[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 22 points 8 months ago

The headline about the mayor of New York ordering the NYPD to shoot floodwater if it doesn’t disperse was funnier.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 17 points 9 months ago

Compared to those pain points building a modern PC should be a breeze. CPUs go in Zero Insertion Force sockets so as long as you remember to lift the little lever you won’t bend any pins. People don’t even wear static discharge wrist bands anymore (all though it couldn’t hurt) or worry about shorting things out. And power connectors only fit one way unlike the AT power connector.

Speaking of breeze your only pain point might be making sure you have enough air circulation for cooling all that gear.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 16 points 9 months ago

He ran out the clock for the rape charge against him in Sweden? What a scumbag.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 11 points 9 months ago

We don’t have a lot of records of what speakers of the Proto-Indo-European language were thinking because they lived c. 4500-2500 BC and didn’t have their own writing. I think the for the earliest writing we have of an Indo-European language gendered nouns had already been invented.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 18 points 9 months ago

I think he just didn’t exist when he “left”. Their rings don’t summon him from another place, they form him. When the mission is over, he ceases to be. There was an episode where the fire guy goes back in time and prevents himself from getting his ring and creates an alternate timeline where Captain Planet never existed at all, because the other planeteers can’t “cast” him without fire.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 10 points 9 months ago

Some of them are, some are not. Probably most are not, I think the overall probability of “doing OK” is less than 50%.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 11 points 9 months ago

We don’t just use capitalism to distribute information. There are free libraries all over the U.S. It’s possible to learn most of what knowledge-workers need to know for free. Then you can seek employment for using what you know and not your physical labor.

But also, economists consider humans to have infinite wants. Certainly society as a whole has infinite wants. So no matter what resources we extract from the environment, society always wants more, which creates scarcity, which creates markets, which, in a free society, creates capitalism.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 25 points 9 months ago

So a post-information-scarcity society. It means something else with different word-order.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 94 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

Yes, ha ha, but Arabic Numerals, with a capital N, refers to ٠ ١ ٢ ٣ ٤ ٥ ٦ ٧ ٨ ٩ that’s 9 through 0 read left-to-right because Arabic is written right-to-left. While you can see how the West adopted numerals based on Arabic ones eight hundred years ago (thanks to Fibonacci), we only call them Arabic numerals, with a lowercase n, to distinguish them from the Roman numerals we were historically using. Today they aren’t really Arabic anymore, and I don’t know why you’d learn Arabic Numerals unless you were learning to read and write Arabic.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 34 points 9 months ago

Are you American? Because I seem to recall between five and ten years ago a particular event that changed the way we ran a lot of the government.

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 81 points 10 months ago

Pretty sure the U.S. Code says it means to act or incite to act against the authority of the United States. Such as the authority of the United States says it’s time for Congress to count and certify electoral votes, and you try to stop it from doing so. https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2383

[-] aesc@lemmy.sdf.org 39 points 10 months ago

That is the book that is very critical and severe toward the United States. I think the problem is that that book was written as a counterpoint to the history of the United States we learn in secondary school. If you haven’t learned U.S. history from a U.S. high school history textbook, it is going to feel unbalanced, prejudiced, because you are not the target audience, who has grown up with an uncritical, unbalanced, prejudiced but in the other way, curriculum. I would imagine a book by a European scholar of U.S. history would have more potential to give a neutral outside but critical point of view.

view more: next ›

aesc

joined 10 months ago