amio

joined 1 year ago
[–] amio 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

They should, but won't. The Lemmy people (or at least devs) aren't exactly apolitical, more's the great big whopping pity. Also downvoting is unlikely to do shit, I would suggest blocking it. I moved to lose .ml, grad, hexbear, slrpnk immediately and this place is so much better for it.

[–] amio 4 points 2 months ago

It's more of a permanent flooding situation, but, well, election year. I just block shit that gets to be a nuisance - some instances are entirely devoted to shrill screeching, some have legitimately decent communities that just aren't worth the astroturfing/doomposting/negativity/politics/malicious management/people being twats or 100 other reasons. None of it's missed, except it shows how much of a ghost town this is when you remove the ragebait.

I lost my (several pages long) blocklist in the kbin.run disappearance, Lemmy actually having instance blocking does a lot to make it easier to build back up. I do wish blocking an instance also blocked its users, which doesn't seem like the case.

[–] amio 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I think the oldest thing I've played is mostly just NES stuff. Some of those will have been ported arcade titles or whatever, otherwise it's plain ol' SMB1 (1985, I think). I still play SMB3 ('88) quite often.

[–] amio 4 points 2 months ago

No, they're pretty much just dumb. In tech, this works along hype cycles where there's gotta be some new thing all the fucking time, and it cures what ails ya and is perfect for every case. This mostly involves taking any actual merits of [new tech] and blowing them way out of proportion and context, making it the best thing since sliced bread. This invariably makes people invest because hype is more important than making sense. When the cycle for that particular tech winds down into the Trough of Disillusionment, a new one shows up.

[–] amio 1 points 2 months ago

In canon (hue hue) nah, "God did it" which explains anything.

[–] amio 5 points 1 year ago

Vagal tone, is the technical answer. A nerve (vagus) runs through your body and, among other things, slows the heart. When straining to "void", you cause that nerve to activate more strongly. It's also related to the Valsalva maneuver.

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