The good thing is that you don't have all these toxic, wealth-dependent, brand-indoctrinating capitalist, environmentally destructive fast fashion pressures for kids.
Amazing. Day walking around in Milan. Then onwards to Lecce. All trains were on time to the minute. We had cabins to ourselves (went with friends). Did it with Eurorail tickets.
Yes. Took the sleeper train from the Netherlands to Italy last autumn.
Ëë is definitely also used in the Netherlands
What happens at the y-axis is pure magic.
In that story, sometimes the moon would be so close, that if you would jump on the right moment you would be taken up by its field gravity.
There is a great story about that by the great writer Italo Calvino called 'the distance of the moon': https://irenebrination.typepad.com/files/calvino-italo-cosmicomics.pdf
Great watch, thank you
She is probably looking at you with that exact smile behind you right now.
Why is this dowvoted. This is great.
Yes, thank you
Well yes, the US is not too picky when it comes to finding customers for it's arms industry. For example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_United_States–Saudi_Arabia_arms_deal
Haha. Great. Must be it.
What is on his T-shirt?
What is Colombian schadenfreude?
Wasn't the last time also about saving some southerners from other southerners?
Thank you
This is a great way to travel through space and time, and get to know our planet better in a fun and beautifully designed way.
What could be reasons for my rsync, which is syncing two remote servers through ssh, to slow down over time like this? It keeps happening. How to check what is the bottleneck?
Does anyone else experience this? When I upvote a post and then bookmark it, the upvote disappears. I then have to redo the upvote.
Today someone told me that he heard through the grapevine that OpenAI has been selling it's ChatGPT (not sure which version) complete model to one or more key organizations (companies) whose policies simply do not allow it to store any data on external servers. Does anyone here know anything about that?
The Firefox extension "ChatGPT Summary Assistant" has been quite useful over the last few weeks, but sometimes I would like to be able to specify a question about an article. Do you know if any extension(s) exist(s) for that?
Hi all, just checking: is there a way to manually sort files (specifically photos)? So not automatic sorting on name or date, but (drag and drop) manual sorting?
Hi all, sorry if this has been asked/discussed before (I couldn't find any directly overlapping posts):
I have been running the Nextcloud snap now for quite some time, and although things have run quite smoothly, I never really managed to properly back things up.
I make weekly backups of the database, config and data, but it's very hard and time consuming to glue these elements back together. And as they say: when you can't check whether a backup works, it's not really a backup.
I have been experimenting with KVM/qemu lately and things look pretty great. The idea of simply backing up the entire OS that runs Nextcloud (a backup that you can easily deploy/run somewhere else to test if it's working) sounds very attractive.
Reading around, however, tells me that some of you recommend running the Nextcloud docker (instead of a VM).
My questions:
- What would be the advantage of running Nextcloud as a docker, instead of within a VM?
- What would be a sensible way to have an incremental/differential backup of the VM/Docker?
- The storage usage of my Nextcloud instance exceeds 1TB. If I run it within a VM, I will have to connect it to a 2TB SSD. Does it make sense to add the external storage space to the VM? How does that affect the ease of backing the full VM up? Or (as I have read here and there) should I simply put the entire VM on the external SSD?
I recently asked an admittedly controversial question about the veracity of a Mastodon account. Some people understandably took offense, while others were willing to exchange thoughts. It was a conversation of about 13 comments.
I now find the post is gone. I can't find any message in my inbox about any removal. Now I understand that we cannot expect mods to provide elaborate justifications for all their decisions, and I understand that they (and admins?) are the final arbiters (although in this case I think it was a bit drastic, also considering that I there was a diversity of perspectives). But shouldn't participants in a post be notified or something? With an automatic notification? When a post is deleted?
I have seen great memes and posts about the fact that Lemmy doesn't have any Karma to pursue. But surely it keeps track of points? At least in Connect I can see mine and those of others?
Often political leaders at the top need to maintain some diplomatic composure and have the privilege to leave their dirty fights to subordinates. As a result we often don’t realize how much of an asshole these leaders actually are. A good test is to check what they allow (or encourage) their lower ranked allies to get away with.
I would like to be able to use the command line (curl) to get a list of communities I am currently subscribed to.
I know that there is a full-blown API, but it only briefly covers what it is possible with simple a curl request, and most of it seems to refer to an API that runs in javascript (which seems excessively complex for what I want to do?)
A simple curl request like this seems to work,
curl "https://mander.xyz/api/v3/community/list" | jq
But I wouldn't know how to make it list only communities that I subscribe to? Does anyone know more?
cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/986772
> Let's see how many interesting facts about beans we can bring together.
> Pythagoras’s aversion to beans, though, always got a lot of attention, even from ancient writers. According to Pliny, Pythagoreans believed that fava beans could contain the souls of the dead, since they were flesh-like. Due to their black-spotted flowers and hollow stems, some believers thought the plants connected earth and Hades, providing ladders for human souls. The beans’ association with reincarnation and the soul made eating fava beans close to cannibalism. Aristotle, writing earlier, went much further. One possible reason for the ban, he wrote, was that the bulbous shape of beans represented the entire universe. Nevertheless, other Greeks ate plenty of fava beans, and Pythagorean beliefs were mocked. The poet Horace tauntingly called beans “relations of Pythagoras.”
Let's see how many interesting facts about beans we can bring together.
When it comes to spreading disinformation about climate change or the risks of smoking, I can clearly see how it protects economic interests (e.g. the value of the assets of the fossil fuel industry or the tobacco industry). I therefore understand that these lies are (have been) regularly pushed by people who do not necessarily believe in them.
But what are the strategic considerations behind the active spread of anti-vax theories? Who gains from this? Is it just an effective topic to rile up a political base? Because it hits people right in the feels? Is it just a way to bring people together on one topic, in order to use that political base for other purposes?
Or is anti-vax disinformation really only pushed by people who believe it?
I think there are good reasons to not let corporate interests join the space we built to escape them, but I guess every instance is free to (de)federate with whomever they want.
So let's say my instance (mander.xyz) defederates from Meta but another Lemmy instance that meander.xyz federates with (let's say "misguided.ml") does not. What happens when someone from Meta comments on a post from misguided.ml and others from misguided.ml comment on that comment? Will I see the comments on the meta comment, but not the original meta comment itself? Or will I not see the entire thread?