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Joined 1 month ago
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Cake day: May 3rd, 2025

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  • To be clear you don’t have to get that technical to read non-Amazon books on your kindle… I’ve owned 2 different kindles over the course of about 15 years and literally never bought an ebook from Amazon. Just gotta know where to get them (libgen) and how to use them (calibre.)

    A cheap ereader would be nice, but I’ve kinda had to go the opposite direction; my eyes weren’t great to begin with and have only gotten worse with age, so I need a larger screen. I do very little reading (in general, not of books specifically) on my phone because it’s too small and I have to zoom in and pan around all the time, etc.









  • What I’m looking to do is point out that the world isn’t ever black-and-white, that the broadly applicable standards - while I agree that they are in fact broadly applicable - are never universal, and that edge-cases exist everywhere and need to be accounted for or the world is just a worse place for everyone. I’m not saying ‘your solution must handle solve for every case’, I’m saying ‘be aware that your solution needs to be flexible enough to account the fact that the real world is messy and things are never as simple as you’d like to believe.’

    I am specifically, as you say, advocating for the use of best judgement over moral absolutes (I have heard it said, in person and online, that anyone who doesn’t put a shopping cart back no matter the reason is a shit human being, f.ex, so there are definitely people out there slinging moral absolutes on the subject of shopping carts.)





  • Most of my youtube subs are educational/informative in some way or another, so I’m gonna break it up by category a bit…

    General

    • Half as Interesting
    • Wendover Productions
    • Answer in Progress

    Religion/Philosophy

    • Religion for Breakfast
    • Esoterica
    • Bart D. Ehrman
    • PhilosophyTube
    • Wisecrack (though it’s dead as of a month ago it still has tons of great content)
    • Michael Burns (the guy who did Wisecrack, now has his own channel, though it’s more politically-oriented)
    • UsefulCharts (not exclusively religious content, but largely)
    • SatansGuide (I keep hoping they’ll make more videos like their original 2, but it’s been a year…)

    General Science:

    • Veritasium
    • Dr Ben Miles
    • Kyle Hill
    • Stand Up Maths
    • Primer

    Science Experimentation:

    • Nile Red
    • Thought Emporium
    • Styropyro
    • Tech Ingredients
    • Alpha Phoenix
    • Applied Science
    • BPS.Space

    Programming/AI:

    • Sebastian Lague (his Coding Adventure series is super fun and informative)
    • Emergent Garden
    • Code Bullet

    Engineering:

    • Practical Engineering
    • Real Engineering
    • SuperfastMatt (guy builds crazy cars for fun, love his sense of humor)

    History:

    • History Matters (great short videos on historical topics)
    • Miniminuteman/Milo Rossi (mostly archaeology and such)

    Geography:

    • Daniel Steiner
    • Map Nerd
    • Jay Foreman (Map Men is hilarious, and the rest of his stuff is pretty good too)


  • Looks like it’s time to test the waters of Lemmy. This one has generally gone over poorly on reddit every time it’s come up, so let’s find out how it does here:

    What about people who have a high degree of difficulty getting around? A good friend of mine has a herniated disc and a bunch of neurological issues as a result of a car accident he was in, he walks with one of those rolling walkers at a very slow speed grunting and groaning the entire time, and that was at the best of times. He barely manages shopping by using those electric cart things, but with all the reaching and bending he has to do, by the time he got back out to the car he was sweating like crazy and in obvious pain, even with my help. The idea of expecting someone in that situation to endure another couple minutes of horrendous pain just to make someone else’s life very slightly more convenient by bringing his cart back up to the store even from the handicapped parking spaces strikes me as absurd, but he can’t always get help with his shopping so I know he has to sometimes.

    I think rules, written or otherwise, should have exceptions to account for extreme circumstances like this, but a lot of online people just go ‘No, if you don’t bring your cart back you’re a BAD PERSON no matter what!’.





  • I just started a novel project a few weeks ago and have been using scrivener because it’s just what I saw recommended the most. But now I’ve switched to linux and have been looking for FOSS linux-native alternatives so this is perfectly timed. I tried anytype briefly but it feels like it’s designed for programmers. By which I mean it’s extremely powerful and flexible, but just doing simple shit like creating a bunch of pages in a tree structure requires an hour of hunting and watching tutorial videos.

    I like the look of novelwriter that someone else linked, gonna give that a shot.