SkyNTP

joined 2 years ago
[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

We are in uncharted territory here. There is no crystal ball for what comes next.

That being said, this is not sustainable. Society is a contract. The contract goes away when parties to that contract begin to disagree on what that contract says, and that is inevitable when people are fed garbage without results. Most empires have collapsed under their own weight. I suspect this will happen to the US as well, which has always been the purpose of all this disinformation: not to consolidate power into a dictator, but instead to sow division, and rip apart the social contract. The fact that Americans are so polarized is proof of that division. You ask if people will ever wake up. Clearly half the the US has.

The only question is how that collapse will happen, and how peacefully it might be.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 39 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

I spent an unhealthy amount of time on Reddit. Getting bored of Lemmy is a feature, not a bug. Embrace it.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 38 points 3 weeks ago

Missed opportunity to fine Google $1 googol.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 14 points 1 month ago

This situation has come to be, through the ignorance and inaction of ordinary people. Your attitude is part of the problem.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 33 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Corporate censorship. These companies are too powerful and tyrannical.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 18 points 1 month ago

The article is ambiguous. It states "use IPv6" which at face value could simply mean support it together with IPv4. On the other hand, it states that they are running out of IPv4 addresses beyond what NAT can solve, so perhaps they may not have a choice in the matter.

If this is the nudge needed to transition, then great.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 7 points 1 month ago

"Fragility" is the typical descriptor for this sort of thing. Advanced technology is very powerful, and that is obvious to see, but it also tends to fail readily without long-term planning, in disaster and war, of course, but also in more benign ways, like when a consumer becomes reliant on the technology for a way of life, and a corporation abused their unique ability to maintain the technology, and the consumer has no recourse.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 7 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (5 children)

Man, I've been trying to migrate to Linux as my daily driver desktop over the last week. I love Linux passionately. But multi-monitor and 2.5Gb/s NIC support is just a disaster, basically to the point of completely unusable. It's so frustrating. It keeps pushing me back to Windows, because Windows just works when it comes to hardware.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 13 points 1 month ago (1 children)

This is what we get for no longer being the paying customer (that and a quasi Monopoly).

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 15 points 1 month ago

The problem isn't the technology. The problem is the people losing their minds about it.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 38 points 1 month ago (4 children)

We don't need immortal billionaires sucking up everyone's oxygen.

[–] SkyNTP@lemmy.ml 41 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Open the tv and rip out the antenna. Y'all already forgot the classic secret agent trope of checking the hotel room for bugs? Now we all get to play that game!

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