aebletrae [she/her]

  • 2 Posts
  • 42 Comments
Joined 3 年前
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Cake day: 2023年7月23日

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  • No, absolutely not. Someone else suggested meeting people in the middle. I am not. Never accept the liberal smears that right wingers are the stupid ones. The most clueless people in politics call themselves ‘centrists’.

    I quite specifically limited my approach to “people who could be won over”. Obviously the fascists cannot be won over. But propaganda exists, and people who are capable of being better people are influenced by it. None of us are immune. So we need to counter that, and telling everyone who isn’t already on our side that they will forever be our enemy is incredibly counter productive.

    What I am saying is that Pacman Theory is not a thing. You cannot push people away and expect them to pop up behind you and have your back. If you tell someone that they are right wing while others are telling them it’s good to be right wing, you are not going to change their mind.

    Now maybe you think that’s not a problem, that we can just get rid of them. Bad news: the numbers are not on our side. We need numbers, and the only source is terrible. That sucks, no argument. But it is also reality, I’m afraid.

    We absolutely should not coddle liberals. We should insist that their ideas are stupid and dangerous, that they should get better ones, and—hey, wouldn’t you just know it—I have some that I can give you, for the low, low cost of being the better person you know you want to be.

    We should not welcome them with open arms until they can be better people. But we really, really shouldn’t push them into the open arms of the right, because that’s how you actually enable fascism.

    “Coddle my feelings so I might give a fuck about your human rights and stop enabling fascism”

    I used exactly the same approach in my original comment: you are correct; the tactical ideas should be changed.

    Did you feel coddled?

    GTFOH

    Probably not.


  • It is not enough to be correct. You also have to be smart. And telling people who could be won over that actually, no, you’re not on our side, you’re one of them—“you are Right Wing”—is a monumentally stupid opening move.

    Stop telling people they are right wing. A lot of people—especially those most susceptible to right-wing rhetoric—think that who they are is fixed. Instead, insist that they are people who want the best for others (even if you don’t think that’s true enough yet). Tell them that they’re dragging around the anchors of right wing ideology, and that if they want things to be better, those ideas—which harm most people for the benefit of an unscrupulous few—should and can be left behind.

    You’re still not going to win very often, but at least you aren’t throwing the game immediately.



  • The output here lets us know that systemd is running the service file and starting the script just fine. The echoed GPU temperature is making it to the journal, but the gpuTemp variable isn’t being updated (staying at 0) because of a problem executing nvidia-settings. Specifically, it wants a display: “The control display is undefined”.

    You could add a line to the service file:—

    Environment = DISPLAY=:0

    Although if echo DISPLAY in your terminal gives you a different value, use that. There’s a possibility that that will just push one error further down the line, but it’s something to try.

    Alternatively/additionally, you could try changing the User= line to your own username to see if it picks up the environment your manual executions work with.

    You aren’t the only one to run into problems trying to automate nvidia-settings. You might end up needing to track down an Xauthority file or use the display manager’s initialisation options.


  • If you had a book which had on its Contents page:

    Chapter 1 . . . . . . . . . . page 1

    and you crossed it out, then wrote:

    Chapter 1 . . . . . . . . . . page 1

    Chapter 2 . . . . . . . . . . page 50

    someone looking for Chapter 1 is still going to find all the text in the right place (as long as it was less than 50 pages).

    Changing the partitition table is like changing the Contents page; it doesn’t mess with the rest of the data. And if the new table points to the same place it did before, the data can still be found.

    That said, if the filesystem still thinks it’s 1TB, you may end up with future problems unless you resize it to fit the reduced partition.







  • “Instance” seems too jargon-y to me as well, and “proxy” is even worse. “Server” and “host” are probably a little more familiar, but are still technical language.

    Confusion doesn’t stem from individual words; people need explanations and examples, but, as an alternative to “instance”, if you want to extend the “communities” metaphor, then “society” as a cluster of communities is a natural option, particularly since it relates to the widely understood concept of social media. Since most people using the Internet also know what a web “site” is, you could use the sibilant linguistic association to help cement the notion:—

    Each society has its own web site, such as:

    • aussie.zone, where the communities relate to Australia;
    • programming.dev, where the communities discuss software development;
    • and lemmy.film, where the communites are about movies.

    You can choose which society you want to join, although some will ask you to fill out an application. Most societies have connections to others, meaning that you can discuss things with people who are part of different societies. Often, you’ll recognise them by their username saying that they’re at (@) another site. Not all societies get along with one another, so which one you join will also affect who you can talk with.

    Each society has its own rules it expects you to follow, whether you are a member of that society or just visiting.

    This kind of language seems more intuitive to me anyway, although when I’ve tried describing instances and federation before now, I’ve likened instances to countries:—

    You choose somewhere to live (and you can move later if you want). If there’s a cross-border agreement, then you can send messages back and forth between people in each place.

    but this has also meant stressing that your instance “country” doesn’t have to match where you physically live, so a more general term probably would have been more useful.


  • This is far from a complete answer, but it might at least get past that initial objection, if they’re willing to listen to you.

    Under capitalism, the unscrupulous do not take advantage of the system, they take advantage of people who have little room to object because the system purposely denies them self-determination. A poor individual who tries to escape their exploitation risks homelessness and starvation, while the exploiter who fails is usually free to try again.

    Under a system that protects everyone, however, the unscrupulous lack leverage over others, who can safely refuse to go along with their schemes. Without the imbalance of power, corruption is made inherently more difficult.

    If you’re prepared to also discuss prison abolition, etc., you might also add that, beyond that, societies already have mechanisms for protecting themselves in the form of laws and consequences for crimes. Each society’s responses may be different, and need not be as inhumane as those we’re familiar with now, and so on.








  • For someone seemingly so eager to try out new distros, I’m surprised you haven’t mentioned virtual machines. If the vibes are off, it’s a whole lot less disruptive to find out that way.

    Your experience with drivers won’t be quite the same as a bare-metal installation, but checking out software shouldn’t be a problem.