Not ideologically pure.

  • 12 Posts
  • 551 Comments
Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: January 8th, 2024

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  • It’s useful.

    Let’s say you see someone who posts stuff you’re interested in. In a brief moment of absolute brilliance, you think to yourself “aha! Maybe this person follows other people whose content I would be interested in!”

    So you check, and sure enough, there’s a bunch of interesting people listed. So you follow them as well. Your social graph grows, you have a better time there, the people you follow get better reach and gets to enjoy pleasant interactions with you. Everybody’s happy.

    These social media platforms are designed to be public. If you want to do stuff in secret, do it somewhere else.


  • I guess I at least agree that we were naïve with regards to Dorsey and way too slow to realize Twitter was a threat. Looking back now it seems like it was bound to go to hell eventually, and if we look beyond the west it already went to hell a long time ago. And even in the west the tipping point was arguably years before Musk bought Twitter, it was just that people were too addicted to accept how dangerous it was.

    So I guess you could criticize people for only realizing now how fucked up Twitter is. Then again, better late than never.




  • I just saw this post over at Mastodon, and it seems to be a solid reminder why Victorinox deserves to be represented in this community:

    A few weeks ago, I sent my 1985 Swiss Army Knife back to Victorinox for a broken blade replacement.

    It came back today, fully repaired, cleaned, polished, lubricated and in a new box.

    Total cost: £10 + return postage.

    They sent the knife back with an invoice. I didn’t have to pay a penny before the job was done.

    A product that’s been out of production for almost 40 years, repaired at very little cost by the original manufacturer.

    I’m stunned. Happy, impressed, grateful and stunned.

    — @[email protected]

    I’ve only had my Swiss army knife for around half a decade, but I can confirm that they are still amazing.





  • I mean, I totally believe people who would find the act of milking a cow to be disgusting have no business drinking milk from the supermarket. We need to reflect on where food comes from, and if that changes people’s habits that’s probably a good thing.

    In part, I think legislation should play a role here. When buying milk you should be able to know what kind of conditions the cows lived under and what they were fed. I don’t think there’s anything disgusting about cow milk as such. Induatrial farming, on the other hand…