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"So many uses!" (Black Leaf 40 ad from Country Gentleman magazine 1939)
  • Ah I see we actually agree. That's my bad. I'm so used to getting shouted down around here by people that didn't read very closely, I wrongly interpreted your comment. Ironic. I'm sorry.

  • "So many uses!" (Black Leaf 40 ad from Country Gentleman magazine 1939)
  • Doesn't really seem like you understood what I said or read any of what I linked. That's still roughly 11 grams of nicotine, so still several hundred times more than it takes to kill an adult by my quick back of the envelope estimate.

  • "So many uses!" (Black Leaf 40 ad from Country Gentleman magazine 1939)
  • I mean this isn’t really poison tho.

    Go ahead and look into the toxicity of a single drop (30-60mg) of nicotine. Plenty of "natural plant products" that are poisons.

  • [Opinion Piece] My AI boyfriend is kinda saving my life rn
  • That's not an AI boyfriend. That's an AI Nanny/Therapist/Caretaker. They have a live in AI nurse.

  • Aliens haven't contacted us. Scientists found a compelling reason why.
  • The whole article is the why. Not just a single headline-appropriate bullet point.

  • Category 5 Titty Rule
  • I've only ever watched the show in passing, as in literally just passing through the room. And it is painfully obvious in an instant that her character is the ONLY one that is pleasant, eloquent, intelligent, and kind in any appreciable degree. That's what's fucking sexy about her character.

    Moreover, those other waifs don't even know what sex is, but that girl FUCKS with nerdy literary passion and will let you cry like a baby into that cleavage afterwards.

  • NASA’s commercial spacesuit program just hit a major snag
  • I agree with you.

    We're paying for it anyway when a private enterprise develops this technology, but we don't get to keep the results of any of that development. That's my big problem with it. It's like any other tragedy of publicly funded projects/programs that ultimately only profit a select few like healthcare, stadiums, and pretty much any software as a service or closed source systems sold to public sectors. Those are just a few, but I'm sure there are more. This stuff is too important to the public good to be controlled and horded by corporations. The scariest thing in the alien franchise wasn't the xenomorphs, it was The Weyland-Yutani Corporation.

  • Apple finally adds support for RCS in latest iOS 18 beta | TechCrunch
  • Just in time for Google to kill RCS and move on to something else.

  • Humans will pet anything
  • Turtles and tortoises also like pets sometimes and not just their heads. Their shells are surprisingly sensitive.

  • Footloose, for e-bikes? The US town that banned all electric bicycles
  • All the laws to prevent this tragedy already exist, except maybe limiting powered bicycles on public travel ways to licensed drivers/riders. Bicycles (powered or not) are vehicles and require appropriate lighting at night or when conditions otherwise would require it for a car. That 66 year old would have been exposed to much more safety education about bicycle helmets over the course of their life than that 12 year old. I have trouble feeling bad for the 66 year old when that kid is going to carry the weight of that death for the rest of their life. Everything about this situation is awful though so it's understandable that the town may have overcorrected based on emotion.

  • This pisses me off so much
  • That view of the driver, looking out from the front passenger side out the driver's window always makes me anxious for this reason. It's like Chekhov's gun. Why would they pick that angle unless the characters were about to get T-boned?

  • This pisses me off so much
  • That one actually has some basis in reality though. My terminal still dings at me, it's just that having it ding too much is annoying and out of fashion now. Does no one else remember PCs piezoelectric beeping, even before you upgraded to an actual soundcard?

  • does anybody use an external player? Android
  • No, I don't use the podcast feature on the Plex. But I do use Plex for listening to audiobooks. Just be aware that MP4/m4b cannot be in the same library as mp3s.

    The other podcast thing is a solution totally outside of Plex. It is running on the same machine though and accessing the same files. dir2cast + webserver like Nginx or apache reads a directory of mp3 files and builds an RSS feed out of them. In some ways it works better than Plex because it's simpler on the user side to listen offline as long as you sync the feed at home. I tend to do a separate feed for each series or author. It's a bit fiddly to get setup and adding a new feed requires a bash one liner and editing some HTML after the files are sorted and named perfectly because podcast apps have some funny limitations when it comes to actually grouping, sorting, and displaying metadata.

  • does anybody use an external player? Android
  • I use podcast addict in much the same way. I can control it using my WearOS watch or even just via the Bluetooth controls of my headphones. I use podcast addict mostly for podcasts (obviously), but I also have (a very manual and kludgey) RSS server at home to feed me and the rest of the home audiobooks via podcast addict. I've started to move that listening more to Plex via PlexAmp on my phone, which is also controllable from my watch. The Plex audiobook experience isn't perfect, but it is a lot easier to manage.

    I haven't found a need or advantage to an external player yet. But, I have found some codecs that the Plex app has struggled with, which might benefit from an external app. I haven't had the issue in a while though and didn't think of using the external player then, so no guarantees.

  • NASA’s commercial spacesuit program just hit a major snag
  • SpaceX has saved NASA a ton of money on launch and ISS cargo/crew services.

    Privatizing a government sector and then subsizing its for-profit commerical replacement is the opposite of saving NASA (or taxpayers) money. I'm all for companies getting into space, but they should be getting support in the form of publicly available fundamental science and technology development from a properly funded NASA, not bids to do the work for them at a profit to those companies.

  • Pity, really.
  • Blocklists are ineffective by design. Each and every member of the swarm can collect all the data necessary to flag you to your ISP. Obviously any professional collecting this kind of data can avoid a blocklist. There is no such thing as a better blocklist.

  • Pity, really.
  • Teach us then 😭

    I think this hits on another big generational difference. Those who grew up in the early days of personal computing and the Internet didn't have teachers or a hallucinating language model to spoon feed them instant answers. They had to actually RTFM thoroughly before they could even think of asking in some arcane BBS, forum, or IRC for help from elders that had absolutely zero tolerance for incompetence or ignorance. MAN pages and help files came bundled, but the Internet (if you had it) was metered and inconvenient on a scale more like going to the library than ordering a pizza. They had to figure out how to ask the right questions. They had to figure out how to find their own answers. The Internet was so slow that all the really interesting bits were often just text. So much indexed and categorized one might need to learn a little more just to find the right details in that sea of text. There was a lot less instant gratification and no one expected to be able to solve their problems just by asking for help.

    I've seen way too many kids give up at the first pebble in their path because they are so accustomed to the instant gratification that has pervaded our culture since the dawn of smart phones.

  • Pity, really.
  • A decade ago we figured out blacklists were ineffective. What's changed?

  • Relationship between GDP per capita (PPP) and mathematics performance (PISA OECD)
  • Why is China listed multiple times as individual cities/regions?

    What is the missing footnote for all those asterisks?

  • Mommy, why is the Apple Pie so spicy?
  • Nutmeg does interesting things to savoury foods. It's subtle though. It's often like a background singer making the other flavors better more than being a diva in its own right. I haven't added nutmeg to potatoes yet, but now I think I might try it. I usually add some fresh ground nutmeg to my spinach and bacon quiche. Nutmeg would also be right at home in a sweet potato pie. So why not mashed potatoes?

  • What is this yellow box like device from the early 90s?

    As seen very briefly in the movie Weekend at Bernie's II (1993), what is the yellow box like thing this lady is carrying? Camera? Maybe, but what make or model?

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    ElderWendigo ElderWendigo @sh.itjust.works
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