rather than go after any unpure view. Maybe arguing with libs online too long has clouded the goal of furthering class consciousness.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Socialism@lemmy.ml•Why People Falling Out of Mainstream Liberal Politics Tend to Move Right
11·1 year agoBased on my limited knowledge, I can agree with that. I don’t yet know of a system that has been implemented that is optimal.
I think the electorate want change but I don’t think those the current system allow offer that unfortunately. Reformists tend to get filtered out.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Socialism@lemmy.ml•Why People Falling Out of Mainstream Liberal Politics Tend to Move Right
13·1 year agoThis is assuming you need a national political party. In the UK we have a population of 70m, and MPs represent seats of 60k. District councils could represent around 100k people, and county ones could cover 500k. If you localise power so that all decision making for an area sits with the councils running areas of 100k, then you don’t need a nationwide party, a local party could gain a foothold and run an area. If that party is setup, so representatives can easily be voted out or replaced. For example open selection and you have to campaign to represent your local party again every term then the power sits with the members of that local party rather than a national party.
Ultimately, a system can exist for this, but it doesn’t mean that a system does exist or runs effectively in the world at present. Getting that system set up and running is a whole separate problem.
You did cover this, and the thing you suggest about expertise and continuity and problems that can be solved. Term length (and how many seats change each term can solve the latter), while expertise would likely be a solution that can be taken up by think tanks, and there are good ones, and dreadful ones. Legislation on transparency of funding and ownership would be key with that. Secondly health groups, co-operatives can form, that can be paid by councils for their expertise, which can build credibility and hire specialists.
I’m not saying any of this is easy, or would be without contest, but it is very possible, and while if you centre power in the hands of the few, you create elites, if you distribute that power, you can solve the problem around wealth and corruption. A system can be set up that adapts to the demands of the skills that are needed, whether that is technical skills, or knowledge based skills etc.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Socialism@lemmy.ml•Why People Falling Out of Mainstream Liberal Politics Tend to Move Right
29·1 year agoIt was a response to the point about an elite class. In communist systems, that is usually the political class, the ones that make the decisions. That needs to make the decisions and are essential to the system functioning. In a democratic system that is localised, those decision makers don’t have that much power as they have a small sphere of influence and are more administrators. Redistribution of wealth doesn’t mean there is no wealth. Wealth can still exist, be taxed significantly and redistributed.
The point being, you misrepresented my point. Saying there is no elite “political” class, doesn’t mean there is no class.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Socialism@lemmy.ml•Why People Falling Out of Mainstream Liberal Politics Tend to Move Right
111·1 year agoIt does matter, and I don’t accept with a socialist system, you have an elite class. With communism, maybe, but with democratic socialism, the goal is democracy first, because if you give powers to local people, to decentralise, and remove the disenfranchisement that people feel, you get the change for people to push for changes that help their circumstances. This was a view advocated by the late, great Tony Benn.
First past the post puts too much power in the hands of a few “representatives” and the more you break it down, the more working people can campaign and win. It’s hard to campaign against centralisation as it requires a level of organisation, mobilisation, and cohesive view that is very hard to organise. Then you get corruption within that as pro-business interests influence and fund those that aim to divert the movement from the benefits of people. The Labour party in the UK could be an example of that. Currently, they’re pushing for deregulation, growth and tight controls on migration.
CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlto
Games@sh.itjust.works•Video Games can't afford to look this goodEnglish
17·1 year agoMinecraft is one of the biggest games on the planet. Very popular with the young. Not what many would consider beautiful.











You get AC? You’re lucky if you get a meaningful title…