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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2023

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  • Another thing of course is that the banks are unhappy with not getting their share in money laundering, crime investments and tax evasion, like they do with government currencies. Cryptocurrencies could also democratize organized crime and not just leave it to the established ties between politics, banks and existing crime groups.

    I’m not sure that “cryptocurrencies make it much easier for criminals to launder money, finance criminal enterprises, evade taxes and for organized crime to funnel dark money and into politics and corrupt politicians” is the kind of pro-cryptocurrency argument you seem to imply it is.


  • That’s some incredibly bad reporting and fuzzy math presented as facts:

    The contract stipulates the creation of over 100,000 units of 155-mm ammunition via Expal, a Spanish company Rheinmetall recently acquired in November 2022 for a hefty sum of 1.2 billion euros.

    Other, more credible reports state that the order is for several hundreds of thousands of DM121 shells - meaning the math here could be easily off by a factor of three or more.

    Even Rheinmetall’s own website states that the order is for several hundreds of thousands of shells.

    Which would mean that these shells would cost about as much as they always have, and maybe even significantly less.







  • Many “tech journalists” are about as old as Facebook.

    When they started using devices, the iPhone had been around for years, and the only discussion platforms they ever knew where centralized platforms with millions and millions of users run by mega corporations. In their personal life experience, Reddit has always just existed, they’ve never known a world without YouTube, Snapchat is what they used when they were little kids, TikTok had been around long enough that’s it’s considered an established media outlet.

    They’ve never seen a Usenet group, they’ve never had accounts on phpbb forums. Choosing a smaller platform with a more selective userbase just doesn’t exist in their reality.



  • Yeah, I get that, and hypothetically you could just use a mobile device for text creation, using your preferred method of inputting text (e.g. a swipe keyboard, or a stylus with text recognition, etc.) on the mobile device and then send it all to the desktop.

    I asked about that, and I didn’t get a definitive answer. The conversation was more like:

    “You don’t get it, we grew up with touchscreen devices, physical keyboards are outdated.”

    “So do you use voice to text or something?”

    “No! You don’t get it. We grew up with mobile devices!

    “But… How do you enter text!?”

    “Nobody cares about your typewriting skills!!”

    They stared at me.

    I stared back.

    The generational gap felt like the Grand Canyon.


  • I’ve had conversations with young people who started work in an office environment that required a lot of text editing/text creation, and they didn’t know how to type on a keyboard.

    Their opinion was that typing on a physical keyboard was an outdated skill that just wasn’t required any more.

    I asked them if they used voice-to-text or some other input method instead, and they said no.

    Are that point, I just talked away, because I didn’t have any polite follow-up questions, and we simply didn’t seem to speak the same language.


  • Barely.

    It doesn’t even have to be easily replaceable as in: on the go, so that I can switch out batteries during the day. That’s really not important to me.

    It just has to be user replaceable, so that I can switch it out at home, with normal tools, when the battery has degraded so much that the phone becomes unusable.

    As things are, i have to throw a disproportionate amount of money at some shop to switch out a $10 part, or risk breaking the screen and digitizer when I disassemble the phone with a suction cup and hot gun, just so I can get at the glued down battery.

    That’s just ridiculous to me.