

At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus…
Avatar by @kyudred


At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus…


Discord-compatible (Use all your custom clients/bots with minimal changes)
I was excited at first, because I thought I could still chat with friends who won’t leave Discord.


Thanks for the archive link.
If you’re promoting Linux, I wouldn’t teach it at all.
Just show yourself doing stuff on the computer like a normal person on Windows what Windows used to be like.
The biggest hurdle for most users is (I think) the mistaken belief that Linux must be complicated.
Because the steps for Xitter were :
Even one extra step that adds friction can lead to you just not doing the thing.
Mega-corpos spend billions to reduce the number of steps to your wallet, because they make it back tenfold.


If wages stay high but the price of goods fall, companies won’t make enough profit to pay their employees.
*FTFY:
Companies won’t make enough profit to keep the investors happy and giving their CEOs billionaire compensation packages.


Update: 8 hours later, no change.
I’ll check again after 24 hours to see if Lemmy does anything.



The Linux Experiment showed content, but Coffeezilla and Louis Rossman show empty for some reason.


I am beginning to remember what made me think Jellyfin wasn’t user friendly.
Maybe it wasn’t the user interface after all.


Tl;dr:
although they can probably mitigate the effects by moving to one of their 500 houses that’s in a safe zone
That’s why they don’t care.
Climate change hits the poorest first and hardest (see: hurricanes in the Caribbean and SEA).
Billionaires can fly in, enjoy the sunshine, fly out and not get a drop of water on their skin.
And they’ll keep “outrunning” climate change on an individual level, and only feel it when it hurts their net worth*.
At which point, they’ll just re-organize their investments to exploit clean energy subsidies and real estate wherever everyone is fleeing to when the coasts flood.
There is a viable alternative to the problems raised by Bill Gates in his irate letter to computer hobbyists concerning “ripping off” software. When software is free, or so inexpensive that it’s easier to pay for it than to duplicate it, then it won’t be “stolen”.
—Jim Warren, July 1976


The last two paragraphs are tangentially about the fire, and don’t engage with the anger at all - which was the subject of the headline.
It’s like I was watching a news segment where they stop reporting and cut to a talking head who started analyzing political responses to the fire.
How much Chinese companies are donating to relief efforts and the political parallels of an election being delayed (covid before, the fire now) are tangentially related, but in my opinion, that’s no longer focused on “Anger swelling in Hong Kong over deadliest fire in more than 70 years”.


Yep. What’s considered intuitive UI changes depending on what you’re used to.
It’s why Google fought so hard to put Chromebooks in American classrooms.


I believe you. I feel that way about iTunes (trauma intensifies).
But Jellyfin doesn’t have that reputation.
Have you tried the box it came in?



TL;Dr: They want the Hong Kong leader to focus on the renovation company’s possible corruption, not the bamboo that didn’t burn.
The Hong Kong leader responded to the fire by promising to replace (traditional Hong Kong) bamboo scaffolding with (mainland China) steel, because they’re claiming it might have been an accelerant.
Residents argue that this is a distraction (most of the bamboo is still standing) from the real issue: the company doing the renovation/maintenance seems shoddy/corrupt and should be investigated.
At this point, the article gets unfocused and jumps around a lot.
By the end, she’s talking about the upcoming elections being compromised by the Chinese government.


I set up Plex on my mum’s TV and she can just push play. The UI is intuitive (read: familiar) to her.
Jellyfin has a reputation for giving users more control and customizability, but the other side of that coin is that it’s more “fiddly”.
My users don’t want to fiddle.


I’m betting 650 (PS5 Pro price), with a controller.
Any higher, and the market vanishes.
PC gamers with that much extra money can just build their own, and probably with better specs.
Console gamers will skip a v1 offering that costs more than what they’re used to, especially if their game catalog doesn’t carry over.
Okay but change European to the whole continent.
Restrictions apply*.
*
Genociders not allowed.