Lettuceeatlettuce

joined 2 years ago
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[–] [email protected] 44 points 1 month ago (7 children)

Jellyfin is love, Jellyfin is life.

[–] [email protected] 33 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Fighting with Linux is generally rewarding. On the rare occasion when it happens, I almost always learn a lot, and I'm able to figure out a functional solution.

Windows on the other hand feels like fighting with a manipulative, toxic partner. It happens constantly, you're always a little on edge, and you never come out learning anything, you're just relived that it's over.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 month ago

Meanwhile, I saw a post on r/debian a few weeks ago of a user running Debian 12 on a Pentium III server.

My 3rd and 4th gen i7 workstations are also running it like champs.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 month ago

The issue is structural, there are no "good cops" in the same way there are no "good pimps" or "good slave owners."

There were some slave owners who were kind to their slaves, taught them to read, allowed them to have some free time and make a small amount of money.

That doesn't mean that what they were doing was morally acceptable. They still were buying and selling human beings like property.

Policing, especially in the USA is rotten to the core. There are absolutely some cops who are kind people, who become police officers out of a naive belief that they can do good for society as a whole in that profession.

But those people don't usually last long. They either leave after seeing the ugly underbelly, or they become corrupted by the system. The police will always act in the interest of the rich and powerful, or else they get fired. If they are told to break up a protests, they will always comply. If they are told to block a corporate skyscraper so that protesters cannot get into it to stage a sit-in, they will do it, even as ultra wealthy oligarchs stream safely past them to conduct horrifically corrupt dealings that hurt and kill millions of people across the world.

The cop's job is also to go around trying to bust people for crimes. If a cop comes up to you out of the blue and starts up a conversation, 99% of the time they are fishing for information, trying to sus something out. They aren't just trying to be friendly, they are doing their job. In the US at least, the cops are allowed to lie to you in an investigation in order to try to get you to admit guilt. They are allowed and trained to do it, to use all kinds of trickery to manipulate you into a confession, or to get Intel that helps them.

In addition, the examples people frequently cite as good things the cops do would be better done by non-cops. First aid? Suicide intervention? Disaster relief? Theft deterrence? Wellness checks? Those are all things that would be better done by non-cops if we funded and grew those kinds of organizations instead of further militarizing the police.

ACAB has never meant that all cops are evil people, it means that no matter how good of a person a cop is, they will always be empowering a corrupt and evil system.

Why don't we see the same sentiment about paramedics, firefighters, and heck, even soldiers? Because the systems that those folks are a part of don't have the same corrupting effect. Even soldiers are generally looked on much more favorably than cops, even though politically and socially, there is a large amount of overlap. Part of this is propaganda, but another factor is the standards soldiers are held to in the US. They are expected to carry themselves extremely well, and can be severely punished, even jailed for misconduct.

As a personal anecdote, I grew up in both worlds. My dad and several members of my family were both in the military and were cops. I was around both cultures a ton. I've had many bad encounters with police officers over the years, and that's with me knowing all the classic, "always keep your hands visible and comply" stuff that my dad and his cop friends told me.

I've never had a single negative encounter with an on-duty soldier. They've always been extremely respectful and grounded. Like I said, just an anecdote, but interesting to think about. If cops could be fired or even jailed for relatively minor infractions, even have their lives destroyed like soldiers who are dishonorably discharged, ACAB would probably never have became a thing.

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

1 in 10? Those are rookie numbers! We gotta pump those numbers up!

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

Timeshift has turned my system breaking updates and tinkering into a non-issue. I just set up all my systems with it right off the bat. One snapshot per day, one weekly, and one monthly.

Since doing that, I've never had to toss a totally borked install.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I was one of the lucky users who used Manjaro on my old laptop for over a year and never had any real problems.

I was very confused when I started getting more involved in the Linux community and kept hearing about how terrible Manjaro was.

For me, vanilla Fedora has actually been the most consistently problematic distro. I've had more random issues getting it set up and working properly than any other distro.

God bless Mint though, it has been basically flawless for years.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Yeah, it really bites. And no, they don't allow anything personal other than phones.

At least I get to use the Thinkpad, even if it is gimped with Windows. They initially weren't even going to allow that, because their company deploys only HP laptops.

But I made a strong and slightly pathetic case to the manager and he relented. Angry that I had to kiss the ring, but right now I need the money, and I really hated their clunky HP laptops.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 1 month ago

For sure, I'm on it already.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 month ago

Harsh but fair, edited lol.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 month ago

Thank you, I might join in spirit heh 👊

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