hellofriend

@hellofriend@lemmy.world

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

hellofriend,

Snap annoys the piss outta me because of the forced updates. That said, never ever had a snap package not work for me. Whereas installing some things from apt just doesn’t work for whatever reason.

Would it be possible to install Linux on this HP Chromebook Plus?

This is the laptop in question. It has an x86 processor so basically any distro should work on it. However, it is still a Chromebook which likely means Google fuckery in the BIOS. But it’s great value for the money (can get it $300 off at Costco) and if I can plop Linux on to it then I’d love it.

hellofriend,

Hm, website indicates that it should work but that there may be no audio. Might be a no-go then :(

hellofriend,

Lol, I wish I could but that level of programming is beyond my abilities.

hellofriend,

Lmao, these are Canadian dollars, remember. Either way, it’s $300 cheaper at Costco than the price listed on HP.

hellofriend,

Yikies, I imagine adult toys have seen some shit

hellofriend,

Both war and environmental catastrophes existed prior to capitalism…

hellofriend,

Problems that have been created by capitalism

It’s literally right there.

hellofriend,

Cause then we’d be thinking we’re monkeys on a spherical rock in a vacuum instead of calibrating clocks to a radioactive element to make sure everyone tunes in to wheel of fortune on time while this oblate spheroid tumbles around

Just a little sodium chloride

hellofriend,

If you want Linux apps on your phone, wouldn’t you have to have a compat layer a la WINE except that it’s for x86->ARM rather than Windows->Linux? Wouldn’t that make using Linux apps unattractive due to the overhead slowing them down? Plus, wouldn’t devs have to implement a mobile mode for GUI apps for this to be a good UX? Not trying to bash the idea, just curious about how it would practically work.

hellofriend,

Most sorceresses in that universe enhance their beauty/youthfulness with magic. Most sorcerers do not because they’re taken more seriously as they age. It’s essentially a commentary on what each gender derives power from. Yennefer is like 80 years old by the time the main story begins.

hellofriend,

Not sure where you’re getting that from. As far as I know none of the sorceresses’ familial backgrounds are explored aside from Yennefer’s. Either in the Netflix show, the books, or the games. Additionally, magical ability is exceedingly rare and not confined to the nobility. The chances of the majority of the sorceresses being from noble families is extremely low.

hellofriend,

Honestly trying to figure out if they’re an LLM or not

hellofriend,

That creates a weird power dynamic where the state could potentially withhold subsidies if it doesn’t like what is published. Furthermore, it would provide an easy source of revenue to news and media corporations that are already established and entrenched since they already have the funds to easily handle all the paperwork that would be involved. Additionally, Postmedia accounts for at least 33% of the market by revenue. This is owned by a primarily American corporation. Subsidizing Postmedia would effectively be giving Canadian money to foreign corporations.

What I think needs to happen on a policy-level is that foreign ownership of news media needs to be curtailed and protections must be put in place to prevent larger companies from buying local newspapers. The current players in the news industry need to be broken up. But this isn’t something I can change, nor is it even likely, so there’s no sense talking about it. I’d much rather focus on something I can do myself to incentivize people to buy a publication.

hellofriend,

Here’s my case for keeping housing prices high: the rich are largely insulated from fluctuations of the market. If housing prices drop then what’s left of the middle class will be destroyed. Then the rich will come in to pick its corpse. Property will be concentrated even more in the hands of the rich and given 20 years we’ll be in a worse position than before. I think what we need is to slowly increase housing supply while financially weakening the owner class. Eventually, housing prices will come down but the rich won’t be able to buy all of it. But shocking the system in the short term will prevent any average Canadian from owning property ever again. We’ll have to weather the storm for a while but things will get better. But I’m not a rocket economist, so feel free to refute this.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • fightinggames
  • All magazines