MonkeMischief

joined 2 years ago
[–] MonkeMischief 14 points 1 month ago

HAHA! I was just trying to explain this to my wife. I was like

"Okay, yes, it DOES help you get stuff done but it's kinda like casting magic...You need the right intention and materials in front of you, or else it backfires and you end up focusing super hard on the first silly, likely useless thing that grabs your attention, and forget time is still moving..."

[–] MonkeMischief 3 points 2 months ago

Well it's artificially upscaled, so it's like the original but appears to be superficially aping its qualities with no actual understanding of the source material.

[–] MonkeMischief 6 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

This is why I spent my highschool years in combat boots. Ankle support, tough soles, the same footwear was great for hiking, shopping, whatever. Inconspicuous if your pant legs cover them. Like $40 at the time. Lasted me beyond school.

Only downside was I lived in a desert so too much time outside would make them really hot. That, and I got a lot of people scuffing them going "HEY ARE THOSE STEEL TOE?!" (they were not)

Meanwhile shoes that fall apart in 3 months had some giant billboard logo so you'd have to keep up with their latest image, I guess. Gross.

[–] MonkeMischief 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Up all night, and all you got to see was a boob

Sometimes a boob who spent the previous night compiling a custom webcam driver. :(

[–] MonkeMischief 14 points 2 months ago (1 children)

You're totally right. Without that inner life we'd just be forced into being exactly like our parents because we wouldn't grow as individuals.

I think the problem is when, hypothetically, that inner life that finds you first is a profit-driven hate-brewing death cult brought to you by an algorithm. Then these people "totally get you" and gives you a "community."

I miss when those unsupervised inner life communities were mostly around hobbies or games or whatever to escape life drudgery and make real friends. MySpace wasn't about viral brainwashing campaigns, YouTube was mostly creation for fun's sake, and even with online games and such, we all knew there was a separation between "the Internet" and "Real Life(TM)".

Everybody knew not to take the Internet seriously, because it was a place you went to escape everything else. Nothing really mattered on the internet.

I think now people don't really see a separation. The Internet is real life, in the worst way.

Now so much of it is a minefield of recruitment and manipulation to enlist in culture wars for clicks. There's labels and lifestyles that act as "funnels" and "pipelines" to increasingly toxic extreme identities that find "belonging" in being captive mindslaves and profit-cattle to any number of "influencers."

[–] MonkeMischief 3 points 2 months ago

Sure, let's not try to help them and just fuck them instead.

How society collectively decided to design the Millennial experience lol.

[–] MonkeMischief 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

No joke. We went from getting yelled at by old people for problems they caused, to being called old and getting shoved aside by the generation ahead of us, really freaking fast.

I feel like we've already been forgotten after we were robbed of opportunity and respect at every turn.

I try to focus my energy towards the good ones. There's still good people out there. I've met many kids that would put the majority of adults to shame with their level of intelligence, maturity, and respect. The odds are so against them though.

[–] MonkeMischief 6 points 2 months ago

How complex is making a roll-your-own NAS?

It really depends on what you want out of it. I personally installed ProxMox on an old gaming machine (DDR3 RAM old lol) and have an Open Media Vault virtual machine running on it with access to my ZFS mirrored pair of storage drives.

Enabling Samba support in Open Media Vault gives you a nice little NAS. I believe it's okay to install bare metal if you really want to also.

It also has a nice Docker interface, so although I should probably not bundle services together so tightly, it runs things like Jellyfin for media, Paperless NGX for document storage, and NextCloud AIO for a convenient (if slightly resource-hungry) interface.

ProxMox lets me do fun things though, like back up the VMs, spin up virtual machines for PiHole ad blocking and Klipper for controlling my 3D printer.

My most important data gets synced to a subscription to a service called iDrive as my offsite. Pretty affordable for 5TB and my own encryption keys. :)

I want to stress that I'm not an IT professional or anything either. If you're reasonably comfortable with Linux and understand some basic networking, I'd say at least getting Proxmox and/or Open Media Vault up and running so you can access it on your home network isn't too hard.

Outside of that, and if you want HTTPS and stuff? There's lots of guides but I would recommend using TailScale instead of opening any ports to the web.

Sorry if this post was meandering but hope it gave you a little bit to go on! :)

[–] MonkeMischief 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Maybe the murder/crime rate has technically gone down, but the prospect of getting thrown in a literal dungeon without trial for having a tattoo, being mistaken for someone else, or doing some thing the government decided they didn't like that week, doesn't sound safe, even if statistically so.

By that definition, the DPRK is "safe" because you're unlikely to get randomly mugged or something while you're there. But God have mercy on a tourist who tries to bring home a piece of paper from a hotel room.

[–] MonkeMischief 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

In his stupid hat... And the stupid little red hat he sometimes wears on that one.

[–] MonkeMischief 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Exactly. The man saw horrors we pray the world would never see again, and still somehow, he came home and finished one of the greatest legends ever told about the indomitable power of fellowship, hope, goodness, and love, against the machinations of ever-hungrier evil and darkness.

He faced the abyss and found light where others would have emerged only with cynical disillusionment and despair.

He fought for a belief that there was still good in people. He wrote the story about those who wanted to turn back and lose hope only they didn't.

Those are the stories that really stick with us.

I'm with you. People can be... Yeah, I can't really top:

willfully ignorant assholes sometimes

...But we can be the light even they can't ignore.

[–] MonkeMischief 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Actually no, not the guy who tries to name everything (and everyone) "X", but one of his fellow Mordor-mentality'd ilk, an entirely unoriginal and stupidly rich aristocrat spawned from the same pits, Peter Thiel .

Most famously, founder of, I kid you not, "Palantir", a big-data information analytics and surveillance company...with military contracts and ethics that mainly revolve around "How much line go up tho?"

Would certainly get Saruman's approval, but I have no freaking idea how he got the Tolkiens'!

Here's a quick article just listing how profoundly the guy misses the point with his LOTR ~~inspired~~ blatantly plagiarized naming scheme, over and over again, wrecking the good name of a fictional world we hold dear as a contrast to this ridiculously stupid timeline.

(Don't care much about the article, it just lists the companies and their primary functions in one spot.)

https://qz.com/1346926/the-hidden-logic-of-peter-thiels-lord-of-the-rings-inspired-company-names

And of course, he's a major player for the Republican machine, because why not? (He's apparently got a husband too, which is even more LeopardsAteMyFace.)

Dude really, actually, got super into Lord of the Rings, made his whole life about pursuing neverending wealth and power, contributes to the military industrial complex, starts ventures about unnaturally extending life, likely contributes massively to climate change, and decided to make the world look more like the one Frodo saw in Galadriel's mirror in Lothlórien.

If you asked him, I'm sure he's the Good Guy(TM) in his story.

Freaking LOL. It's all too stupid to make up.

What artifact do we gotta throw into the fires of the NYSE to implode all this nonsense and save ~~Middle~~ Earth?

view more: ‹ prev next ›