CheezyWeezle

joined 2 years ago
[–] CheezyWeezle 5 points 2 weeks ago

I didn't see the replies to me, but the person i responded to posted the raw uncensored output of a traceroute from their computer to twitter, and I heavily suggested that they should not do that and should remove or edit their comment.

[–] CheezyWeezle 4 points 2 weeks ago

The station on Highway 97 has someone there, they've always just waved me through and said "have a nice day" i think they stop and inspect the agricultural trucks that go through there, tho.

[–] CheezyWeezle 6 points 1 month ago

I work in an extremely high level professional environment for a multi trillion dollar company.

I gotta wipe piss off the seat every damn time I go into the bathrooms here.

It doesn't matter how smart or dumb people are, piss will end up in, on, and around the places where people piss.

[–] CheezyWeezle 5 points 1 month ago

If you have only one device on Wi-Fi, multiplexing turned off, or especially if you have MU-MIMO support, Wi-Fi can be faster than a single wired connection. It is still higher latency and subject to other drawbacks such as security and power consumption, but of course it offers advantages that can outweigh the disadvantages depending on use case and user needs.

That said, it's technically not faster than the cable, but rather faster at the data link or network layer. For example, CAT8 physically supports up to 40Gbps, but most consumer and even professional electronics only support up to 2.5Gbps. Only really enterprise level switches can push up to like 100Gbps onto copper, and even then that's using QSFP transceivers, not RJ-45 connections. Fiber cables regularly push 400Gbps.

[–] CheezyWeezle 13 points 2 months ago

When WSL first came out, all the documentation i read from Microsoft led me to believe it was intended to help developers who are cross-developing software for both Linux and Windows to more easily test features and compatibility and to ensure software behaves consistently. It never seemed like they intended it to be used to run Linux programs fully and integrate into the Windows environment. It always seemed like it was just there for convenience so a smaller budget developer could develop on one machine and not need to be constantly rebooting or running VMs.

[–] CheezyWeezle 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

So, wait, you are claiming that a Windows update broke your hardware so bad you had to reinstall the firmware, but it magically worked on a linux distro? First of all, that means it wasn't "permanently stopped [from] working". Second, I hate to break it to you, but it sounds like Windows might have fucked up a setting, and then you user-errored your way into breaking things. I've never had something break that can't be fixed with a full system restore or reinstall, and it sounds like you had a problem just like that. If it worked on Linux, you could have gotten it working on Windows, too, because it's clearly a software error at that point.

[–] CheezyWeezle 10 points 3 months ago

That would violate the Treaty of Versailles

[–] CheezyWeezle 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I don't think it would have that effect at all... abolishing all nations and states would mean the massively wealthy corporations that are wealthier than most nations and states would become the de facto super powers of the world. Governments are the only thing keeping the likes of Meta, Google, Apple, nVidia, etc. From having private militaries and literally taking over the world. If you want to abolish all nations and states, you need to gut capitalism first and make sure these corporations can't just become the new and far worse government.

[–] CheezyWeezle 15 points 3 months ago (6 children)

If see a nazi sitting at a table and 10 people are at the table talking to them, you have a table with 11 nazis.

There is no tolerance for intolerance.

[–] CheezyWeezle 1 points 3 months ago

I think it would be possible to reach this conclusion. Using shorter surveys, like Google opinion surveys or something, asking people if they recognize 2-3 logos at a time, run a few hundred of those surveys over a few years and you could categorize each logo based on % of participants who recognized, anything over like 66% could be considered "generally recognizable" and then count how many generally recognizable logos you had.

 

In the comment pictured the first line is text with a hyperlink markup. The line does not wrap to fit the screen, so half of the text of that line is not visible unless I select the three dot menu, copy, and select text.

I also noticed that I cannot click on the link at all, it only expands the options for the comment.

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