Promethiel

joined 1 year ago
[–] Promethiel 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Your comment, but without irony or sarcastic pretention. What exactly do you think semantics are?

[–] Promethiel 1 points 6 days ago (3 children)

We need to return to preindustrial population levels so the animals can too.

What exactly are you proposing?

[–] Promethiel 2 points 1 week ago

What is the problem they're so pragmatically a part of? And how do you pin both the content creators needing to eat and the reasonable take of that commenter on the poor Marketing executives who care about neither but just want--actually what do they (end goal of marketing, literally, semantically) want, in your eyes while you're at it? It is their (the marketing execs) side I take it you're on, since the commenter you replied to is part of the problem and the creators do "an ad is an ad" things?

Challenge; remember capitalism exists in the world as it must as the beginning of your answer (but if you can make it vanish and it all works out by the end of the answer, that's cool too as lots of us are looking for that one).

How is that other commenter part of the problem, actually part of the problem suspect?

[–] Promethiel 12 points 1 week ago

There actually is an asterisk and most of us can see. Does this happen in your life often?

[–] Promethiel 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

The ones that straddled the divide seem to be the most versed but also the most blind to where the other generations are, particularly the newer ones.

Many of them can't navigate file systems, or use data abstractions like a simple node tree.

They live under eroding education systems and the free sharing of ideas seems under attack damn near everywhere.

Entire concepts like the idea that privacy or self determination are human rights aren't really taught and are the assumptions of those who came before to them.

They're mad and don't even know who to be mad at, all the while their every interaction is with The Algorithm, which is (are) all too happy to break down and redirect that anger towards short term gain for the few, regardless of long term societal costs for the whole.

It's not insurmountable, but it is so so much bullshit. A never ending deluge. Will the fact that some humans are always born with more than others and enough of them may develop enough critical thinking despite the points at everything be enough?

I dunno. But I worry too.

[–] Promethiel 4 points 2 weeks ago

Beware the (only) highly empathetic too, while you're at it.

Get the right (wrong) combination and you have:

Someone who can understand and read the changes they are engendering in others, adjust manipulation in real time, feel terrible about it, but be able to justify it to themselves as improving the lot of others if they genuinely lack the intelligence to comprehend the whole "you can lead a horse to water but not make it drink" adage.

Self-awareness is tragically never a guarantee; much less using it to take responsibility for shortcomings.

[–] Promethiel 6 points 3 weeks ago

Thank you for stating the obvious. I fucking hate this future where even the basics of the past are starting to seem unreal. Little gray cubes with a wide bar you push and out comes cold water from a spout at the top; used to be everywhere outdoors growing up.

[–] Promethiel 1 points 3 weeks ago
[–] Promethiel 0 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

These totally normal human beings you sound like you deify...are you their psychiatrist, psychologist, therapist, counselor? Short of those professions or a former tutor who happened to treat all three...

Well, interesting thing to devote anecdotal brain power to, I'll tell you that.

[–] Promethiel 1 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

You're like a rogue, misunderstood Guru on a journey of 'I know leave me alone, I was describing the meta-woes of seeming to carry a dearth of knowledge, not the lack itself'.

Just pointing out from a passing ship; yeah, I see the semantic headaches and agree it's a silly maritime tradition.

[–] Promethiel 2 points 4 weeks ago

You haven't experienced slow until you try to take Firefox through Google Cloud Console or Search Tools. 15 seconds in Chrome, somehow turns into 3 minutes in Firefox, funny how it does that.

[–] Promethiel 8 points 1 month ago (1 children)

This is simply because of how batteries work. We're focusing on lithium ion batteries, the most common in computing at our current point in time, and these are simplifications and not electrical engineering down to the exactest detail.

They can only hold the max charge when brand new. As they are used (charged and discharged), literal physical wear is happening within the battery (really, series of battery cells, it is not one chunk that fails at once). The capacity for the ions to "stay" on the desired side of the anode-cathode pair diminishes over time.

This is why batteries are advertised as maintaining x amount (usually 80%) after x cycles (usually 500) and why a device having a good Battery Management System (BMS) can be as important as how many mAH units a battery is rated as having.

As to why a plugged in battery suffers the same fate? Physics is cruel. A charge cycle is just defined as using an amount equal to 100% of your battery. Nothing says it has to be all at once.

A plugged-in lithium-ion battery still undergoes wear because it experiences minor discharges and recharges, contributing to charge cycles. Heat from constant charging and chemical aging also degrade the battery over time, leading to shorter battery life when eventually used unplugged.

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