Skip Navigation

Posts
296
Comments
1640
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • I agree, I didn't want to change the premise too much in my original comment, but ideally you'd do some complicated math to determine the optimal height for your location, building materials, and population density.

    I don't know what that calculation would look like in China because I don't live there (I'm sure the Chinese engineers are well aware of those calculations though) but in my country it would definitely be a lot closer to the 10 story range, maybe even lower.

    Either way, something us in the West absolutely NEED to get used to is prefab buildings that all look the same. A bunch of prefab skyscrapers like China has is still worlds ahead of the logistical nightmare of demanding every single building be custom designed like is so common here. You call it boring, I call it efficient. Having a few reusable designs (usually different heights) to choose from and copy paste building housing, like what China does, is what we need first, IMO, and then we can talk about the optimal heights for those prefab buildings.

  • Always interesting when the subjects the meme is clowning on make themselves known when they absolutely didn't have to.

  • We discussed those green skyscrapers in university environment class, and as far as I know they didn't work that well. It was hard to keep the plants alive and when they did grow, they became a breeding ground for pest insects that got into the units where people were living. It's very much prioritizing looking green over being green.

    IMO it's better to just have efficient but visually boring skyscrapers, and then have dedicated green space around clusters of density (which is what China is mostly doing nowadays). Separating housing and green space make both more effective, easier to manage, and more resiliant.

    Also, in case you're wondering, most Western environment profs are very impressed by what China has done, at least in the university I went to.

  • Get yourself to a safe place they can't access and from there call security to remove them from the hospital?

  • Nah Nest was made by an ex Apple engineer, retained Apple's "philosophy" of locked down walled garden everything, and introduced the idea of cloud controlled home automation to the masses. Killed off the idea of smart thermostats and smart home devices in general having a local server that does everything in your own home. Fuck that shit.

    Also, for something pretending to be eco friendly, the amount of disposable packaging it came in was disgusting. A fucking thermostat that had more packaging than an iPad.

  • No, I complain about Google and Apple being proprietary. That alone is a deal breaker for me so I really don't give a shit about them not having file management or whatever other old school feature. And if a sufficiently rigorous security model must take away old school file management in favour of a more restrictive system, so be it, as long as it's open source and publicly auditable.

    If you're relying on a proprietary operating system, literally none of that matters because your root of trust is inherently untrustworthy. The operating system itself can (and have been shown again and again and again to do) include malware that can never be removed and you can never be sure it doesn't.

  • They still stole more STEM talent from developing countries than they lost

  • As if they haven't been killing US citizens

  • Updates alone have no way to happen solely on the local machine.

    No, but it wouldn't need to cost the original vendor that much backend resources either if they're willing to relinquish control of it. There's a reason most Linux distros would rather you use the torrent than their hosted images, and package managers allow you to add any mirror you want and for anyone to spin up a mirror. Something like IPFS (or BitTorrent) would be a great fit for software updates, because it doesn't matter where the file comes from, as long as it's the same file.

    Updates are expensive for the vendor because they insist on their servers being the only place you can get them from.

    Image/video/audio processing that requires more compute than you can reasonably except from average consumer hardware.

    I'd be more accepting of this if it wasn't for the fact that they increasingly don't even let you try to run it on your own hardware. Taking an hour or even overnight to process a video might not be ideal, but there are still countless use cases where that's acceptable and worth the security of not sending your data to the cloud.

    Antivirus and other forms of security which require near real-time fingerprinting and/or new definitions.

    Antivirus is an antipattern and the need for it is usually a symptom of the OS architecture/permission control model being hopelessly vulnrable. An ideal system would be zero trust and some random piece of code wouldn't be able to do anything truly harmful to begin with. You can still social engineer the user into giving a malicious program trust, but you can social engineer them into whitelisting it in their antivirus too.

    Licensing/certificate servers

    Certificates don't need that much backend resources and can be decentralized in the same way as updates, taking load off the original vendor.

    Licensing is a circular argument. I'm paying for you to maintain the system that determines if I paid or not?

    Servers which receive and process telemetry data

    Yeah that's not a "feature" most people appreciate. At best they accept it as inevetable because they can't turn it off.

    Also, if a company tries using that as justification for their subscription model, they can go fuck themselves.

    Resources for submitting/processing/securing legal/government forms/documents

    If it has to do with the legal system or government, then it should be covered by the ultimate subscription model: taxes. I shouldn't have to cover a company's costs of filing things with the government when I already pay the government.

  • *Junior devs

    Senior devs are more likely to write one liners from their VIM window.

  • I'm annoying

    Like, in general.

  • hold the device in front of her face and to forcibly use her fingers to unlock it. In other words, a judge gave the FBI permission to attempt to bypass biometrics

    This isn't bypassing biometrics. This is using biometrics as intended. Bypassing implies this was an unexpected side effect when every security researcher ever has warned that biometrics is intrinsically vulnerable and a terrible password substitute for this exact reason.

  • Some services, like social media, require backend resources and there's no way around it.

    Others, dare I say most, are backend by the company's choice and usually to the detriment of the user.

    Some require backend resources purely for DRM and so that they can pull the plug on it whenever they please and screw over everyone who paid for it. Like most single player games these days. Or as a means of holding your in game items hostage to get more money out of you (Pokemon Home comes to mind).

  • Oh no, your cloud account got banned because you commented killing Palestinian children is bad on a social media platform they also own. Now all your data is gone.

    Oh no, your cloud account got banned because that hello world binary you just shared with your friend got flagged as a virus. Now all your data is gone.

    Oh no, your cloud account got banned because you were using adblock on their paid streaming service. Now all your data is gone.

    Oh no, your cloud account got banned because you were sharing your password with your friend so they can use your paid streaming account. Now all your data is gone.

    Oh no, you uploaded media files that you bought but they got replaced with DRM versions.

    Oh no, they're suddenly not letting you log in until you upload your ID and a 3D scan of your head. Now all your data is held hostage.

    Oh no, they accidentally deleted the production database and the recent data you absolutely can't afford to lose wasn't in the backup.

    Oh no, you got phished and they changed your password from under you. Now all your data is theirs.

    Oh no, they suffered a data breach. Now all your data is on the dark web.

    Oh no, they're developing the next generation AI. Now all your data is being used to help companies replace workers and the right prompt might just give some rando fragments of your personal information.

  • It can be taken out if, 1, you know it exists (is it documented?), 2, you know how to program (is it configurable through the normal instance setup or do you have to sift through the code and then maintain your own fork with it removed?). Sure seems like being able to take it out is a side effect of it being open source and was not intended to be configurable. If that's your bar then any feature you don't like in any fediverse platform "can be taken out." You're talking as if it was explicitly made to be taken out.

    Also, it doesn't just detect 4chan pictures. It MASSIVELY overblocks. This is Lemmy's slur filter blocking "fire removedant" but on steroids. Tell me again how Pifed is the "anti authoritarian" Lemmy.

  • Oh please if Lemmy had that hard coded you would absolutely not be defending it. Even if it was just .ml you'd still use it to smear all of Lemmy. I hate 4chan too and would prefer not to see it, but this is still by definition a very heavy handed imposing of one's personal opinion on others and limiting expression but somehow it doesn't get the authoritarian label. Wonder why.

  • Lol y'all complain about Lemmy being authoritarian but think this is fine?

  • "How do you refer to an instance member in Java?"

    "Sorry can't comment that."

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Data breach at Canada Computers & Electronics leaks personal customer information

    www.cbc.ca /news/business/canada-computers-data-breach-website-9.7067138
  • If you think "not invading other countries for oil" or "not doing ethnic cleansing of immigrants" are purity tests I don't know what to tell you.

  • Not the Onion @lemmy.ml

    Ozempic Brings Back the 'Mac vs PC' Ads for the GLP-1 Era

    gizmodo.com /ozempic-brings-back-the-mac-vs-pc-ads-for-the-glp-1-era-2000711982
  • World News @lemmy.ml

    E.U. halts approval of U.S. trade deal after Trump's Greenland tariff threat

    www.nbcnews.com /business/economy/eu-trade-deal-trump-greenland-tariff-rcna255199
  • videos @hexbear.net

    Book Recommendations: The Latest Developments in Socialist Theory and Analysis - Hakim

  • World News @lemmy.ml

    Lebanese Cabinet approves a draft law to return funds wiped out with the 2019 collapse of banks

    apnews.com /article/lebanon-gap-law-economic-crisis-banks-f5769bb1eb7a44f49abb66b366fddf0f
  • Fuck Cars @lemmy.world

    Trump wants to bring Japan's 'cute' tiny cars to America — but it may not be easy

    www.nbcnews.com /world/japan/trump-japans-cute-tiny-cars-america-experts-rcna248586
  • Fuck Cars @lemmy.ml

    Trump wants to bring Japan's 'cute' tiny cars to America — but it may not be easy

    www.nbcnews.com /world/japan/trump-japans-cute-tiny-cars-america-experts-rcna248586
  • Nix / NixOS @programming.dev

    How do I prevent the computer from suspending when inactive?

  • Security @lemmy.ml

    People online say old computers are prime candidates for repurposing into routers, is that actually a good idea security wise?

  • Privacy @lemmy.ml

    People online say old computers are prime candidates for repurposing into routers, is that actually a good idea security wise?

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    What's the "proper" way to share a single Wireguard connection for all devices on the local network?

  • Worldbuilding @hexbear.net

    Potential project idea I want your feedback on: Fictional Lemmy threads that take place in my world?

  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml

    Do you think Chinese companies will pick up the slack when it comes to consumer RAM and SSDs?

  • US News @lemmygrad.ml

    A new analysis shows that increased immigration enforcement is reducing labor in the child care workforce. The ripple effect is impacting mothers with young children

    19thnews.org /2025/12/ice-child-care-mom-workforce/
  • United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

    A new analysis shows that increased immigration enforcement is reducing labor in the child care workforce. The ripple effect is impacting mothers with young children

    19thnews.org /2025/12/ice-child-care-mom-workforce/
  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml

    Thoughts on putting down elderly pets?

  • Privacy @lemmy.ml

    How do I check my router for malware?

  • Privacy @lemmy.ml

    How's my network privacy? Should I switch from a commercial router to PFsense or something?

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    My hard drive keeps clicking like files are being accessed but I'm not doing anything in that filesystem and the indicator light doesn't indicate any usage.

  • Videos @lemmy.world

    What Does a Supercritical Fluid Look Like - Steve Mould