AnAmericanPotato

joined 2 years ago
[–] AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev 11 points 10 months ago

Likely this. Temperature and humidity also affect your sense of taste and smell, plus they can affect a hot drink's evaporation rate.

Is it more for situations that need to be compatible with most *nix systems and you might not necessarily have access to a higher level scripting language?

Yes, and also because integrating Python one-liners into shell pipelines is awkward in general. I'm more likely to write my entire script in Python than to use it just for text processing, and a lot of the time that's just a pain. Python isn't really designed for one-liners or for use as a shell. You can twist it into working in those use cases, but then I'd ask the reverse question: why would you do that when you could "just" use awk?

On macOS, Python is not installed by default. So if you are writing scripts that you want to be portable across platforms, or for general Mac administration, using Python is a burden.

This is also true when working with some embedded devices. IIRC I can ssh into my router and use awk (thanks to it being included in Busybox), but I'm definitely not going to install an entire Python environment there. I'm not sure there'd even be enough storage space for that.

Thanks for the link. I'm not up on the latest in anarchist philosophy. The last meaningful work I read on the topic was probably In Defense of Anarchism by Robert Paul Wolff.

[–] AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

After working for many years in a “fast pace environment” I can’t help but notice that I have increasing difficulties to do simple tasks.

How many years are we talking?

A lot of what you describe sounds like you're starting to have "senior moments". If you're past 50, that's pretty normal. Which is not to say it's good. "Normal" does not mean good. It just means common. I don't think you should look for anything exotic if the mundane explanation fits your observations.

Low-tech suggestion: Keep a notepad in your pocket. Make to-do lists. Cross items off it when you're done. Maybe put the time in when you cross it off.

  • ~~Put water on stove~~
  • ~~Turn off stove~~
  • ~~Make tea~~
  • Drink tea
[–] AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev 32 points 10 months ago

The perverse ideas that money is speech and corporations are people can make a lot of simple common-sense statements suddenly completely insane.

I support free speech. Money is not speech.

I support personal freedom. Corporations are not people.

[–] AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev 56 points 10 months ago (23 children)

he viewed other libertarians as having the same level of honest compassion as he does but over time it’s become more and more clear that libertarians are overwhelmingly selfish rich white guys who don’t want to be called Repuiblicans

I had a similar progression myself when I was in my teens, maybe even early 20s.

The basic principle of libertarianism is appealing: mind your own damn business and I'll mind mine. And I still agree with that in general — it's just that a single generality does not make a complete worldview. It took me a while to realize how common it is for self-identifying libertarians to lack any capacity for nuance. The natural extreme of "libertarianism" is just anarchy and feudalism.

In a sane world, I might still call myself a libertarian. In a sane world, that might mean letting people live their own damn lives, not throwing them to the wolves (or more literally, bears ) and dismantling the government entirely.

I'm all for minding my own business, but I also acknowledge that maintaining a functional society is everybody's business (as much as I occasionally wish I could opt out and go live in a cave).

[–] AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev 5 points 10 months ago (1 children)

The Hyperlegible web site makes no mention of dyslexia, only visual impairment. Those are two totally different issues.

Geany is a nice GUI option. It's a bit more capable but still lean.

It's probably time for me to re-evaluate the host of coding editors out there. For the most part I just use good text editors. Though I do love Spyder, I only use it for a certain subset of tasks.

[–] AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev 19 points 10 months ago

Yep. On a Blu-ray disk, you have 25-100GB of space to work with. The Blu-ray standard allows up to 40mbps for 1080p video (not counting audio). Way more for 4K.

Netflix recommends a 5mbps internet connection for 1080p, and 15mbps for 4K. Reportedly they cut down their 4K streams to 8mbps last year, though I haven't confirmed. That's a fraction of what Blu-ray uses for 1080p, never mind 4K.

I have some 4K/UHD Blu-rays, and for comparison they're about 80mbps for video.

They use similar codecs, too, so the bitrates are fairly comparable. UHD Blu-rays use H.265, which is still a good video codec. Some streaming sites use AV1 (at least on some supported devices) now, which is a bit more efficient, but nowhere near enough to close that kind of gap in bitrate.

Joplin is great. I have its data stored locally with encryption, and I sync across devices with Syncthing. It also has built-in support for some cloud providers like you mentioned, and since it supports local encryption, you don't need to depend on the cloud provider's privacy policy.

Setting it up on multiple devices was a bit complex, but the documentation is there. Follow the steps, don't just waltz through the setup assuming it will work intuitively. I made that mistake and while it was not the end of the world, it would've saved me 15 minutes if I'd just RTFM.

[–] AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev 4 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Louis Rossman did a video about this the other day: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-8bTquKjzos

The gist is: They had a $100M of revenue outside of Google in 2023. 40M of that was passive income from their >$1B investment portfolio.

I wonder what it would cost to simply develop a web browser instead of all the other bullshit Mozilla is focused on nowadays.

Yes, absolutely! I'm in a renter's mindset so I didn't even think of that.

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