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wolverine876

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wolverine876
·2 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Interesting. What would it take to write the driver? Also, is Plan 9 maintained sufficiently?
wolverine876
·2 tahun yang lalu·discuss
What I meant was simpler OSes like BSDs, as you discuss in the edit, or Linux stripped down to networking essentials.
wolverine876
·2 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> as close to stock Debian as possible

Is there an OS or another Linux distribution that matches Debian's performance in this respect, without the complexity of an entire Linux system? Could Debian be stripped down (and then how are updates applied)?
wolverine876
·2 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> They'd still be able to see that you talked to him.

Signal has no access to metadata, including participants in a conversation. All they know is the date of account creation and the date of the last connection.

However, if they got access to Navalni's phone, then they of course can see everything Navalni can.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> Because they found the one and not the other.

Agreed. That means there is something wrong with our discovery mechanisms.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
There are lots of risks, and those are not at all the largest ones. The entire world relies on international agricultural trade and it's never been better fed.

One reason is that the resources are much greater - if one place has a bad year, another can have a good year. Also, each location can produce what it does best, what its land, capital, skills, and infrastructure best support. Then other locations do what they do best, and we get the most economical, the best of everything.

Economic nationalism is, among other things, a ruse by some businesses to monopolize markets (not having competition) and get subsidized by the public.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Maybe it's both. Western countries have long protected their domestic agricultural industries (while calling for free trade for the products they want to export).
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> I've talked to people who are from Nigeria/Ghana or have visited there and they pointed out issues with his narrative. But most people who read Matt's blog have never been to these places, so they take everything as 100% accurate.

It's interesting that people read a blog by a someone who visited for 10 days, instead of someone who has lived there their entire lives or otherwise has far more experience.

The author even starts by disclaiming interest in calling them by their name or good knowledge of their language (French), showing that he doesn't seem to consider the impression that gives to readers.

(Note – The Ivory Coast is so French in culture and temperament that it insists on officially being called “Côte d’Ivoire.” But I don’t know how to make that accent on my keyboard and I don’t feel like copy-and-pasting the name over-and-over, so I’m just going to call it the “Ivory Coast.”)
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Both those solutions are failures, but they aren't at all the only options (look at HN, for example). On a certain scale, public social forums need effective moderators.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
> Nobody gets kicked out by brownshirts for expressing their view.

Who kicks out the actual brownshirts? I and most people have no interest in trolling.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
If Usenet's requirements haven't increased in a 2-3 decades, and in its moribund state I expect they haven't, then it should be trivial to run Usenet servers on almost any device, at least in terms of resources.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Also, not everyone lies with the same frequency. Some do reflexively, some hardly ever, and there's everyting in between.

It's like saying all programmers write buggy code, so they are all the same.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
You can watch it on free digital broadcast, with a $30 antenna.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
That is a weak justification, commonly used by criminals. A liar might say, 'everyone lies'; honest people don't say it. Unless we are engaging in a very philsophical discussion (possible on HN), we don't need to explain the problem in detail.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Is there somewhere that documents this history? My understanding is that the current interpretation is a new(ish) idea promulgated by the NRA, etc. starting around 1980.

The Bill of Rights point seems like a long stretch.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Yes, and even your own inventory: Are you really going to kill another human being over a TV?
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
If it was in the job description, you'd be a police officer.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I've been to community meeting with neighbors complaining about drunk bar customers urinating, sleeping, barfing on their lawns; making noise late into the night; fighting; etc.

About security specifically, bar fights are a cliche and alchohol makes people violent. Are we going to pretend that isn't an issue?
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
The Second Amendment is centuries old. The current interpretation of it is only a decade or two old. For centuries before that, other interpretations prevailed - the oddball is the current radical one.

If one more person tells me 'the ship has sailed' or some other hopeless cliche of the moment - yes, the smart trend of the moment is despair! - about anything .... The radical gun people sure don't think that way, and their positions are obvious, absurd horsecrap. The only problem is you (and many like you) quitting.
wolverine876
·3 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Also, people don't want to shoot other people or kill them.