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Was it my imagination that most people believed in a 9/11 conspiracy?
  • I can't say this was super prevalent in my social circle at the time in the suburbs of Boston. The only part of it that some people sorta didn't exclude was the possibility that Flight 93 was shot down and we weren't being told.

  • Chaya Raichik left sputtering when asked what “wokeness” is as the audience bursts out laughing
  • Well, drive through speakers are also notoriously bad. 😅 But yeah fully agree. When I talk to other people in my 2nd language, I often understand them perfectly well in person but the same person talking about the same thing is hard to understand for me over the phone. If I watch something on TV and I can’t see their face, I feel compelled to turn up the volume way higher than I would for English. Language is harder than we think, but our brains are really good at using all information at its disposal and making it feel deceptively easy.

  • Chaya Raichik left sputtering when asked what “wokeness” is as the audience bursts out laughing
  • It makes sense. Your brain uses all kinds of cues even if you don’t realize it. That includes things like smiles and even some degree of “lip reading”. If you can’t see someone’s mouth moving, you lose some cues and your brain has fewer signals to rely on when interpreting speech.

    That said, if you can take a phone call, you can understand someone through a mask. It’s not an impenetrable barrier for communication.

  • It's a choice
  • As a non-drinker, some of these are great but some are non-tenable.

    “Just don’t like the taste” will lead to all kinds of suggestions where “you can’t even taste the alcohol!!!!” (it inevitably tastes like nothing but a sweeter form of alcohol).

    Things like “I’m driving later” or “ate something earlier” are one-time use tokens.

  • [Lemmy.ca Discussion] What should we do about Lemmit.online
  • I don’t see a lot of people voicing this opinion so I’ll share this:

    I like lemmit. It adds value to me as I can keep up with some very small communities on Reddit that I care about a lot, while spending all of my time on lemmy. If it didn’t exist, I’d have to keep visiting Reddit for some communities, and that would make me sad. Yes, I hope I can abandon Reddit completely some day, but lemmit is a great way for certain things to transition across the gap that still exists.

  • Les voisins de « l’allée du crack » racontent leur « enfer » à Montréal
    ici.radio-canada.ca Les voisins de « l’allée du crack » racontent leur « enfer » à Montréal

    Alexandra vit dans la peur chaque fois qu'elle sort de son immeuble de la rue Charlotte, en plein Quartier des spectacles de Montréal. « Ce matin, j'avais quelqu'un qui vendait de la drogue à côté de mon garage à cinq heures et demie. »

    Les voisins de « l’allée du crack » racontent leur « enfer » à Montréal
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    Protip for Apollo users: Wefwef is a lemmy client with Apollo's UI
  • Have to disagree with you here across the board.

    native apps have too many permissions on your phone

    What permissions are you referring to? On my phone, Apollo was able to send push notifications, and it had restricted access to specifically chosen photos. Otherwise, it can't read the file system outside its sandbox, has restricted background runtime, and can't access sensitive shared data like contacts or health data.

    It’s not uncommon in this world for someone to make a nice app, another company to buy it and you don’t even realize while your data is being sold.

    That's true, but orthogonal to the question of PWA vs Native. Web apps can let you upload data, access your location, keep track of your accesses, etc. Ultimately, you're running someone else's software on your device, and their software can do privacy-preserving things or they can do gross things with your data, and that can happen on any software stack.

    PWAs are cheaper (in this case free) to maintain too. Apple charges you $100/year to be a developer . Google is more generous $25/lifetime for android.

    Given the overall cost in time (man-hours) to develop an app, I'm not sure the 100 bucks is that big of a deal to be honest.

    These operating systems change often and keep deprecating stuff, forcing devs to continuously fix unnecessarily broken stuff. This doesn’t happen with PWAs as they follow the web standard.

    That's not true. Your web app may not break in the same way (i.e., not compile), but OS evolution changes what people expect constantly. A few years ago it wasn't possible for a web app to send push notifications or support dark mode properly, but now they can and people expect it. Browsers also regularly introduce new features like privacy protections that routinely break web apps that weren't built with those behaviours in mind. Also, the OSes look and feel completely different now, and web apps that want to "feel" native will need to adopt their designs constantly no matter what.

    Native apps break earlier (at compile time instead of at runtime) but both need to be maintained just as much to stay current, because the OSes people are running - and their expectations - are also changing all the time.

  • Lemmy.ca's Main Community @lemmy.ca thunderstruck @lemmy.ca
    Protip for Apollo users: Wefwef is a lemmy client with Apollo's UI
    wefwef.app wefwef for lemmy

    wefwef is a beautiful mobile web client for lemmy. Enjoy a seamless experience browsing the fediverse.

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    Merci d'avoir créé cette communauté

    J'avais peur de ne pas retrouver des québécois après l'exode de reddit. Ça fait plaisir de vous revoir ❤️

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    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)TH
    thunderstruck @lemmy.ca
    Posts 3
    Comments 1