• Kiwi_Girl
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    1 year ago

    Trying to get a job, which requires better equipment.

    I need a job, to be able to afford the equipment.

  • @archchan@lemmy.ml
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    151 year ago

    How it feels to never have had anyone in my life that I could just randomly call up and talk about happy and sad things with.

    • @JCPhoenix@beehaw.org
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      11 year ago

      I’ve done it before using Duet.

      But it’s not like that’s the only “monitor.” It’s always been secondary (mainly because I’ve used it with an MBP).

      • @Rocky60@lemm.ee
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        21 year ago

        I’ve tried that, but it’s just not plug and play. I’ll be looking for a small laptop type monitor

    • @ByGourou@sh.itjust.works
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      21 year ago

      If it’s an old iPad the issue is the terrible lightning port that isn’t able to transfer nearly enough data to be used as a monitor. This is partly why most solutions for that involve a network.

  • Gormadt
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    271 year ago

    Converting a high resolution photo scanner into a large format digital camera

    There’s a lot that goes into it and I’m still fairly early in the process but it is possible and has been done before

    I already have some lenses that will cover the whole scanner bed, it’s mostly a question of power at this point

  • @Alk@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I don’t think there’s anything that nobody would understand when explained. But most people would not understand the drama that happens between creators in the minecraft modding community.

    • @Goun@lemmy.ml
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      31 year ago

      Yeah… Flatpaks are nice, but slow and sometimes broken (I guess mostly depending on how the rest of your system looks like.) On the other hand, I hate adding 3rd party repositories; it feels weird and messy. It’s a complex matter indeed.

  • DearOldGrandma
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    1 year ago

    I’ll bite. I had a brother with special needs pass away a year ago next week. He was born with cerebral palsy, was blind, nonverbal, totally dependent on caretakers (myself, my siblings and mother, his nurses) for literally everything since he didn’t have functionally-independent motor control. We were told he’d live to 10, and he lived to 29; he was a bundle of joy and loved going out when he could. People would stare and kids would ask questions, but we loved sharing his story and my brother liked when people were curious about it.

    But, his health started declining in 2014. He had several close calls, and we told doctors each time to try their best with the circumstances they were given. On more than one occasion, his nurses or our mother would actually be with the doctors during hospital stays to assist with him since he was case they didn’t have much experience in and didn’t want to make his issues worse. That said, he had a DNR (Do Not Resuscitate) since he had a trache, and was brittle enough to die from chest compressions.

    I prepped for my brother’s death countless times over 8 years. We all did. When he passed, we were so obviously distraught. But we were also relieved, in a way, that he wasn’t in pain anymore in the end. We let out our emotions that had been stored for those years, and the grieving process is still continuing. We all put our lives on hold to help him, and he just became our lives; our goal simply was to make him comfortable and let him know he was loved, knowing we couldn’t realistically do more. We spent years watching him in pain, watching him gradually lose his fervor and personality.

    If you read this far, thank you. Not really sure what else to say, I just want to share this since it’s occupied my mind a lot.

    TLDR; Preparing for the worst outcomes, coupled with grief, over prolonged periods of time really disrupt your emotions and outlooks. Needless to say, my family became stronger proponents of state-assisted suicide after this experience. It couldn’t be granted to my brother, but maybe we can help people in the future that coupd really use it. People understand, but not nearly as many are truly empathetic because they can’t be - they’ve never been through a similar experience. I simply ask that people try to be sympathetic rather than to pass judgement on others.

    • @kromem@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The one cause that I’d champion over all others is the right to have access to assisted suicide.

      It’s really a travesty how we tend to hide just how grisly dying (and in some cases living) can be, and how those who most go through it inherently lose their voices to advocate for others not suffering the same drawn out fate.

      I’m sorry you had to watch as it dragged out.

      My SO is a doctor and the cases that most upset them are not the healthy patients that die, but helplessly watching the unhealthy patients that are forced to drag on living because of various factors.

      We’re getting much better at unnaturally prolonging life, and while that’s a good thing in some cases where it can change outcomes for the better, there’s a very dark side of it as well that’s gradually getting worse.

      Know that it’s not a topic that only you are thinking about, even if it’s unfortunately a topic that is too rarely discussed in public.

    • @GFGJewbacca@lemm.ee
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      111 year ago

      I’m deeply sorry for your loss. I am a hospital chaplain, so I have been with families as their loved ones have died in settings like this. If you want to talk to someone, I’m here for you.

    • @GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee
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      101 year ago

      I understand the weird feeling of relief when someone dies. I know that sounds terrible. My situation was not yours, so I’m not directly comparing. One of my parents had long, slow cancer. Watching them waste away, choosing to fight a symptom or not, was draining and difficult. In one sense, I enjoyed all of those final moments and would give anything to have more. I miss them dearly. However, I’m glad they’re not suffering. It was difficult at the end. Their quality of life was not good.

  • @peanut_koala@lemmy.ml
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    121 year ago

    There’s a part of me that really wants something to take over my body or replace myself with an entirely different person who does all of the things I struggle with. Even if it wasn’t a person, if it did work and made my family and friends proud then I could stop struggling.

    • @Jordan_U@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Oof.

      I feel this all to well.

      I highly recommend reading https://www.strugglecare.com/book .

      It’s not self-help. It’s not going to “fix” you.

      But reading it was some of the best therapy I’ve ever received. If you’re at all like me, maybe it will help you too. I am happier, as are the people I love and who love me, in large part because of K.C. Davis’ philosophy. (The people I love and who love me are also very empathetic and understanding, which I know is definitely not true for most people unfortunately).

      It’s less than $20.

      It’s short.

      Buy it. If you can’t afford it, I might even be willing to buy it for you / venmo you $20 to get it.

      Also available in your library / Libby.

      Also available as an audiobook.

  • silasOP
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    1 year ago

    I learned recently how the James Webb Space Telescope is not orbiting around Earth but literally orbiting around an empty point in space. I don’t think I even quite understand it, but it’s really cool

  • @hellweaver666@discuss.tchncs.de
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    171 year ago

    A couple of weeks ago my wife and I got jiggy for the first time in five years. After our third kid she just went completely off it and we’ve been in a dead bedroom situation ever since, she told me how she felt and despite my frustration I understood and respected her wishes. A couple of weeks ago I just opened up about how I was feeling unloved and then blam! It happened out of nowhere. I was in a daze and couldn’t believe it. Now I’m scared it’s going to be five years before it happens again.

    • @meliaesc@lemmy.world
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      201 year ago

      I know this is just a thread to vent, but I really want you to focus on the fact that communicating how you felt helped the situation so much. Please don’t wait 5 more years to try that again.

  • @kromem@lemmy.world
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    121 year ago

    It’s very common that in modern virtual worlds there’s 4th wall breaking Easter Eggs buried in the world lore.

    Years ago, I got to wondering if something like that might exist in our own universe, and fairly quickly found something that far exceeded my wildest expectations for what I might find meeting that criteria.

    But there’s so many layers of bias connected to the concept that I really doubt anyone will ever take a serious look.

    Some will just reject by default the notion that they aren’t in an original reality.

    Others will reject the notion that something connected to an (in)famous world religion and religious figure could reflect metaphysical truth, even though many of those parallel lore examples happen to tie into their respective lore’s religious beliefs (usually a fitting place for meanderings about the creation or purpose of one’s universe).

    I’ve studied it for years now, found all sorts of surprising things from an explicit discussion of survival of the fittest in antiquity or the idea of an original humanity evolving spontaneously bringing forth an intelligent being of light which then recreated a twin of the whole universe.

    Which is pretty weird in an age where there’s increasing investments into photonics specifically for AI which is in turn powering digital twins and articles like this.

    So we are discussing the ideas of these kinds of things happening in the future, and meanwhile there’s a tradition from antiquity centered around a document “the good news of the twin” that claims the most famous religious figure in history was saying we’re already in the future but are in a non-physical copy of the earlier cosmos in the archetypes of a long dead humanity, duplicated by a being of light that the original humanity brought forth.

    Like, I guess I just don’t think the odds of that being the case in a random original reality are particularly high, and think it’s much more likely that such claims represent the same kind of 4th wall breaking lore manipulation we see in multiple modern virtual worlds.

    But I don’t know that there’s anyone that’s genuinely interested in knowing or discussing those details. So it’s just a personal investigation as someone who is very interested in knowing those details to the extent they can actually be known.

          • @kromem@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Fixed.

            And yeah, I’ve studied that too, from pre-history to the Sumerians. I’m not really sure what’s your point?

            For example, there’s only one extant text from antiquity explicitly describing the idea of evolution. And only one religious tradition citing that text. Which happens to also be the religious tradition claiming that an original humanity which arose spontaneously ended up creating the creator of our own cosmos, which is a copy of the one that occurred naturally.

            Go ahead and show me what other religious tradition BCE was claiming things like “the cosmos and man existed from natural causes” along with “man later created God.”

            If you actually study the history of religion, this one existing at all with the ideas it has is weird and anachronistic as shit.

    • @blandy@lemmy.ml
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      41 year ago

      That’s where quantum indetermancy comes from. No one, not even the first intelligence, gets floating point right

      • @kromem@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Well, in this case the first intelligence was basically us. Though perhaps a not quantized version of us. Which I don’t think makes much of a difference in our math competency (even if a very big difference in computing capability).

  • @darth_helmet@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Cybersecurity, as a profession, is a fool’s errand.

    Dedicated security staff exist solely to teach real engineers how to do their job, and the fact that such personnel exist is a catastrophic failure in computer science curriculum

    • @devious@lemmy.world
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      91 year ago

      I don’t know if I am right but I am of the opinion that Cybersecurity should be considered a mastery branch on top of basic engineering skills. But it feels like there are so many Cybersecurity experts who do not understand enough about the underlying engineering concepts to be effective in their role.