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cassepipe

4,233 karmajoined 6 lat temu

Submissions

Open Repair Data Standard

openrepair.org
162 points·by cassepipe·w zeszłym miesiącu·13 comments

Editing changes in patch format with Jujutsu

knifepoint.net
59 points·by cassepipe·4 miesiące temu·11 comments

The Housing Debate Is Finally Catching Up to Reality

strongtowns.org
6 points·by cassepipe·5 miesięcy temu·3 comments

Against Bravery Debates (2013)

slatestarcodex.com
2 points·by cassepipe·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Portable Systemd Services

systemd.io
2 points·by cassepipe·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by cassepipe·8 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Yaks Big. Razors Bigger

pijul.org
1 points·by cassepipe·10 miesięcy temu·0 comments

comments

cassepipe
·13 godzin temu·discuss
Hell I am not even in the rust community (rust never clicked for me) but I went many times on the rust subreddit and the responses were overall quite thoughtful and non-partisan
cassepipe
·13 godzin temu·discuss
> I want to make the terminal a special place for applications. The PTY’s in-band signalling (an unstructured byte stream with escape sequences) is a big problem. The Nushell ecosystem tries to fix it with another layer, but we need a fundamental improvement. Many people dislike the Microsoft ecosystem, but PowerShell gets a lot right with structured data.

I wish they would say more. The little nushell I used was a real pleasure to work with but they seem to imply there are limitations to the approach (one more layer ?). It seems the model to emulate is powershell but what does powershell do better than nushell ? I though it was essentially the same approach
cassepipe
·przedwczoraj·discuss
Hypothetically, I could hear arguments about it being unhealthy maybe if was shown science that supports it but immoral ?

How can something that is done by two consenting adults for their own enjoyment be immoral ?

EDIT:

> regardless of the genders involved

Interesting, so you actually went out of your way to not be confused with other homophobic discourse, I wonder why. Is what's immoral to you not making babies each time you have sex ?
cassepipe
·przedwczoraj·discuss
Poster seems to believe that a good heuristics to evaluate the truthfulness of a statement is how challenging it is to your worldview or feelings. It intuitively makes sense to the social part of the brain since living among other humans constrains our discourse and prevent us from sharing what we feel is the truth yet the logical error seems to be that any discourse that does not respect the feelings/worldview of a given audience is more truthful.

It doesn't help that people generally advance the "only truth hurts" argument after they receive pushback on a statement trying to inflict their "truth" to others and rarely to share the experience of changing their own mind after by accepting a truth that is emotionally costly for the self
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
Ok, so pushback is the same as being disallowed, got it. No wonder you people have such a victim complex.
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
> Would you also tell that to native American Indians? Or to the Japanese? Or to the Indians?

If they were saying to me what you wrote that $big_chunk_of_land "is the land that housed, fed and scarified my ancestors, is my house, not this supra-governmental corrupt bureaucratic institution called" $state_institution, I would laugh them off, yes
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
Amazing, you even support autarky in debating
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
Oh, you're just noticing are you ? Who are those people who are "disallowing" you from calling your land your land ? How do you handle living under such oppression ?

Just come out of the woods will you

It turns out people don't like to be invaded, yes, simple as. Of course you would very much like to convince everyone that immigration is just the same as an invasion and thus, the same way to deal with it is justified. So just say so instead of dancing around and posing as the victim.
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
I think less because I am not an african myself but yes, I guess it could ?

Can you provide me with some example of something that you think I would not disapprove of and that amounts the exactly the same thing ?

Or maybe can you try to defend the blood and soil rethoric (call it the way you want) instead of a drive-by comment ?
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Football_War

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paquisha_War

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cenepa_War

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beagle_conflict

And that's not counting the Falklands war because Britain doesn't feel like it belong in the neighborhood but it's still an invasion of sovereign territory out of nationalistic motives

I'll grant none of those was a major conflict and that it's an interesting case but still. Maybe the fact that apart from Brazil, they have a language in common makes it harder to sell the neighbour as a foreigner ? What else could it be ? I am genuinely curious
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
> Taking away people's privacy and freedom of speech is a little more problematic than just "a little bureaucracy"

I mean yes but it is ultimately your framing. It's concerning and worth being fought against but no worse that what US was, is or has tried to do, and despite the corrupt buffoon at its head right now, it is not a dictatorship yet. What we need is a good balance of powers and well-designed institutions, and not as you suggested, to destroy it.

> That WAS an achievement in the past, but if you dissolve the EU institution tomorrow, no former EU member state will suddenly got to war with their neighbour just because the EU doesn't exist anymore. So the myth that the EU is preventing war in EU is bogus. That was history, this is today.

Fair enough but that does not warrant the use of the past, it IS an achievement. Also, give it time and history will do its thing. Remove the EU and, sooner or later, war will come back. The same way that if you remove the counter-powers, tyranny will come back

EDIT: You added this part about in response to my blood and soil line afterwards:

> It's no BS unless you've been brainwashed and make massive efforts to ignore reality. Blood based tribalism and ingroup preference is hardwired in every culture and society on the planet, from Asia to the Americas. NA, UK, AU, NZ, and the EU just have added a lot of PR paint on top to pretend it doesn't exist in their liberal societies, but it does except it's much more under the table and subversive.

Interesting how people seem to think reality is on their side and people who think otherwise must have been brainwashed.

Anyways, is it hardwired or is it "soft" wired ? Are we only responding to our wiring or did we manage to create cultures around it or are we condemned to an endless loop of prewired behaviours ?

Sexual desire is also "hardwired" in us and yet we finally managed to no rape each other based on dominance hierarchies. Is that the kind of society you are looking forward to ? One based on some kind of supposedly natural order ?

Yes tribalism does exist, we know what kind of world it produces. It's utter shit. Poverty and misery for everyone but the people at the top.

I swear you people are so bored that you cannot appreciate the sheer amount of material wealth you are effing bathing in. You dream of an heroic past that never existed where you get to be the hero.

Ha the times where being a man with no other skills than violence could get you riches ! Let's conveniently forget about most people, living under the boot in a life of injustice and life-threatening poverty.
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
I believe k and q are member of the "array programming"/APL family of languages who are exceptionally terse/information-dense

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Array_programming

EDIT: Did someone downvoted this because it is wrong or is someone I am arguing with rage-downvoted this ?
cassepipe
·3 dni temu·discuss
Let's stop the blut and soil BS right here. I am all for european panationalism but don't pretend that Europe is "your house" where "your ancestors" were. You come from a very specific culture inside it which has its own specific language and traditions and that has spent most its history warring with its neighbours, sometimes people in the next village speaking a different version of your lanuage. My ancestors and your ancestor probably scarified each other, the land didn't

Turns out unifying a lot of different countries that have different languages and interest is a hard problem and in order to satisfy everyone a little bureaucracy is the price to pay. You may find it too bloated, too slow or even too corrupt but burning it to the ground is a lunacy for people who entertain clean slate delusions: Whenever it happens, it is a catastrophy for everyone but a few opportunists.

Europe is imperfect but it has rejected the idea of war outside of itself. I don't think any European citizen would go to war with their neighbour. Just that is an amazing achievement. Now it can stay an economic union and big powers can pick and choose how to manipulate each one of us for their own purposes or it can strive to be a political union and have a standing on the international stage. We're not there yet but we will, eventually, we just need to hang tight. Things take time.
cassepipe
·10 dni temu·discuss
I don't think it's a grenade unless you are implicitly trying to mean it that life begins before birth, which ultimately is a definition game since it's actually quite hard to define life, hard enough that calling it "life" is a matter of personal worldview. I personally think it's quite reasonable to exclude pre-birth "deaths" from life expectancy, or event infant deaths sometimes, depending on what you are trying to measure.

In any case I didn't know this number and it's quite relevant to the discussion of how much we got rid of natural selection.
cassepipe
·11 dni temu·discuss
The first image is telling: A glass building in front of a white hard-floor plaza with just one small tree for shade

Nothing specific to the European commission though, we just don't hate mainstream architects enough
cassepipe
·11 dni temu·discuss
Are you speaking from the perspective of US law or are you familiar with belgian law ?
cassepipe
·11 dni temu·discuss
Could be but I am not sure belgian law is as trigger-happy with the whole trespassing thing. I wouldn't be surprised that lying to the police about someone being a threat in order to remove them form the private event you have invited them to would be a clear cut case
cassepipe
·11 dni temu·discuss
IIRC it is why some people defending captain Dreyfus urged him not to accept a pardon
cassepipe
·11 dni temu·discuss
Zig was the first to appear on my radar. I believe I saw Andrew's first (?) talk called the "The road to Zig 1.0" where he communicated his vision very clearly in a way that must have sounded like the promise of the holy land for C programmers who were stuck in C hellscape. Maybe it was even an earlier video where he talked after a rust talk but it was essentially the same message.

Maybe the best marketing is to establish your vision and stick to it over the years ?

In any case c3 didn't exist, I had never stumbled on a talk of Odin's creator and its syntax seemed more foreign (I only knew C back then) so I started rooting for zig. Even though it's not 1.0 yet, zig seems more ambitious (incremental compilation ! comptime ! translate-c ! logical bitcasting !) and committed to the vision of C companion/replacement. That for me is enough to still be hyped ten years after.
cassepipe
·22 dni temu·discuss
> That's kind of the point the article is making though, isn't it?

I think the article pays lip service to this in a paragraph ("social crutch") but otherwise falls into the trap of "societal" pieces (Soft "Why can't we talk to each other anymore ? What is wrong with our cvilisation?")

In my opinion make it a safe enjoyable non-crowded ride and you'll get plenty of interactions.

> just another bourgeoisie wall.

You are not wrong in a way. The base of a lot of the kind of interaction the author of the piece is thinking about is a relatively equal social standing, otherwise there's too much at stake, on both sides. For example, I, a lower middle class man, would have little patience for someone telling me about how much fun they are having taking helicopter rides in the summer and I don't think they'd enjoy my rant about how landlords are evil. Of course I think there's a moral duty to lower yourself from your social standing to care for people who have it rougher than you but it's generally not exactly pleasant like a conversation with someone like-minded could be