Oh no! Anyway…
Oh no! Anyway…
I live in a town of 4500 in the California coastal mountains. We have a library, a dispensary, a volunteer fire department, and an ambulance. We’re open about diversity, and the mountain skinheads (NAZIs) are disliked and can’t get a foothold. Internet connections are touchy and max out around 50mbps. The power does go out so often that most folks have backup generators. Mine will handle a two week outage.
The only thing missing is a decent night life. I may be a biker, but the local biker bar is very sketchy.
Stardew Valley Expanded. A simple life with a bit of magic.
I’d like a simple life with easy questions and obvious answers.
I’d also like socializing to be that easy.
Detectors of any sort can only flag expected variations from expected norms. AIs’ goals are to be undetectable with continuing improvements. Detectors help them do this by flagging failures. This is the same way antibiotic resistant bacteria evolve (well, it’s similar).
The fine article bounces back and forth between base salary and total compensation (salary + bonus + stock grants). It’s hard to be certain of which they are actually using, but I work in Silicon Valley and this seems more like total comp than base pay. (Stock and bonuses can more than double total comp.)
We should include Pixelfed here.
Home: Windows 11, work OSX. I moved my personal computer to Linux a couple years ago (I’ve been using Linux since the mid 90s), but game support was an issue. I’ll try again soon. Windows is a necessary evil that I’d like not to be necessary.
I just had to work with my doctor to fill out an ADA (American Disability Act) form to allow me to work from home. I’ve been working from home for three years and only needed it now. (I do have the disability, but this whole back to the office thing has been annoying.)
Ignorance of the problem will not make things better.
Over a decade on Reddit makes this a multi-day slog. It looks quite useful, but I’ve spent the last month moving into Lemmy. I’m using the same strategy here that I used there: search for the basics, subscribe, read, and if anything interesting mentions another community, subscribe on the fly. (Of course this strategy is probably why looking at Wefwef’s migration is overwhelming.)
TL;DR: ADHD makes some things a challenge.
I always ask “do you want help with that?”
If they’re talking nonstop, they don’t want input. If they’re not, this is the question I ask. Most of the time they just want to be heard, but not always.
I started using Spark late last year. It’s simplified my mail handling quite a bit. There’s also a desktop client for Windows, Dunno about OSX and IOS.
True Stories. After 40 years I still watch it every few years to make sure it’s still wierd. Excellent social commentary.