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sj_zero | @sj_zero@social.fbxl.net

Author of The Graysonian Ethic (Available on Amazon, pick up a dead tree copy today)

Also Author of Future Sepsis (Also available on Amazon!)

Admin of the FBXL Network including FBXL Search, FBXL Video, FBXL Social, FBXL Lotide, FBXL Translate, and FBXL Maps.

Advocate for freedom and tolerance even if you say things I do not like

Adversary of Fediblock

Accept that I'll probably say something you don't like and I'll give you the same benefit, and maybe we can find some truth about the world.

Ah... Is the Alliteration clever or stupid? Don't answer that, I sort of know the answer already...

Fact Check: True ✅

In my home country of Canada, inciting someone to commit suicide is the official policy for dealing with pesky veterans and disabled people.

Wait, is it?

"I didn't do that because I was angry, I did that because I was bored."

I just watched an academic giving a short presentation in which the first slide complained that RFK was allowed to have opinions he didn't like, and on the next slide complained that on Twitter opinions that he liked were being censored.

Find it really funny that there's an implicit demand in the intro that the rich and powerful censor unacceptable ideas, while immediately afterwards complaining that some of the Rich and powerful censored their unacceptable ideas. The one solid meme the left have come up with in the last 20 years is the "leopards eating your face party" -- these people want the leopards to eat faces, they just didn't expect leopards would want to eat their face.

Long before Elon Musk purchased twitter, I warned against being a fascist in The Graysonian Ethic. The argument that I made in that book was specifically that you think that the people who abuse power will only abuse power against your enemies, but it has never ever ever worked that way. The people you think on your side will always turn on you if you give them the power to.

(I know it's not the meme format)

Good progress editing Future Sepsis. My first editing pass is just playing the work back using TTS. A lot of the time stuff that's correct on paper doesn't sound right when it's read aloud. After I've edited a section in this pass, I dump it into the file with the correct formatting. Lots of easy mistakes I caught.

I recorded the Audio Book of The Graysonian Ethic long after the book was finalized, and as a result editing the audio book I found a lot of mistakes, which is one reason why I decided to make that the preliminary pass.

I was going to do an AI editing pass, but after using AI a lot, I've decided against it -- I just don't feel like the language it spits out is what I'm looking for.

Final editing pass is sending it to an editor who did a good job on The Graysonian Ethic.

Once that last editing pass is done, I'll be ready to put it up for sale.

At least they stopped using me for my body.

Think about this: between 1990 and 1995, Microsoft completely rebuilt windows from the ground up into a fundamentally different type of operating system.

Next, between 1995 and 2001, Microsoft completely rebuilt windows again from the ground up into a fundamentally different type of operating system.

From 2001 to 2006, Microsoft completely rebuilt Windows yet again from the ground up into a fundamentally different type of operating system.

Windows 7 occurred with it in the next 6 year window, but it was more of a smoothing out of all the rough edges of the previously rebuilt windows. However, Windows 8 occurred in the next six year window, and it was once again a fundamentally rebuild windows into a fundamentally different type of operating system.

It's been over 10 years since the release of Windows 8, but when you really think about it it's been a completely stagnant product ever since.

On the other hand, this narrative really misses something else: from Windows 3.1 to Windows 95, Microsoft essentially had to completely change how configuration was done. From 95 to xp, they had to completely change how most things were done. From XP to 7, a lot of things are still done the same way that they were done in XP, and from 7 to today a surprising number of things are still done the way they were in XP.

There might be some good arguments against taking away the old ways of doing things, but I would push back on the idea that the only reason that nothing is moved forward is that Microsoft doesn't want to break anything. In particular, the settings app still doesn't do most of the things that the old win32 utilities did and still do, and so you aren't just going back to the old way of doing things because you're old and set in your ways, you're doing it because Microsoft has failed over nearly 25 years to produce a utility to do the same thing. In some ways if you're using just straight windows 10 or 11, it feels like you're using a janky Linux distribution from 15 years ago.

Ironically, Microsoft also tries to pretend that the problem is the user by trying to hide the old utilities version after version and people have to go chase them down because you still can't do so many very basic things with stuff like the settings app. I'm sorry Microsoft that I'm having to go back to the network connections page to set up my network connections instead of your shiny new settings app, but I need to do some stuff the majority of which you can't do from your shiny new settings app.

If it was just a matter of trying to keep things the same workflow as before then the same stuff would be in the same place, but that's not the case. Over the course of windows 10, buttons for the same thing have moved all over hells half acre, fundamental stuff like the start menu has catastrophically changed in between minor revisions of Windows all the way since Windows 8. Newark econ show up, old icons disappear, any idea that Windows is being kept the way it is because they're trying to maintain workflows evaporates upon contact with reality.

>And Rozen dolls!

You monster desu

When I first got out of college I had that sort of doe eyed attitude. I felt -- correctly -- the fact that I had managed to get through college with relatively little debt, in a field that had decent demand, and managed to get a decent enough job right out of college, had a lot of elements of pure luck and I happened to roll the dice well.

There was a time period where I went out hoping to lift up others who hadn't had the same good luck I did.

After years of sacrifice, the subjects of my charity were no closer to self-sufficiency, but we're very well taken care of in terms of grooming and gadgets, and were endowed with a deep resentment that I hadn't given even more.

For people outside my immediate family, I've learned I need to give help that's constrained by cost, scope, and time. Do a specific thing and when it's over it's over, because otherwise you become just an exploitable resource. For my wife and kids, it needs to be a leadership first approach that instills and aligns values before providing material resources. For my kids in particular, I'll be dead someday soon (relatively speaking) and they won't be able to rely on me for help for most of their own lives.

It's pretty impressive! I guess we don't even have an executive or a legislature anymore, it's all just judiciary all the way down.

Look, I'm impressed at how cute this picture is, but what I'm really impressed by is how clean that keyboard is.

Unfortunately, anyone with three quarters of a brain in Canada leaves (apparently I'm stuck at half a brain) so we end up with someone like former bank of England chair Mark Carney as head of government, and he brings back all his euro retardation with him.

I'm more expressing general frustration given what's happening here, it isn't a personal attack on you.

Up here we're in year 10 of Europeans exporting their stupid ideas. Our current prime minister was an EU citizen until a couple months ago and he's trying to implement the genocidal "who needs ICE cars anyway" policies that might make sense in western Europe, but is going to kill swaths of this country if implemented here.

I'm sick of it. Europeans don't know what the American continent is like. It isn't western Europe.

The rail systems in China and Western Europe rely on high population densities but simply don't exist throughout most of the United States. In order to justify such rail systems in the United states, the population density of the country would have to rise by a factor of nearly 10. Actually doing that would bring about a huge ecological disaster, because much of the north American continent is already straining in a number of different critical resources such as water, and the amount of food production we could expect to see from the United States would drop catastrophically which would be a humanitarian disaster for huge swaths of the world.

When Europeans criticize Americans, they're continuing their long and storied history of trying to export their bad ideas mindlessly and end up killing a bunch of people in other continents. In the few cases that they were successful, they apologize for it later but obviously they don't feel sorry enough to stop trying to do it.

Just a bunch of bros, hanging out, living their best lives as billionaires, doing unspeakable things to children. It's not that complicated bro, no need to overthink it!

Really looks like it's time to be fearful.

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