No, it’s a lie. They wouldn’t say yes, so saying that they would say yes is a lie.
No, it’s a lie. They wouldn’t say yes, so saying that they would say yes is a lie.
I understand the downvotes, but that law really needs reforming. The labels need to say in what way it can cause harm. I remember seeing a piece of wood (pressboard) labelled as carcinogenic at Home Depot. I couldn’t figure out what that meant. Is it ok as long as I don’t burn it? Is it bad to breath near it? Is it only dangerous if I eat it?
Labels need to be more specific about possible dangers.
Hey HobbitFoot! Are you related to the Hobbiton Proudfoots/feet?
Feel free to join us at !hobbit_art@hobbit.world and post some of your hobbit family artwork.
If I browse !lemmy@lemmy.ml I don’t see this post. Only see it via the website. I really hope they implement post linking soon.
Oh, maybe !announcements@lemmy.ml
More hobbits are always welcome at: !hobbit_art@hobbit.world
Every instance just needs to store the communities they use, just like now. But once cached, any other instance could grab those messages from any of those instances. It’d be a peer to peer sort of organization.
I can think of lots of caveats regarding freshness of content and trust and ensuring the tree of instances is auto organized to minimize depth. Maybe for trust you could have signatures for all content signed using keys that every instance could pull from the original instance just once every now and then.
Upvotes and responses would just travel up the tree in the reverse trip from the way content came down.
But, I think it’s similar to other things that already exist. These problems seem solvable.
If it worked like torrenting where you have seeds, etc, it’d scale almost infinitely. I don’t think we should change to fit the algorithm. We should change the algorithm to make it scale.
I noticed that occasionally. I just assumed it differed based on the instance of the post or something. My Lemmy experience has been a lot better since I switched away from lemmy.world. Used to have crashes but haven’t crashed since switching.But, lots of stuff is changing, so maybe it was something else.
The Connect client can hide posts based on keywords. I switched from Jerboa purely for that one feature.
That’s obviously someone making a joking point about karma.
Is that value stored on the home instance of the user? I think summing karma is a terrible measure of an account. So if it’s stored in the instance, I’ll update mine to be a large random value.
Maybe we can have the admins of all instances update the value for all users to a random value to make it worthless.
In summary, for our mental health, delete nextdoor and never look at national news. One is populated by busybodies and the other is just cancer.
We actually do own the airspace over our houses. Not as high as planes or space, but a drone probably would from my skimming of this article.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/aviation.uslegal.com/ownership-of-airspace-over-property/%3Famp
I’ve read theories about white holes and such. I’m not a physicist though. But ultimately, sometimes you just need to shrug and say I don’t know. Any assertions without evidence are meaningless guesses.
I hope you’re wrong. If there’s one job I want AI to do, it’s to improve health care.
There are many excellent doctors, but also many very average doctors. And even the best doctors seem to be biased towards the most common illnesses.
And I’ve read that many people with persistent pain, especially people of color, cannot get medicine because doctors suspect everyone of being abusers. But, giving it out like candy isn’t great either.
We need AI doctors.
I did a bit of searching and the initial size you mention seems to be the initial size to which extrapolation is possible given information we have and that past that point it’s unknowable?
These are the philosophical questions that every traveler must answer for themselves. I am but a hobbit. I didn’t even remember to bring a handkerchief!
Optoma GT1090HDR
I’m pretty happy with it, although it doesn’t do 4k. But, it’s super bright at 4200 lumens.
You’re right, although if you ever get the chance to browse a real physical encyclopedia, it’s a unique experience.
Not practical, but it’s a bit like playing a record or playing a game on a real NES. It’s a unique experience.
I have a full 2007 set of Encyclopedia Brittanica in the same room as my vintage computer collection. I browse it occasionally.
I assumed it was intentional.