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  • It was a different commenter, though I also like snacking on dark chocolate chips. Baker's chocolate is also good, but the consistency of the squares isn't great for snacking.

    I just read it as a tip for how to get chocolate anyways, even if all the chocolate bar makers stop using it. The chocolate-like but cheaper stuff they are using instead of chocolate sounds more like the dustbowl/depression era tricks to enjoy food while you can't afford it.

    Though part of my perspective is from getting my cooking to a level where store bought prepared stuff is just the easy/convenient option, not the high quality one (for health or taste). I also love dark chocolate and prefer the high cocoa content ones over must chocolate bars.

  • And I'm confused about how you found anything in that comment dystopian. Though I'm assuming that name I didn't recognize is a brand name for an actual chocolate producer. Hopefully it isn't a brand name for something similar to chocolate but not lol.

  • Yeah, I think sucralose is the only one that doesn't taste awful to me. Like I've always been skeptical of the defense of aspartame because it tastes like something I shouldn't be eating. I was looking forward to stevia back when it got popular, but it also has that taste (I'm guessing from leftover solvent, since it's not water soluable like sugar).

    There's plenty of ways to make things taste great without relying so heavily on sweetness. I hate the western food industry's obsession with it along with the capitalist obsession with selling as much as possible, because it's resulted in the less sugar I've wanted to see instead meaning the sugar is replaced with other chemicals that taste sweet (and "chemically").

    And I doubt safety studies looked at anything beyond "does it so obviously cause issues that we'll be sued the moment we try to sell this?"

  • Knowing apple, at that price point, performance is going to suuuuuck.

  • If you do that, the volcanoes could start sucking the rocks back in, along with the people and animals, and we aren't well adapted to living in reversed volcanoes. Within a few generations, survival pressures will probably select for shorter posture (to more easily move around in tight spaces), stronger build (to be able to push rocks out of the way more easily), skills with mining and smithing (obviously), and beards on women (so they, too, can easily carry around small snacks for later).

    So yeah, carry on.

  • Can you elaborate on that? I disagree but would like to understand why you think that. Maybe you're referring to something I wouldn't disagree with.

  • Yeah, I've had good results just going for the chest instead of the chest and belly. Then they can interact with their front paws or head if they want to, and you avoid getting raked with the rear claws if they suddenly decide petting was ok up to then but must stop immediately.

    Also don't go from 0 to 100 instantly, unless you know the cat well. Ramp up the intensity more slowly so the cat isn't jolted around unexpectedly or feels out of control. Same thing if you pick them up. If they instantly start squirming around, they aren't comfortable. Maybe it's nervousness about being dropped, maybe they just don't want to be carried.

  • Gonna need a bigger screen or a projector to draw a circle large enough for your mom.

  • Yeah, for things that will likely be used, caching is good. I just have a problem with the "memory is free, so find more stuff to cache to fill it" or "we have gigabytes of RAM so it doesn't matter how memory-efficient any program I write is".

  • It's like people who reply "rtfm", except these people actually think they are helping, while the rtfm replier just thinks the question asker isn't worthy of their knowledge (or wants to hide that they don't know while maintaining their "I am wise" persona).

  • Not that I expect to see it ever happen, but English could benefit from an alphabet/writing revamp like Korea did.

    I don't know any Korean but understand that it's one of the easier languages to learn because of that.

    I do know that Japanese was pretty easy to read, at least before any Kanji are involved. Despite having two alphabets (think like if for bold text, we had different symbols instead of making the same ones heavier, though they have other uses in Japanese, too). It's because they are always pronounced the same, no contextual changes. It gave the impression that Japanese was easy to learn (until Kanji smashed that idea to pieces lol).

  • I don't want my PC wasting resources trying to guess every possible next action I might take. Even I don't know for sure what games I'll play tonight.

  • Thisisfine.png

  • Ib4 "uNusEd RAm iS wAStEd RaM!"

    No, unused RAM keeps my PC running fast. I remember the days where accidentally hitting the windows key while in a game meant waiting a minute for it to swap the desktop pages in, only to have to swap the game pages back when you immediately click back into it, expecting it to either crash your computer or probably disconnect from whatever server you were connected to. Fuck that shit.

  • There isn't anything fundamentally slower about using a GUI vs just text in a console. There's more to draw but it scales linearly. The drawing things on the screen part isn't the slow bit for slow programs. Well, it can be if it's coded inefficiently, but there are plenty of programs with GUIs that are snappy... Like games, which generally draw even more complex things than your average GUI app.

    Slow apps are more likely because of an inefficient framework (like running in a web browser with heavy reliance on scripts rather than native code), inefficient algorithms that scale poorly, poor resource use, bad organization that results in doing the same operation more times than necessary, etc.

  • Except for KDE. At least compared to cinnamon, I find KDE much more responsive.

    AI generated code will make things worse. They are good at providing solutions that generally give the correct output but the code they generate tends to be shit in a final product style.

    Though perhaps performance will improve since at least the AI isn't limited by only knowing JavaScript.

  • A missile could carry something as light as nothing or as heavy as ISS modules. And anchors don't even have to be that heavy, they just need to be denser than water and generate enough friction with the bottom to keep whatever is attached from moving too far.

    Though they could even use catapults or trebechets mounted to the backs of trucks to mine it.

  • T'would be funny if this kind of demand drove the prices back up. Not to money laundering levels, but like to like $180 or something.

  • I'll see your grand and say 950 is still too high.