turdas

joined 2 years ago
[–] turdas@suppo.fi 1 points 1 hour ago

I see you're talking about US numbers, but the US doesn't really have a state pension system in the same way that many other countries doo. Maybe that's the confusion here.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 1 points 1 hour ago (2 children)

Yes, and once boomers start dropping dead, gen Xers will be fighting tooth and nail to hold on to their slice of the state pension ponzi at the cost of everyone below them on the ladder the same as boomers did. That does not change my point at all.

There is no fair and equitable world in which state pensions can continue working the way they work now. The system was built on the expectation of infinite growth with every generation being larger than the last.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi -2 points 2 hours ago (4 children)

Neither of those are billionaires.

Gerontocracy is fundamentally an issue of the few holding more than their fair share of wealth and power at the expense of others and pulling the ladder up behind them. It is a class issue same as everything else.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 7 points 1 day ago (6 children)

Okay smart guy, but how about when you can't make them eat anything?

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Inspired by this post I spent a couple of hours today trying to set this up on my toy server, only to immediately run into what seems to be a bug where <video> tags loading a simple WebM video from right next to index.html broke because the media response got Anubis's HTML bot check instead of media.

I suppose my use-case was just too complicated.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 6 points 1 week ago (2 children)

It's kind of ironic that after complaining about prayers with many words, Jesus goes on to tell them to instead use the Lord's Prayer, which in itself is just an incredibly long-winded way of saying "hi god give me a good and virtuous life".

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 5 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Yes, KDE is a desktop environment. It's one of the "Windows-like" ones and very customizable, and arguably the most technically advanced one at the moment.

Wayland is the display server, as it is called. It's basically the back-end component that facilitates actually displaying anything on the screen. It replaced another component called X11, which was released in 1987 and had become a completely unmaintainable mess of technological debt.

Wayland took a very long time to develop and there are still some growing pains, which is why you will occasionally still see people arguing that X11 is better -- these days you should probably just ignore anyone who says that though, as the overwhelming majority of users will be much better served by Wayland than by X11.


As for what distros support it, basically every up-to-date distro (latest major version release during or after 2024) using one of the following desktop environments will default to Wayland: KDE, Gnome, COSMIC, Sway, Hyprland. Other DEs don't yet have stable Wayland support. Notably Linux Mint, a very common recommendation, is not on this list because the Cinnamon DE it uses does not yet support Wayland.

A couple of example distros mentioned in the thread and article would be Bazzite, Fedora and CachyOS. These distros all update swiftly, which is desirable because the Linux desktop is advancing very quickly at the moment. Slower-moving distros like Debian or Ubuntu LTS tend to miss out on a lot of nice new features.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 2 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I just tested it on one of my laptops running Linux Mint Debian edition 7, (Debian 13 Trixie under the hood) with the Cinnamon desktop environment running X11 and it worked perfectly also. 4K TV set as the primary monitor scaled at 150%, the laptop's screen as the secondary, 1080p at 100% scaling, applied the settings and it was completely fine.

X11 fractional scaling is not great. It may have looked fine if you only had a cursory glance, but it has many issues. "True" fractional scaling in X11 doesn't work on a per-monitor basis IIRC, instead any per-monitor fractional scaling will be a relatively simple resize operation that results in lots of blurriness.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 2 points 2 weeks ago

Well, the gospels themselves are an example of editorializing. None of the gospels are written by the disciples themselves, most if not all of them were written after all the apostles would have been dead, and it is widely agreed that two of them (Matthew and Luke) are basically fanfiction spin-offs of Mark and a second, long lost source.

To clarify, I think by the time the stories were canonized, the narrative was likely more or less established. But in the 2-3 centuries before that I expect it to have been quite varied. We have no real way of knowing either way because there are very few surviving scraps of manuscripts from that early on.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 6 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

The New Testament was written after his death too, some parts of it earlier than others. I think it's also a pretty safe bet that there was a lot of editorializing over the centuries, since AFAIK the earliest surviving copies of anything are from the 2nd or 3rd centuries CE.

[–] turdas@suppo.fi 85 points 2 weeks ago (22 children)

Jesus wouldn't quote the Bible. It was written hundreds of years after his death.

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