bremen15

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] bremen15@feddit.org 3 points 1 day ago

Male here. By now I can and do express my feelings. It took a while. It is an odd power move at times, when you at will articulate and/or show your emotions. Some people can't deal with it.

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 6 points 1 day ago

Yes, i am. I had a challenging health episode last year, and am a member of a legal framework for assisted dying. I worked through the emotions, the letting go and the planning. It was very liberating, hard and sad. And I think I grew as a person in the process. I had a good life, and am happy I can live more, but I can confidently say I know how it feels, and if the world goes to shit I am out of here. I am not suicidal at all and enjoy family and my body, food, music, etc.

[–] bremen15@feddit.org -2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

ja, aber ohne politische und geschichtliche Bildung könnte man ja denken, dass "Sieg heil und fette Beute" einfach nur Jugendsprech ist für "Hallo".

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 5 points 5 days ago (3 children)

Es gibt ja die Möglichkeit von Dummheit. Versuch also zuerst Aufklärung.

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

vielleicht ein Problem im öffentlichen Dienst, war bei mir an der Technischen Hochschule auch so - nur dass wir keine klima anlage zum heizen hatten

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 5 points 1 week ago

Du warst vor acht Monaten der beliebteste MaiMaier.

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

du musst mal auf dem matrix-server der zuhausis hier abhängen, da habe ich die Studie vor einer Weile gepostet. Und du irrst dich, Social Media, das als Forum der Gesellschaft dient, hätte die gleichen Grundkinken, die toxisches Verhalten ermutigt wie das Wirbellosen-ding. Social Media an sich ist das Problem.

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 1 points 3 weeks ago

unzufrieden mit dem Feddit-Wichtelgeschenk?

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 2 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

wie machst du das konkret? sickern die Nachrichten nicht kontinuierlich in alle möglichen Kanäle?

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 6 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

internet != social media. Großer Unterschied.

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 2 points 3 weeks ago (8 children)

warum tun dir die leid?

[–] bremen15@feddit.org 5 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen haben ergeben, dass Social Media nicht durch nicht-triviale Algorithmenänderungen harmlos gemacht werden kann. Social Media an sich ist ein Problem. auch das Feddiverse, ohne Konzern.

 

YOU MIGHT think that in Trumpworld a new National Security Strategy (NSS) would not count for all that much. John Bolton, a national security adviser in Donald Trump’s first term, frequently laments that his boss had no strategy at all. Instead, the president worked by impulse—and without the encumbrance of too many briefings. From one day to the next, he veered in opposing directions.

Despite that, the new NSS matters. Released, weirdly, in the dead of night on December 4th/5th, it will be pored over by soldiers, diplomats and advisers in America and around the world. It is the latest and fullest statement of what “America First” means in foreign policy. It sets the terms for a soon-expected review of military power, and lays out the priorities for all those trying to interpret the president’s wishes. And, for many of its readers, it will be profoundly alarming.

For the most part, the new NSS rejects the decades-old insight that a common set of values are what cement America’s alliances. It declares that it is “not grounded in traditional, political ideology” but is motivated by “what works for America”. Instead, it embraces what it calls “flexible realism”. That means being “pragmatic without being ‘pragmatist’, realistic without being ‘realist’, principled without being ‘idealistic’, muscular without being ‘hawkish’, and restrained without being ‘dovish’.”

If that sounds like a dog’s breakfast, that is because it is. Shorn of the enlightened values that have long anchored foreign policy, America First becomes a naked assertion of power that owes more to the 19th century than the world that America built after the second world war. And that leads to a document riven by contradictions.

In some parts of the world, in particular in Asia, Mr Trump expects countries to behave as willing allies. In most others they are to submit meekly to America’s economic and military will. In one place the NSS rejects the interventionist idea of urging countries to adopt “democratic or other social change that differs widely from their traditions and histories”. That suits Russia, China and the monarchies of the Middle East. Yet in Europe, where MAGA worries about wokeism, migration and the dominance of liberal values, the NSS bluntly declares that “our goal should be to help Europe correct its current trajectory.”

When the NSS applies this formula to the world, region by region, the full consequences of this shift start to become clear.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the section covering the western hemisphere. “We want to ensure that the western hemisphere remains reasonably stable and well-governed enough to prevent and discourage mass migration to the United States,” it reads. Governments in the Americas will be enlisted to control migration and curb drug flows. They are expected to grant America control of key assets, resources and strategic locations, or at least a veto over “hostile foreign” ownership of them—a clear warning to refuse Chinese investments that offer a sway over ports or such assets as the Panama Canal. Where law enforcement has failed to halt drug smuggling, America will use armed forces, the NSS warns.

This swaggering right of intervention is called a “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine. That is a deliberate tribute to the “Roosevelt Corollary”, President Theodore Roosevelt’s assertion of gendarme-like enforcement rights over the western hemisphere in 1904.

All this seems sure to provoke angry recollections of high-handed American interventions in the region in the 20th century, from military invasions and blockades to CIA-backed coups or security pacts that saw America arming and training autocracies guilty of extra-judicial murders and torture in the cold war. With its talk of conditioning aid and trade on co-operation from Latin American governments, the NSS signals a belief that resentment will not stop Latin Americans from doing as they are told.

In Asia, by contrast, allies will read the NSS with a mixture of immediate relief and long-term gloom. The passages on Taiwan could have been worse. The nightmare scenario for such allies as Japan, the Philippines and South Korea would have involved an NSS declaring that the fate of the democratically ruled island of Taiwan is not an existential interest for America.

Instead, the NSS restates America’s position that it “does not support any unilateral change to the status quo in the Taiwan Strait”. True, there is nothing about Taiwan’s importance as a friendly, pro-Western democracy whose people overwhelmingly oppose coming under rule by China. But the strategy does make a cold-eyed realist case for Taiwan’s importance as a usefully-located redoubt in the middle of the “First Island Chain” that runs from Japan through Taiwan to the Philippines, penning in China’s navies and air forces. In addition, the NSS nods to Taiwan’s importance as the largest source of advanced semiconductors.

Accordingly, America will sustain forces capable of deterring any attempt to take Taiwan or to control the sea lanes near that island, or in the South China Sea. Asian allies must also spend much more on their own defences and grant America more access to their ports and bases. In short, the NSS demands that Asian countries risk China’s wrath by helping America contain Chinese ambitions in the Indo-Pacific. But there is not a word of criticism for China’s (or indeed Russia’s) expansionist ambitions or their desire to overthrow the post-1945 legal and multilateral order.

The NSS spares its sharpest barbs for Europe. The old world, it says, is undergoing a profound crisis, and this is not so much about economic decline or military weakness as it is about the loss of national identity, leading to the “stark prospect of civilisational erasure”.

Warning that “it is more than plausible that within a few decades at the latest, certain NATO members will become majority non-European,” the NSS warns that “it is an open question whether they will view their place in the world, or their alliance with the United States, in the same way as those who signed the NATO charter.” In other words, immigrants will corrupt the values of the societies they move to—a shocking assertion from a country that is itself built on immigration.

The NSS’s prescriptions for Europe flow from this assertion of Judeo-Christian nationalism. The NSS calls for “unapologetic celebrations of European nations’ individual character and history”, encouraging the revival promoted by “patriotic European parties”. That is a reference to the populist right, including National Rally in France, Reform UK in Britain and Alternative for Germany, which the vice-president, J.D. Vance, embraced earlier this year when he spoke at a conference in Munich. If that is the Trump administration’s programme, how are the centrist governments in Europe, who see these parties as a grave threat, supposed to treat America as an ally?

When the NSS applies this rationale to Ukraine, it draws some devastating conclusions. Suggesting that most Europeans want peace even if it means surrendering to Vladimir Putin, and asserting that their governments are standing in the way, the strategy calls for a rapid end to the war in order to prevent escalation. It says that America should curb the sense in Europe that Russia is a threat and warns that NATO cannot be “a perpetually expanding alliance”. Alarmingly, it has nothing to say about the repeated aggression and hostility of Vladimir Putin, the Russian president. To much of Europe, this sort of appeasement will only serve to set up the next conflict.

“In everything we do, we are putting America First,” reads the letter from Mr Trump to the American people that opens the NSS. But it is the preceding sentence that will be read by allies with gloom, and with glee by China and Russia, for it is hopelessly at odds with reality: “America is strong and respected again—and because of that, we are making peace all over the world.” Alas, that claim comes from an administration that is indeed feared, resented and obsessed over, but one that is less respected or trusted than any American government in decades.

 
 

Lieber @ZonenRanslite@feddit.org , denk an mich!

 

I found some torrents for series, but I don't get any seeders. Please recommend torrent sites that hook me up better. Are torrents the right approach at all? What would be better?

 

https://www.economist.com/business/2025/09/22/nvidias-100bn-bet-on-openai-raises-more-questions-than-it-answers

ONE THING is clear about the announcement on September 22nd that Nvidia may invest up to $100bn in OpenAI to help the maker of ChatGPT buy 4m-5m of Nvidia’s artificial-intelligence (AI) chips. Silicon Valley is becoming more incestuous than ever. Just days after Nvidia announced a $5 billion investment in Intel, as part of a deal to help boost the business of its beleaguered American chipmaking rival, the proposed partnership between Nvidia and OpenAI, set to start in the second half of next year, is yet another eye-popping move. It makes today’s AI-driven stock market rally increasingly dependent on the intertwined fortunes of the world’s most valuable firm and America’s most prominent private tech firm. For good measure, OpenAI is also deeply entangled with Microsoft, the world’s second-richest firm. Nvidia’s shares climbed by almost 4% after announcing the letter of intent with OpenAI, raising its value to close to $4.5trn. Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive, described the deal as an addition to its sales of graphics processing units (GPUs), which likely buoyed the stock. He also said that selling as many as 5 million extra GPUs would be roughly equivalent to Nvidia’s entire GPU shipments this year. There was another unspoken benefit. The deal would make OpenAI more dependent on Nvidia’s chips, reducing the incentive to build its own. It was also apparent that Nvidia would fund the GPU sales via the $100bn it is proposing to invest in OpenAI, which will increase in $10bn increments for every gigawatt (GW) of Nvidia-supported data-centre capacity that OpenAI builds, up to 10GW. Some Nvidia bulls celebrated the proposed investment as a convenient way for the chipmaker to fund its sales. In effect, said Pierre Ferragu, of New Street Research, a firm of IT analysts, Nvidia would invest $10bn for every $35bn of GPUs OpenAI buys from it, meaning OpenAI will pay 71% in cash and 29% in shares. But some also expressed concerns about the transaction. In an interview with CNBC, Stacy Rasgon of Bernstein, an investment firm, acknowledged that it would exacerbate worries about the “circular dynamics” of Nvidia investing in companies that it supplies with GPUs. The size of the deal will “clearly start to raise some questions”, he said. Moreover, OpenAI’s use of its privately held shares as currency may also deepen concerns about its cash constraints as it makes ever-bigger spending pledges. It has reportedly struck a $300 billion deal with Oracle, a data firm, to build 4.5 GW of data center capacity over five years starting in 2027, which was the primary contributor to Oracle’s blowout earnings projections earlier this month. That is connected to the “Stargate” project President Donald Trump announced at the White House in January. However, how OpenAI finances such expenditures remains an open question. Though ChatGPT has more than 700m weekly active users, making it by far the most popular AI application, the response to GPT-5, the research lab’s latest family of models, has been underwhelming. For now, the sums OpenAI is promising to spend dwarf its revenues, which run at close to $13bn a year. Cash is not its only constraint. Additional power capacity of 10GW is almost half of the 22GW of utility-scale electricity generation added in America in the first half of this year, or the equivalent of ten nuclear power plants, even with a laxer infrastructure-permitting regime, that could take years to bring online. Sam Altman, OpenAI’s boss, acknowledged three difficulties in particular to overcome as he announced the Nvidia partnership. One was pushing the frontiers of AI research. The second was building products that entice users. The third was the “unprecedented infrastructure challenge”, such as obtaining chips and power supply. A lot of interconnected wealth is riding on the hope that he can solve all three challenges simultaneously. None is proving as easy as getting his well-heeled friends in Silicon Valley to believe his promises.

 
 
 

Here's a theory to help explain some online discourse of emotional suppression that could be behind certain meme-ing behaviors or neurodivergence, in the sense of articulating emotions that might arise from different parts of memes.

Pepe = the stunted inner child, stuck at a kindergarten-like emotional level, innocent and vulnerable but largely unable to articulate what's wrong using complex emotional language, just knows it's sad or something with some body language.

Wojak = the adult mask, the societal script-following shell that's supposed to have it all figured out but is actually just as lost, ,wondering "I did everything I was supposed to do, why do I feel like garbage?"

When they're combined in memes, it's literally the adult self staring at its own emotional stun,ting going "what the hell happened to me?" The bland, mask-like appearance of Wojak is perfect because that's precisely what following societal scripts does: it turns you into this generic, hollow version of a person.

And the reason these memes exploded across the internet is that many are seeing this split. They see Pepe and think, "Oh wow, that feels like my emotional state," and they see Wojak and think, "Oh damn, is that what I look like to the world?"

It's as if the internet has figured out how to express the fundamental disconnect between their inner emotional reality (confused, sad, stunted, etc.) and their outer social performance (bland, conforming, mask-like) through frog and Wojak memes.

-12
submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by bremen15@feddit.org to c/ich_iel@feddit.org
 
 

summary by chatGPT 4o

📘 Book Overview: Peak Human by Johan Norberg

Publisher: Atlantic Books Length: 400 pages Price: $32.99 / £22 Author: Johan Norberg, Swedish historian Thesis: Golden ages of human history were driven by openness—to trade, people, and ideas—and declined when societies turned inward. 🏛️ Key Historical Case Studies

  1. Song Dynasty (960–1279 AD), China

    Progress:

     Rule of law and meritocratic bureaucracy.
    
     Toleration of dissent: e.g., officials not executed for opposing the emperor.
    
     Peasant property rights and freedom of movement.
    
     Agricultural output surged, fueling urban growth (Kaifeng vastly larger than London at the time).
    
     Advanced commerce: paper money, canals, international trade.
    
     Technological innovation: movable type, industrial processes (e.g., coal for smelting).
    

    Decline:

     Mongol invasion preserved tech but stalled further progress.
    
     Ming dynasty (from 1368) imposed harsh reactionary policies:
    
         Banned ocean-worthy ships and foreign trade.
    
         Reinstated ancient fashion and punished deviation (e.g., forced castration for wrong hairstyles).
    
         Economic regression followed—Chinese incomes halved (1080–1400).
    
     China only rebounded with liberalization in the late 20th century.
    
  2. Athens

    Achievements:

     Democracy and liberal trade: tariffs only 2%.
    
     Welcomed foreigners—e.g., a Syrian ex-slave became a wealthy man.
    
     High economic freedom (per Fraser Institute’s index)—higher than any modern nation.
    

    Limitations:

     Exclusion of women and slaves from freedoms.
    
  3. Roman Empire

    Strengths:

     Inclusive citizenship and cultural learning from conquered peoples.
    
     Unified legal system and extensive road network.
    
     Economic policies:
    
         Augustus introduced a flat poll tax and low marginal tax rates.
    
         Encouraged innovation and productivity.
    

    Decline:

     Mismanagement:
    
         Coinage debasement led to hyperinflation.
    
         Price controls stifled commerce.
    
         Rise of dogma and suppression of intellectual freedom.
    
     Collapse followed due to plagues, invasions, and poor governance.
    
     Dark Ages marked by massive societal regression (e.g., decline in shipwrecks = less trade).
    
  4. Abbasid Caliphate

    Misconceptions:

     Revered by extremists today (e.g., ISIS), but historically a beacon of tolerance and intellectual flourishing.
    
  5. Italian Renaissance

    Clarification:

     Originated in rebellion against Christian orthodoxy and embraced pagan ideals.
    
     Not a purely “Christian” cultural phenomenon.
    
  6. Britain’s Industrial Revolution

    Reality Check:

     Contrary to romanticized misery (e.g., Dickens, Blake), diaries suggest most people were satisfied—except poets and writers.
    

📉 Modern Relevance & Lessons Contemporary Parallels

Globalization after 1990 marked the most dramatic improvement in living standards—half of humanity’s 10,000-year progress occurred since then.

Current global shift toward nationalism and closed borders threatens this “peak human” moment.

Warning Signs

Rising trade wars and suppression of inquiry mirror the downfall patterns of historic golden ages.

The book implies (though does not name) Donald Trump as a symbol of such regressive policies.

💡 Central Argument

Societies thrive when they are open—to trade, immigration, dissent, and innovation. They decline when fear, rigidity, and insularity take over.

Norberg asserts:

Golden ages are man-made and reversible.

Collapse stems from bad leadership, dogma, and refusal to learn.

“Failure is not a fate but a choice.”

📚 Style and Reception

Rich in historical narrative, analytical rigor, and counterintuitive insights.

Challenges popular myths with empirical evidence.

Timely and persuasive, especially given rising global protectionism and authoritarianism.
 

Manche Dinge sind wichtiger für den Pilzanbau als andere...

 

Hat hier schon mal jemand eine laminar flow hood selbst gebaut?

Ich bin gerade dabei und stehe vor dem Problem, dass die Luft nicht gleichmässig aus der einströmkammer herausströmt in den Arbeitsbereich. Ich teste das mit einem Räucherstäbchen und sehe sogar rückströmungen aus dem Arbeitsbereich in die Einströmkammer. Jetzt möchte ich Lamellen zum besseren Verteilen des Luftstroms anbringen, aber bin mir nicht sicher, in welcher Anordnung das am besten ist. Ich würde gerne eine Strömungssimulation vermeiden. :-)

Ich habe Videos auf Youtube angeschaut, aber die hatten das Problem aus irgendwelchen Gründen nicht, obwohl deren Konstruktion sehr ähnlich ist wie meine.

Hat jemand TIps oder Erfahrungswerte?

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