early_riser

joined 2 months ago
[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 2 points 19 hours ago

It's not for lack of personal time. I just have way more things to fill that personal time. Playing with my radios or messing with my homelab or building out grammar and lexica for my conlangs and so on. I think I've also discovered my tastes have changed. I don't want video games to frontload all the complexity anymore. How am I supposed to know what this or that class or race or stat does before even starting the game?

My vision being what it is a lot of games are unplayable now anyway.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 3 points 19 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago)

didn't even know childlore had a name or academic interest associated with it. until last year. When I was a kid I always wondered who came up with things like JIngle bells batman smells or those paper fortune teller thingies or the candyman/Bloody Mary or the game Doorknob and so on. I never saw adults doing or saying those things, so I figured some kid somewhere had to have made them up at some point and it just spread from there.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 2 points 20 hours ago (2 children)

Never played it but I've heard good things about Darklands along the lines of what you're looking for.

I wish I were young enough to enjoy sprawling RPGs again. I bought BG3 but I don't have the time to devote to it like I used to so it molders in my Steam library.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Attempted is the key word. The characters eventually got too detailed for me to distinguish. As I mentioned in another thread I tried finding braille resources for L2 learners but there don't seem to be any. Ironically if everything was in Pinyin I could probably do it, but moving to a new writing system when you already have one that you've used for millennia is a nearly impossible ask. Plenty of people have tried with English.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

While it's true a language is tightly linked to the culture of its speakers by definition, a language's speakers aren't just their leaders. Russian represents centuries of cultural wealth, not just the misadventures of the last hundred or so years. It's not the language's fault that Putin invaded Ukraine. If you love learning languages for their own sake, do it. I made the same choice when attempting to learn Mandarin during the Hong Kong protests.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Find something you enjoy that you can spin as work-related. I learned about sqlite as a potential way to store the lexicon for one of my constructed languages and it ended up becoming relevant at work.

I've had similar luck with playing with raspberry pis and generic Linux stuff. I'm not just setting up a self hosted forum, I'm learning about reverse proxies.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago

News was always political, but I agree, it's exhausting, and it was exhausting back then.

As for the memes, do you really think "It's over 9000" was any more comprehensible. I spent way too much time overthinking why that meme was funny, like "Oh, it's because the power levels grow exponentially over the course of the show and 9000 is such a ridiculously low number when it's all said and done." But nah I think it was just random. Then I started laughing at it cuz hehe funny reference. And what even was YouTube Poop, I mean it was the funniest stuff ever wrought by man (HI BILLY MAYES HERE WITH LOTSA SPAGHETTI FOR DINNER!), but don't kid yourself, nonsense was the whole point. Let the young'uns have their 67's.

Some of it's legit though. YouTube is enshittifying, it's the natural course of things when you have investors to please. That's also why games are crap now. But there were lowest common denominator adult video games as far back as the Atari 2600, so that's nothing new. Not saying its OK, just that nothing has changed and is unlikely to change in the future. Look for the good stuff that is out there. I'm having fun with Megabonk.

I also agree short form content can be straight up harmful. I just found out the other day you can turn off YouTube history which stops the algorithm from feeding you anything. On mobile you just get a blank search bar. It'll still bring up shorts when searching but if you scroll five or six shorts deep it'll just give you a blank screen that says "recommendations have been turned off." I turned it off because I realized I'd get up from my desk at work to go to the bathroom but spend a whole minute looking for a recommended video to listen to before actually leaving the room.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago (3 children)

I feel like that's asking for trouble. You can explain away "FBI surveillance van" because an ounce of common sense will tell you a government agency isn't likely to be so sloppy. But I could see a creepy Airbnb host who's just smart enough to be dangerous doing exactly this.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 8 points 3 days ago

I always want to do it burns when IP or 8 Hz WAN IP but we regularly have guests so I opted for something mundane.

 

Ah the humble service set identifier! It seems to have grown from a simple way for access points to identify themselves to potential clients to a little public bulletin board for airing one's grievances toward noisy neighbors or showcasing one's wit.

What notable SSIDs have you run into out in the wild or created yourself?

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 4 points 5 days ago

Social media, including Lemmy. It just feeds my misery but at the same time its addictive

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 11 points 5 days ago

My job has a fair amount of down time. I'll use it to study for career certifications or work on personal projects that are work-adjacent.

 

Is it number of times the community page is requested? The number of users that post, comment, or vote? Or something else?

It would be nice to get separate posts per day and comments per day etc. to see in what ways a community is active.

[–] early_riser@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

No it's scope is more limited vs Obsidian. Logseq is primarily an outliner whereas Obsidian is anything you can express in Markdown

 

Do you rarely vote on anything at all?

Do you upvote when something is interesting but rarely downvote? Do you downvote when something isn't interesting but rarely upvote?

Do you vote to signal agreement or disagreement?

Do you vote to encourage insightful replies regardless whether you agree or not?

I rarely interact with the voting system on sites, aside from the occasional missclick, that is. While I think it can be useful when searching for answers or tutorials, especially on topics you're not familiar with and can't judge competence vs BS, I think in more social spaces it leads to both echo chambers and karma farming, and it feeds social media addiction by giving you little validations for every upvote you receive.

I also think it prevents people from having more meaningful interactions. Rather than replying with 'This was insightful", "I disagree because..." or "that was really funny" You just make a number go up or down.

 

On a good day I'm up around 5 AM, but I often find myself up even earlier than that. I joined my first Lemmy instance during one of these bouts of insomnia, prompting my username.

My avatar is from a worldbuilding project I work on.

 

The closest I can offer isn't quite the same, as I wasn't working retail and it wasn't on Black Friday, though it was directly related to the Thanksgiving holiday.

I used to work in a high-volume call center for the local transit authority, booking rides on the curb-to-curb paratransit service. We only book trips for the following day, but since we're only open weekdays we have to book for Saturday, Sunday, and Monday on Friday.

Even on slow days we get around 200 calls per agent per day, and Fridays are even worse. 3-day weekends are a notch above that, since now we also have to book for Tuesday. But the granddaddy of call-center gauntlets is the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, since we're booking Thursday through Monday. It's a 12-hour shift, calls from wall to wall from 7 am to 7 pm.

As I mentioned on another post on here, I have a guide dog. I have had 3 over the course of my adult life, and the time this story takes place I was 1 year in with guide dog 2. Guide dog 1 was retired and living with other family members.

So I wake up at 4 AM and catch the bus to work, dreading another pre-Thanksgiving soul grinder. I'm sitting at my desk. I glance down, not without a hint of envy, at guide dog 2 sleeping blissfully under my desk, then turn my attention to the Sisyphean torment that awaits me. My mouse hovers over the start button on the Cisco agent desktop, as I glare at the clock in the corner of the screen. I'm determined to start this living hell no earlier than necessary.

Just before I left-click, the phone in my pocket starts ringing. I'm pretty introverted and rarely get (relevant) unprompted calls on my phone, and anyone who would call me knew where I was, so I figured this was important. The caller ID says it's my dad. Now I know this is important.

Dad: "Early_riser, guide dog 1 passed away this morning."

I had to process that for a second. We had a pet dog, a positively ancient lab mix who managed to hang on another year or so after this, and thought he was referring to her. After clearing that up I ran into the conference room off of the main cube farm and started ~~balling like a baby~~ giving my body's moisture to the dead. My supervisor heard me and came in to check.

Now guide dog 1 had accompanied me to that job for a good year before she retired, so my supervisor and coworkers had seen, known, and interacted with guide dog 1. She wasn't just "some dog" to them, and I believe that served to make my situation more real for that supervisor. She actually asked if I wanted to go home, on this the busiest most grueling day of the year, to say goodbye to my dog.

Of course I said yes, and me and guide dog 2 took the elevator downstairs to catch the bus back home. Because of the time I couldn't take the express, so I caught the longer local route that would take about an hour and a half. As it happens, a friend of mine, a fellow commuter who often sat near me on the ride into work, got on the same bus. She had also seen and interacted with guide dog 1 on the regular, so I told her what was going on and she offered her condolences.

We talked about other stuff until we arrived at my stop. I said my goodbyes and waited to get picked up to go to the vet. We arrived ahead of guide dog 1, so I went in and paid for her cremation. When my dad arrived with guide dog 1's body, we all spent a few minutes saying goodbye.

At the particular place that gave me this dog, on the day you meet the dog you're sat down alone in your room and the trainers go from room to room introducing the new dog, then they leave you alone for an hour to get to know each other. It's a scary and exciting time, the wait before the reveal, seeing the creature that will keep you alive for the next 10 years. I had wanted a german shepherd, but ended up with a little golden retriever. My initial disappointment melted away after I spent some time rubbing her belly, and I caught myself humming a song my parents sang for me when I was a baby.

"You are my sunshine, my only sunshine. You make me happy when skies are gray. You'll never know, dear, how much I love you. Please don't take my sunshine away."

Right then and there I had a thought. "She's going to die someday. This little furry ball of oxytocin with deep brown eyes will be gone someday, and you'll think back to this moment, sitting on the waxed tile floor of your room at this guide dog school, petting this dog you just met. And you'll remember singing her the same song you were sung when you were little. And you'll sing it again, in front of her lifeless body, with tears streaming down your face."

And so I did.

This may sound heartless, but I'm happy she died when she did, in the way she did. I was terrified of having to make the decision to end her life, having to decide whether I could afford to keep her comfortable, having to put a dollar amount on our friendship. If it came down to it I would do what was best for her, but I wouldn't feel good about it. That's part of why I gave her to someone else (well that and I lived in an apartment at the time and couldn't take care of two dogs). So I was relieved to hear she passed on her own, peacefully in her sleep.

I was also miserable at that job. The lady next to me in the cube farm had been working the same sort of call center job for over 20 years, and just imagining that as a career made my skin crawl. Now I'm sure this is a coincidence. Guide dog 1 couldn't have timed her death like that, but I like to think she knew I'd get the day off, so chose the perfect time to go. It was her last gift to me, sparing me from 12 straight hours of screaming customers.

 

Google isn't what it used to be, but the free alternatives like DuckDuckGo aren't really that great. Given how vital a good search engine has been to make any use of the internet since the late 90s, I think it's not unreasonable to offer quality search at a reasonable price.

I'm not aware of any paid-for search engines, and I'm not sure what they could charge for without seeming greedy. Perhaps have a free tier that limits you to so many searches per day and a paid tier with unlimited searches and another with API access or something. The key would be to have a good-better-best system that makes everyone feel they're getting a reasonable product for what they're paying while keeping the experience serviceable for free riders.

Email is similar. While it's not too hard to set up a bare SMTP server, a bare SMTP server will get you absolutely nowhere because every reputable email service will flag it as spam. The hard part is making the server pass all the sniff tests that other services use. You also cannot self-host because residential ISPs block port 25, again as a spam prevention mechanism.

I pay for Proton, not because I trust them per se, indeed the more a company trumpets about how secure and anonymous they are the more suspicious I get. But I trust them more than I trust Google and that's what matters.

 

I miss traditional message boards. No karma, no sorting algorithms, you just get new topics on top and replies are sorted oldest to newest.

You can have forum threads that go on for decades, but Lemmy's default sorting system quickly sweeps older content away. I'm aware you can mimic the forum format by selecting the "chat" option in a thread and sorting by old, and you can sort posts by "latest comment" which replicates the old-school forum experience pretty well, but nobody does it that way, so the community behaves in the manner facilitated by the default sorting algorithm that prioritizes new content over old but still relevant content.

I also notice that I don't pay attention to usernames on Lemmy (or Reddit back when I was on it). They're just disembodied thoughts floating through the ether. On message boards, I get to know specific users, their personalities and preferences and ups and downs. I notice when certain users don't post for a while and miss them if they're gone for too long.

EDIT: given this is my most upvoted post on here to date I'd say the answer is yes.

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