laverabe

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] laverabe 1 points 5 months ago

same here, I looked it up: TED talk link and post on rddt.

God that was 14 years ago...

[–] laverabe 1 points 5 months ago

test comment #3

[–] laverabe 1 points 5 months ago

test comment, please ignore

[–] laverabe 2 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Yeah it was posted to /c/politics and actually pinned for a few days. Had a lot of traffic from that while it was up but no regular posters. The problem was though there was a lot of pro Russia trolls and aggressive commenters. If it's going to grow it needs to be reeeeeal slow, so I can't really post about it much.

[–] laverabe 2 points 5 months ago (3 children)

I've kept at several, no one submits posts even after several weeks of submitting starter posts. It's just very difficult. People just seem to like the status quo because it's easier. I had to give up on [email protected] because almost no one was posting but me for an entire month, well that and plus I just ran out of things to post.

Trying [email protected] now, I'll probably keep at that since public policy is a huge personal interest. It's had some activity but it's like trying to run up an escalator backwards with a 100lb pack blindfolded and drugged. lol. /c/politics even added it on the sidebar and there is almost no posts except mine. Posted links in several other communities including /c/newcommunities .

It's just hard, not sure why my above comment was downvote so much. It's hard, not impossible, but hard. I feel like it would benefit Lemmy if the devs were to modify the algorithm to promote rising new communities over existing ones to even the playing field. They tried with scaled sort, but I don't think people use it much.

[–] laverabe -4 points 5 months ago (15 children)

It is near impossible to start a new community. The Lemmy code primarily favors existing large communities, and it needs to change to heavily promote new communities over existing.

[–] laverabe 17 points 5 months ago (19 children)

It doesn't take a genius to see this tit-for-tat is just going to continue and amplify each time. Strike, bigger counterstrike, rinse & repeat. Without a doubt Israel's next strike is likely going to be the biggest we've seen yet.

Honestly, and I don't think it's hyperbole, but I think there is nothing in the current environment that is going to prevent a full-scale total war in the middle east, possibly even beyond that.

I hope I'm wrong.

[–] laverabe 2 points 5 months ago

Yeah I agree. 2028 was prefaced under the possible scenario where trump wins and we somehow still have a functioning election in 4 years.

[–] laverabe 4 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

This is not that unexpected. There hasn't been much excitement in the democratic party since 2016 when Sanders movement was stampled. Young voters are still progressive, but there has been no good ringbearer.

Reality check: The youngest age group still appears to favor liberal positions on some issues as much as those ages 25 to 29, Anil Cacodcar, the student chair of the Harvard Youth Poll, noted.

In a poll earlier this year, the younger group was just as likely to say basic health insurance is a human right and government should spend more to reduce poverty.

[–] laverabe 3 points 5 months ago

It works. Every weekday, all across America, people get into their cars and drive to or from work listening to the radio; as the nation’s largest statistics organization, Statista, notes, “During an average week in September 2020, radio reached 90.9 percent of all American men aged between 35 and 64 years of age.”

Radio engages, persuades, and informs — and, when done right, builds trust. And the first rule of politics is that trust wins elections.

In politics, just a few points usually decides winners and losers — and talk radio has reliably delivered that incremental edge to the GOP for three decades.

Democrats must get into the talk-radio game. As the old saying goes, “You can’t win if you don’t play.”

[–] laverabe 4 points 5 months ago (2 children)

I suppose it’s considered acceptable for the Polish people to suffer like that for the sake of the state interests of Poland and The League of Nations, but personally I disagree, which is why I want the war to end. I personally don’t see how continued fighting is meant to benefit the average Pole.

Because dictators use the new land for continued invasions while exterminating the non compliant population. War is a better condition to be under fighting for freedom, than the conditions of the Holocaust and complete despair.

 

top voted desired small community per a recent informal 'poll'.

8
dirt re-organizer (cnhi-p-001-delivery.sitecorecontenthub.cloud)
 
 
50
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by laverabe to c/asklemmy
 

Particularly one that you personally would like to post/comment in on a regular basis

 

The launch date of Artemix II for a 4 astronaut flyby of the moon is planned for September of next year (2025).

Do you think NASA will be able to make this date? (https://www.nasa.gov/event/artemis-ii-launch/)

It's a very exciting time to see something like this, something humans haven't done for 50 years.

And as a matter of historical significance, this will be the furthest humans have ever travelled from Earth. We've existed for 300,000 years (homo sapiens), and no human has ever gone as far from this rock as these 4 people are about to do.

39
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by laverabe to c/linux
 

I'm kinda a newbie to linux (...going on 20 years now, slow learner). I recently came across tldr and don't know how I lived without it, because man pages can be a little much for a non technical person.

Is there a helpfile / command to learn the purpose of the current root directory you are in? I've been reading a few books on Linux at the library, and everything about it kinda fascinates me, and I can't stop asking questions trying to learn about it...

My current question is what is /etc/skel/ . It's an empty directory and it has some purpose. Is there a tool to query what the purpose of this directory is? Like whatis . or something like that, for educational purposes; rather than having to web search/"google" it everytime.

 

We currently have Roku's on our tvs to connect to streaming services and servers but they are infested with advertisements.

Some other comments mentioned Walmart's $20 ONN 4k boxes, but these are android and I don't have the time or knowledge/patience to go through the flashing process on one of those; if there is even a working custom ROM.

Basically we just want a functioning (libre) streaming box. The closest I could find was OSMC's Vero V (just released a few months ago), although it's a little pricey at $160 usd. Are there any other options out there or does anyone have any experience with the Vero V?

49
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by laverabe to c/linux
 

command line aliases to make repeated processes quicker. I've used them in the past and on specific programs but never on command line utilities.

like for instance with Debian, I'm repeatedly typing sudo apt-get install, so I aliased it: alias sagi="sudo apt-get install" and it works pretty good.

Are there any best practices or aliases to avoid when using them? Other than known commands obviously. Are there popular alias lists out there?

 

I have a few external hard drives that are connected over USB for backup storage. I power them down when not in use because it unnecessarily uses power and adds wear to the drives.

After a couple power downs on the drives they started to give an audible sort of heavy 'clunk', not too loud, just seemed louder than a hard drive should be.

I ran SMART scans and found that 'Power-off Retract Count' is at 4 (above 100 drive should be taken out of service) on a brand new drive.

I searched for several hours on forums to the cause of the emergency retracts. It appears that gnome does not power down the device after it is ejected. Several other people had the same issue and there didn't seem to be any real resolution other than to run:

udisksctl power-off -b /dev/sdX

or to open gnome-disks and to manually power down the drive after ejecting.

Is there a way to make right clicking on the drive to eject automatically also power down the drive? This seems like a major issue that one of the more popular DEs method of ejecting hard drives is so destructive.

view more: ‹ prev next ›