brisk

joined 2 years ago
[–] brisk@aussie.zone 38 points 11 hours ago

Taken from the driver's seat of a new pickup truck?

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

To hit the target we need about 240,000 new dwellings every year, and new data shows we are already falling behind. The most recent State of the Housing System report predicts we will fall short of the target by more than 260,000 homes, an even bigger miss than was predicted the year before.

I think I know what this is meant to say, but it sounds like we're building -20,000 homes a year.

Nygaard also questions whether the 1.2m dwellings target will significantly impact affordability. “The housing affordability challenges is the greatest for young and newly establishing households, for migrants, low and moderate income households, and First Nations Australians.

“These are also the households that are least likely to be able to compete for new supply.”

This is something that always bugged me about first home buyer grants. They have always had a requirement for new builds since that's what they're meant to encourage, but that also means huge swathes of the people that could most benefit from the grant (because the grant can make housing more affordable), can't take advantage of them (because new houses are out of reach).

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 3 points 1 day ago

Yoghourt or yogetout

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 9 points 1 day ago

It's an alternative shell for Plasma, so theoretically you should be able to do anything in it that you can do in Plasma.

On my Arch box it installed a minimal set of Plasma utilities to support it, which means my setup is still very limited (and I can't turn off screen lock!), but I haven't tried if it would change if offered a full Plasma install.

I can most certainly launch Steam, Kodi, Jellyfin etc.

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

It's not replaceable? That's disappointing. I expected better of controller manufacturers since they're not space constrained.

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 7 points 2 days ago

This has been happening to me in embeds for ages, and I am logged in. It doesn't even give any option to sign in or watch on YouTube, I just don't get to watch embeds anymore.

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 6 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Nobody worth talking to takes Sky News seriously.

Several members of parliament do, but I digress.

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 12 points 2 days ago

The reality is not better, but the "fauna" thing is a common myth

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 29 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I've been an Arch user for more than a decade and I'll usually be first in line to defend it from dodgy claims about unreliability.

But that forum response is bizarre. Literally the last two RSS items right now are about how splitting packages will require intervention for some users (plasma and Linux firmware). VLC is an officially supported package, and surely this change would impact almost every VLC user?

New opt-depends is a nice pacman feature, but it hardly implies that things have been removed from the base package.

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

You can do this on Arch too and it will work great until it doesn't. Manual interventions are rare and usually don't affect everyone.

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 11 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Open camera has that. Settings > Camera preview... > Ghost image

[–] brisk@aussie.zone 2 points 2 days ago

Ah, apologies, I use the word "app" much more liberally.

No, I don't believe there would be a mobile release for Digikam and I'm not aware of similar software for mobile operating systems.

 

A discussion on Emergency Accommodation in South Australia, including first hand experience from the journalist.

 

Mutual obligation is one of the last great shibboleths of Australian politics. Now the entire system is under scrutiny with potentially big implications for our welfare system.

 

When people think of Adelaide, they may ponder its good food and wine or its many churches. Historically, it was viewed as a well-priced place to live and work.

But years of surging property prices have made it less affordable than some of the world’s most famous cities, including London and New York, when income levels are factored into living costs.

[...]

 

Snippets

People are not “placed” on the floor – that is what you do with bags, boxes and rubbish. But that was the word used by the Northern Territory police to describe the sequence of events to the media. Tragically, painfully, I think it says a lot.

Almost a million more people voted yes in the referendum than voted for the Labor party in the recent election. The combined Liberal National party vote was about half the no vote. While the majority rejected the voice proposal because they didn’t know, didn’t care or thought it was unfair, this cannot be mapped on to the political snapshot that the election provided. The referendum was not a proxy election. The door to meaningful, symbolic and practical recognition can and must be opened again.

 

Key parts:

In 2017, Richard blew the whistle on the ATO for inappropriately, indiscriminately, and carelessly issuing garnishee notices that brutally emptied businesses’ bank accounts of money to settle ATO debts.

During the Court of Appeal proceedings, the prosecutors conceded that Richard was a whistleblower as that term is commonly understood. He had disclosed information to an authorised person pursuant to the terms of the Public Interest Disclosure Act.

It was also accepted that his disclosure was not dealt with properly by the ATO. The ATO botched the investigation into his claims and did nothing.

That is, they did nothing until their inappropriate activity was the subject of an ABC Four Corners program (Note that there is no allegation that Richard disclosed taxpayer information to the ABC). In an act of revenge, the ATO charged Richard, not for blowing the whistle, but for what he did in preparing his disclosure, namely using his mobile phone to take photographs of taxpayer information, covertly recording conversations with ATO colleagues; and uploading photographs of taxpayer information to his lawyer’s encrypted email account.

The Court of Appeal found that those preparatory acts were not covered by protections in the Public Interest Disclosure Act and,

 

Some snippets:

The Senate has a number of tools available to force transparency and accountability of the Government.

One measure is the ability to initiate an inquiry into an issue. This requires a majority vote of the Senate. The LNP and Greens would have to join forces (38 votes), with at least one independent (39+ votes), to get an inquiry up in the face of Labor opposition. Getting the LNP and Greens to agree might be challenging, but if that occurs, it won’t be hard to get at least one independent onboard.

The reader can easily imagine the difficulties of getting the LNP and Greens to align on an inquiry. There will certainly be no inquiries on “drill baby drill” or “LGBTQI rights in the community” while such an inquiry requires right-and-left support.

Arguably related: https://aussie.zone/post/20645968

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