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@davidaugust@mastodon.online
2025-07-01 19:41:43

In the future, “they took us on buses, soldiers. When we arrived I was surprised: didn’t smell like I remember Everglades smelling. Wasn’t that wet rain smell. Was…different. Piles, sinking, of what had been people…my stomach turned.
I turned to the soldier with a different flag patch on their sleeve and tried to explain, ‘I didn’t do this, this wasn’t me.’
In lightly accented English, soldier said, ‘yes you did, you voted for this,’ punctuated with a rifle gesture to start carry…

screenshot of a post by @shannonvavich_theflyingkitchen:   We're going to have to force them to walk through all the American Concentration camps one day, won't we....so they'll believe it was real.
@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-07-28 13:06:20

How popular media gets love wrong
Now a bit of background about why I have this "engineered" model of love:
First, I'm a white straight cis man. I've got a few traits that might work against my relationship chances (e.g., neurodivergence; I generally fit pretty well into the "weird geek" stereotype), but as I was recently reminded, it's possible my experience derives more from luck than other factors, and since things are tilted more in my favor than most people on the planet, my advice could be worse than useless if it leads people towards strategies that would only have worked for someone like me. I don't *think* that's the case, but it's worth mentioning explicitly.
When I first started dating my now-wife, we were both in graduate school. I was 26, and had exactly zero dating/romantic experience though that point in my life. In other words, a pretty stereotypical "incel" although I definitely didn't subscribe to incel ideology at all. I felt lonely, and vaguely wanted a romantic relationship (I'm neither aromantic nor asexual), but had never felt socially comfortable enough to pursue one before. I don't drink and dislike most social gatherings like parties or bars; I mostly hung around the fringes of the few college parties I attended, and although I had a reasonable college social life in terms of friends, I didn't really do anything to pursue romance, feeling too awkward to know where to start. I had the beginnings of crushes in both high school and college, but never developed a really strong crush, probably correlated with not putting myself in many social situations outside of close all-male friend gatherings. I never felt remotely comfortable enough to act on any of the proto-crushes I did have. I did watch porn and masturbate, so one motivation for pursuing a relationship was physical intimacy, but loneliness was as much of a motivating factor, and of course the social pressure to date was a factor too, even though I'm quite contrarian.
When I first started dating my now-wife, we were both in graduate school. I was 26, and had exactly zero dating/romantic experience though that point in my life. In other words, a pretty stereotypical "incel" although I definitely didn't subscribe to incel ideology at all. I felt lonely, and vaguely wanted a romantic relationship (I'm neither aromantic nor asexual), but had never felt socially comfortable enough to pursue one before. I don't drink and dislike most social gatherings like parties or bars; I mostly hung around the fringes of the few college parties I attended, and although I had a reasonable college social life in terms of friends, I didn't really do anything to pursue romance, feeling too awkward to know where to start. I had the beginnings of crushes in both high school and college, but never developed a really strong crush, probably correlated with not putting myself in many social situations outside of close all-male friend gatherings. I never felt remotely comfortable enough to act on any of the proto-crushes I did have. I did watch porn and masturbate, so one motivation for pursuing a relationship was physical intimacy, but loneliness was as much of a motivating factor, and of course the social pressure to date was a factor too, even though I'm quite contrarian.
I'm lucky in that I had some mixed-gender social circles already like intramural soccer and a graduate-student housing potluck. Graduate school makes a *lot* more of these social spaces accessible, so I recognize that those not in school of some sort have a harder time of things, especially if like me they don't feel like they fit in in typical adult social spaces like bars.
However, at one point I just decided that my desire for a relationship would need action on my part and so I'd try to build a relationship and see what happened. I worked up my courage and asked one of the people in my potluck if she'd like to go for a hike (pretty much clearly a date but not explicitly one; in retrospect not the best first-date modality in a lot of ways, but it made a little more sense in our setting where we could go for a hike from our front door). To emphasize this point: I was not in love with (or even infatuated with) my now-wife at that point. I made a decision to be open to building a relationship, but didn't follow the typical romance story formula beyond that. Now of course, in real life as opposed to popular media, this isn't anything special. People ask each other out all the time just because they're lonely, and some of those relationships turn out fine (although many do not).
I was lucky in that some aspects of who I am and what I do happened to be naturally comforting to my wife (natural advantage in the "appeal" model of love) but of course there are some aspects of me that annoy my wife, and we negotiate that. In the other direction, there's some things I instantly liked about my wife, and other things that still annoy me. We've figured out how to accept a little, change a little, and overall be happy with each other (though we do still have arguments; it's not like the operation/construction/maintenance of the "love mechanism" is always perfectly smooth). In particular though, I approached the relationship with the attitude of "I want to try to build a relationship with this person," at first just because of my own desires for *any* relationship, and then gradually more and more through my desire to build *this specific* relationship as I enjoyed the rewards of companionship.
So for example, while I think my wife is objectively beautiful, she's also *subjectively* very beautiful *to me* because having decided to build a relationship with her, I actively tried to see her as beautiful, rather than trying to judge whether I wanted a relationship with her based on her beauty. In other words, our relationship is more causative of her beauty-to-me than her beauty-to-me is causative of our relationship. This is the biggest way I think the "engineered" model of love differs from the "fire" and "appeal" models: you can just decide to build love independent of factors we typically think of as engendering love (NOT independent of your partner's willingness to participate, of course), and then all of those things like "thinking your partner is beautiful" can be a result of the relationship you're building. For sure those factors might affect who is willing to try building a relationship with you in the first place, but if more people were willing to jump into relationship building (not necessarily with full commitment from the start) without worrying about those other factors, they might find that those factors can come out of the relationship instead of being prerequisites for it. I think this is the biggest failure of the "appeal" model in particular: yes you *do* need to do things that appeal to your partner, but it's not just "make myself lovable" it's also: is your partner putting in the effort to see the ways that you are beautiful/lovable/etc., or are they just expecting you to become exactly some perfect person they've imagined (and/or been told to desire by society)? The former is perfectly possible, and no less satisfying than the latter.
To cut off my rambling a bit here, I'll just add that in our progress from dating through marriage through staying-married, my wife and I have both talked at times explicitly about commitment, and especially when deciding to get married, I told her that I knew I couldn't live up to the perfect model of a husband that I'd want to be, but that if she wanted to deepen our commitment, I was happy to do that, and so we did. I also rearranged my priorities at that point, deciding that I knew I wanted to prioritize this relationship above things like my career or my research interests, and while I've not always been perfect at that in my little decisions, I've been good at holding to that in my big decisions at least. In the end, *once we had built a somewhat-committed relationship*, we had something that we both recognized was worth more than most other things in life, and that let us commit even more, thus getting even more out of it in the long term. Obviously you can't start the first date with an expectation of life-long commitment, and you need to synchronize your increasing commitment to a relationship so that it doesn't become lopsided, which is hard. But if you take the commitment as an active decision and as the *precursor* to things like infatuation, attraction, etc., you can build up to something that's incredibly strong and rewarding.
I'll follow this up with one more post trying to distill some advice from my ramblings.
#relationships #love

@mlippert@vmst.io
2025-07-31 15:20:46

#Wordle 1,503 5/6*
⬜🟨⬜⬜⬜ <1% of 217,716 (345)
⬜⬜⬜🟩⬜ 3% of 38 (34)
⬜⬜🟩🟩⬜ 0 of 1 (5)
⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 0 of 0 (3)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
WordleBot
Skill 89/99
Luck 44/99
Well that was just lucky, I thought of 3 words after my 4th guess, Even though I had eliminated 12 letters, I was in the situation where you can only eliminate 1 word at a time.
The bot said "I tried solving it on my own, and you have succeeded where I failed. I doff my cap to you." 😆

@axbom@axbom.me
2025-05-30 19:37:19

If you don’t have a mute button on your microphone, the next best thing is software that will mute your microphone at the system level. MicDrop is an example of an app I’ve tried for this (Mac only): https://getmicdrop.com

You know it’s working when the meeting software starts throwing an ”error” and saying it’s not picking up sound from your microphone.

If you’ve ever tried putting butter in your coffee, you have Dave Asprey to thank.
(Sure, it was your annoying coworker who finally convinced you,
but that’s where your annoying coworker got the idea.)
Asprey is arguably the man who popularized the brew of smart drugs, supplements, and self-experimentation
we now know as biohacking.
As part of his multi-million-dollar empire
—which also involves the company Bulletproof Labs
and dressing increasingl…

@whitequark@mastodon.social
2025-06-27 08:48:42

this is very cool! you can embed UV glow powder into your body and have it glow in the dark after light exposure
[cw: blood, pictures of wounds] bioduck.me/2025/06/03/glow-pow
(via @…

@thomastraynor@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-27 13:04:36

Many years ago we had to terminate a dev for cause. He tried to play the 'I am from the same college, same program just two years after you and could you just keep me on and I get better?' Answer was no, I explained that if you graduated from the program you would have a basic set of programming skills and he didn't. We had to delete his code and start from scratch. It didn't matter, if you can't code then I can't keep you on and have the team do your work in the …

@Zer0Rank@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-30 06:52:20

If you haven't tried it yet, I definitely recommend checking Jujutsu Version Control System.
I literally heard about it two days ago, started reading through some tutorials, and already feel like this is something exciting and new in the VCS world. You can use it locally on any git repository you already have, since it uses git as the backend.
Anyone else in the team can keep on using git, and if you feel like it you can switch back to use git at any time.
`jj` feels in…

@lalle@social.linux.pizza
2025-06-27 16:56:26

The recording of my @… presentation "All the DataOps, all the paradigms" is now online. I have observed that most teams are not aware of differences between data processing paradigms and their practical consequences, so I tried to contribute some order and structure. As usual, I tried to squeeze in too much and rambled, but I hope that it i…

@inthehands@hachyderm.io
2025-07-26 17:16:46

I’ve generally disliked South Park — not because it is rude and raunchy, but because it made it seem like being a cynical asshole is somehow brave and countercultural. It made the case that it’s OK to be carelessly hurtful as long as you hurt •everyone•. It tried to make a virtue out of disaffection. Its compulsion never to be caught actually •caring• about anything or anyone robbed it of its capacity to have insights or a moral center. It flirted with satire, but always ended up just being trolling.
But who knows? It feels like trolling the fascists might be what we need right now. Maybe the show finally has its moment.

@mpsgoettingen@academiccloud.social
2025-06-21 22:02:23

Have you ever looked at clouds or water and tried to understand the complex system of swirls and ribbons?
To take it a step further: Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, and its moons still pose puzzles of this kind, which we hope to unravel with the instruments aboard the JUICE spacecraft on its journey there.
Here's a hands-on experiment that explains how the gas giant's cloud swirls are formed.
@…

Video of a large round tube of water spinning around with color drops crating swirls and bands of color
@brian_gettler@mas.to
2025-06-11 20:53:10

English is great, but have you tried French? They have an adjective for "relative to cod" ("morutier")! Mom always said you learn something every day.

@servelan@newsie.social
2025-06-12 21:38:49

You don't have to watch the bitch; the transcript says it all: "**[W]e are not going away we are staying here to liberate this city from the uh socialist and the um burdensome leadership that this governor and that this mayor have placed on this country and and what they have tried to insert into this city" **
Watch Live: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem speaks on immigration enforcement operations in Los Angeles - YouTube
youtube.com/watch?v=OzCq2xx-XJ

@nobodyinperson@fosstodon.org
2025-06-14 08:50:21

@… Have you tried putting #nixbook on 32-bit hardware? I have an Asus eeePC r11cx laying around that I loved at the time and would like to revive. But last time I tried compiling a 32-bit

@doni@meow.social
2025-07-19 17:56:19

You probably heard of mac and cheese. But have you tried crack and cheese? It comes in cube form.

@idbrii@mastodon.gamedev.place
2025-06-19 03:28:48

@… Have you tried The Forge? I think it's higher level than bgfx, but maybe still lower than you want?
github.com/ConfettiFX/The-Forg

@azonenberg@ioc.exchange
2025-07-13 23:15:59

Anybody have a good source for a ripstop nylon zipper pouch, kinda like a pencil case, that's solidly built and fits comfortably in a cargo pants pocket?
Use case is a tiny pocket first aid kit. Nothing fancy, just a couple of bandaids, single-dose ibuprofen, etc. In the past I've tried a plastic clamshell case that eventually broke (and was uncomfortable), a notched vacuum sealed bag (great until you open it, but not resealable), a ziploc (too flimsy).

@bici@mastodon.social
2025-07-09 05:22:45

Some of you may know that I am neither Christian nor Jewish nor Buddhist, nor a conventionally religious person of any sort. I am a humanist, which means, in part, that I have tried to behave decently without any expectation of rewards or punishments after I'm dead. ... I myself have written, "If it weren't for the message of mercy and pity in Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, I wouldn't want to be a human being. I would just as soon be a rattlesnake."
-- Kurt

@brian_gettler@mas.to
2025-07-21 00:21:02

Sure, friends who drop by with drinks or food are great, but have you tried friends who turn up with power tools?

@donelias@mastodon.cr
2025-07-06 03:34:25

Have you tried Mastodon and off again?

@paulbusch@mstdn.ca
2025-05-25 11:52:11

Good Morning #Canada
Today is National Geek Day, so expect your social media feeds to be filled with gobbly-gook acronyms and combinations of words that make you select the translate function. There's no scientific measurement of Canadian GPM (Geeks per million), but Canada does have an award winning #Candy called NERDS Gummy Clusters. I have not tried them, but apparently, non-technical people are allowed to consume it as well.
#CanadaIsAwesome #Geeks
narcity.com/nerds-gummy-cluste

@shoppingtonz@mastodon.social
2025-07-09 18:57:15

This process is very comfortable for me. What can I say? My internet is trash...
This is the final part 3/3
#UFOSandyShores #GTAV #GTA5

As I'm falling supposedly the "shield" of the UFO pushes me away and as I fall part of the props/roads I placed in the sky become visible.

I tried to build as high as I could but the UFO in Sandy Shores it does not allow you to build up to its height so it becomes a bit more challenging to land on it, even as this is in Director Mode.

I have landed on this UFO multiple times in Story Mode...so I do have that experience as well!
@idbrii@mastodon.gamedev.place
2025-06-18 03:15:31

@… Have you tried this CloudFlare setting to block AI scrapers?
blog.cloudflare.com/declaring-

@azonenberg@ioc.exchange
2025-07-04 23:44:51

Does anyone know how to get a competent Comcast business support engineer to actually talk to you? I've called their support line three times, each time they tried rebooting the modem (saying they would only do this once, liars) and then disconnected me saying that I could call back if I was still having problems.
I have yet to reach even a level 1 support drone.
I'm trying to a) get my CPE password reset because the password in my password manager doesn't work anymor…

@brian_gettler@mas.to
2025-06-12 08:52:56

Sure, sex is great, but have you ever tried editing a really great piece of someone else's writing?

@WldMnDave@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-08 00:12:10

I would like to start a bi-weekly meeting for people who would like to try out #Linux. My thought is to set up in a nearby coffee shop for a few hours and allow people to try out on a few laptops as well as have a couple of live distros on USBs to try on their own. Has anyone on here tried something like that out? And what advice would you give.

@stargazer@woof.tech
2025-06-14 20:47:24

I tried it so you don't have to.
Для мене Bitcraft став темною конячкою. Попри регулярний трекінг сендбоксів (в пошуках того, що почеше стару рану від Skysaga), я почув про неї лише зараз.
Чи варто в це грати?
Tl;dr Зараз не варто. Потім - залежить, але, ймовірно, також ні.
Задум цікавий: економіка, яку рухає суспільство, і світ, що повністю редагується. Але реалізації дуже, дуже далеко від задуму попри "вайби" від команди. В плані чату Біткрафт копіює най…