It is one of the things I like and use a lot. I'm sorry you don't have accessible museums or libraryes :(
We have an app called Libby which is not sustainable for several reasons, but for now, lets you access ebooks and audibooks in your local library's catalogue.
It's also one of the things I'm afraid of losing. The fourth reich is here, we have book burnings, we have libraries under immense fascist pressure, and I am worried that libraries could even stop existing entirely.
Most museums here are not free, but most of them are not prohibitively expensive. (Usually, only popular museums in dense cities are expensive, and even then, those usually start at around $30, with discounts available. They make most of their money in the gift shop.)
There's a lot to be grateful for-- I could list a thousand things right now. I think capitalists defend capitalism by looking at how much worse things can be, while leftists are unified by looking at how much better things can be. We have so much wealth that we want to hold on just to ourselves and even then it's utterly wasted.
Which leaves us taking a lot for granted. Plumbing is a modern miracle. Your post resonated with me a lot and I appreciate it, and I'm sorry again you don't have access to these things.
I hate to say it, but exercise, preferably cardio. The gymbros and fitfluencers were right about this one particular thing :(
I think many, many of my emotional problems were just having - literal - pent up energy. Blood sugar or whatever. Walking and running sweats away the anxiety.
That said, I love getting into fights with strangers online. So it's hard to say
It's not just frustrating or exhausting, it's this deep existential terror I feel.
Living in a society with near-universal literacy is one of the privileges that come with living in America. And now there's a possibility that becomes a thing of the past.
I love to get in arguments online, and something I increasingly see is something like this:
incomprehensible bullshit
Frankly, this is incomprehensible. I don't understand the point you're trying to make. Surely you'd agree it's never acceptable to poison children?
cringe, you know you lost the argument when you need to break out the thesaurus 🙄
... Come on, I am using common English words in simple sentence structures.
It's so disheartening! It might have been worse, but it makes me miss the time when someone could say "you made a spelling mistake; your argument is invalid".
a bandaid for having too many dependencies or a workaround for people who don't want to make their software easy to deploy
I'd be curious to ask this; what could someone using a LAMP-like stack do to improve on things? I kind of thought that dependency problems were inherent to this kind of stack.
E.g. Postmill uses Postgres and PHP. Short of rewriting the PHP part in Rust or Go (which is an extreme length but would produce a mostly-static binary), or using another isolation tool like AppImage or Flatpak, I don't know any way it could be easier to deploy.
I really am asking from curiosity-- I moved to Docker because of frustration with LAMP-likes. (Shaking my fist at Nextcloud)
twovests wrote (edited )
Reply to comment by neku in what posting vibes do you think you embody? by flabberghaster
i do swear you are not reddit vibes. you are not cringe