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Unless you have a balanced diet that anticipates your workouts and gives you the proper amount of sodium, potassium and magnesium. Sports drinks are just selling you those at a big premium. Stick with water. Eat a banana.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Linux@lemmy.ml•Niri Debuts As A Scrollable -Tiling Wayland Compositor Inspired By PaperWM
25·2 years agoIsn’t it the opposite then? Since your windows will have vertical scrolls, it makes sense to tile them horizontally in order to maximize vertical space for each window, imo.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Carmen Osorio, expert in technology addiction: ‘It’s not a good idea to give children a smartphone; in any case, you let them borrow yours’
2·2 years agoThese are very poor arguments for smoking cigarettes, but sure…
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Carmen Osorio, expert in technology addiction: ‘It’s not a good idea to give children a smartphone; in any case, you let them borrow yours’
3·2 years agoAnother argument to give your tween a smartphone is that they need to learn how to use it, to develop a healthy relationship with it, to understand the pros/cons, to understand how to use it effectively. Abstinence will just make them envious and less likely to think through the consequences.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Linux@lemmy.ml•Ending support for Windows 10 could send 240 million computers to the landfill. Why not install Linux on them?
10·2 years agoThere are lots of people who could use them. Schools, libraries, poor people.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Pluralistic: “If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing”
1·2 years agoI get ya. I think there’s also a petulant sentiment of “you don’t want to play fair? Then fuck you, I won’t either”
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Pluralistic: “If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing”
8·2 years agoNo no, that is not what the headline says.
The headline says “you’re told that what you’re doing is buying by the people selling you the media, but that’s not what you’re actually doing. So, if they’re lying to you about what you’re buying, then pirating a different thing isn’t stealing the thing they are trying to sell you.”
It’s definitely tongue in cheek and has some hyperbole in it, but that is the gist of the statement.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Pluralistic: “If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing”
2·2 years agoAgreed, and to me the solution is not “let’s hope the companies play nice”, but rather to bring in anti-monopoly regulations, like Canada’s Bill C-56.
We need to force companies to add interoperability, transparency and fairness imho. Like the ongoing fight to force Apple to allow competing browsers in iOS. Or alternate app stores for Android and iOS.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Pluralistic: “If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing”
2·2 years agoAh, that’s not my understanding of civil disobedience. I prefer this definition: “civil disobedience is a public, non-violent and conscientious breach of law undertaken with the aim of bringing about a change in laws or government policies” (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/civil-disobedience/)
I suppose the piracy aspect might not be public enough to count as civil disobedience though, unless you count as public the noticeable cumulative effects of all piracy.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Pluralistic: “If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing”
21·2 years agoThere’s lots they can do…
- cheaper prices (by lowering the % of rent-seeking),
- better pay distribution for creators (Especially so that I pay to support the shows I watch rather than a global pool),
- interoperability (to allow new businesses which provide frontends to multiple streaming services),
- social (clipping and sharing, group watching, etc)
- more equal promotion of shows/movies (instead of based on royalty rates)
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Pluralistic: “If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing”
1·2 years agoHow much should they be paid for it? In a situation where the streaming services have a stranglehold on the market and are extracting a big amount in rent-seeking price vs actually paying the people who labored to create it, should we continue to pay and give in to their morally dubious tactics? In this lens, can piracy be considered a form of civil disobedience?
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Pluralistic: “If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing”
21·2 years agoI’m not so sure that’s true. What if normalizing and removing friction from piracy gets to the point where the streaming services have to react by providing better services and better payouts?
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Spotify made £56m profit, but has decided not to pay smaller artists like me. We need you to make some noise | Damon Krukowski
2·2 years agoYeah, agreed and every person can only do so much. I like to think that it’s all the same fight, it’s the fight against the stranglehold that the rich have on the rest of us.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Spotify made £56m profit, but has decided not to pay smaller artists like me. We need you to make some noise | Damon Krukowski
21·2 years agoThat’s the point, though. Spotify is rigged specifically so that they don’t have to pay small artists. Spotify splits the pot with the Big Three and everyone else can go fuck themselves. I would much rather my monthly payment go toward the artists I actually listen to. Instead, most of a monthly payment goes to the most played artists-- which Spotify rigs to be whoever nets them the most money (low royalty artists, high dividends for Spotify and the Big Three who are highly invested in it)
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Spotify made £56m profit, but has decided not to pay smaller artists like me. We need you to make some noise | Damon Krukowski
11·2 years agoCory Doctorow writes extensively about how it’s Spotify’s fault, as an extension of the common exploitation of musicians in the industry, in the excellent book Chokepoint Capitalism. Here’s a short summary of the Spotify argument by the author: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZ5z_KKeFqE
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Spotify made £56m profit, but has decided not to pay smaller artists like me. We need you to make some noise | Damon Krukowski
41·2 years agoWhat Spotify does affects the entire music market. Why should you worry about their income? Because Spotify’s strategy makes it harder and harder for musicians to have the income to keep on making music. If you care about having music to listen to, you should care about this. Also, Spotify and music is just one example of the overall exploitation of workers. If you don’t stand for artists when it’s their livelihood at stake, why should anyone stand up for your rights when it’s your livelihood at stake?
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.ml•young voters say social media to blame for divisions in the u.s
14·2 years agoIt does more than that, it magnifies, feeds and perpetuates them. It’s not just simple exposition.
mkhoury@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Sodium-ion battery breakthroughs may be key to our electric future
10·2 years agoI agree that the technologies did pan out, but I don’t think it’s an ignorant opinion.
I also feel blasé about the new battery articles because they tend to promise orders of magnitude changes rather than incremental change. Batteries did get much better, but it doesn’t really feel that way I suppose. Our experience of battery power hasn’t changed much.
It’s really about getting excited about the article or the tech, it takes so long to see its mild effects that there’s no real cashing out on the excitement, so it’s not very satisfying.

I agree that with the current state of tools around LLMs, this is very unadvisable. But I think we can develop the right ones.
We can have tools that can generate the context/info submitters need to understand what has been done, explain the choices they are making, discuss edge cases and so on. This includes taking screenshots as the submitter is using the app, testing period (require X amount of time of the submitter actually using their feature and smoothening out the experience)
We can have tools at the repo level that can scan and analyze the effect. It can also isolate the different submitted features in order to allow others to toggle them or modify them if they’re not to their liking. Similarly, you can have lots of LLMs impersonate typical users and try the modifications to make sure they work. Putting humans in the loop at different appropriate times.
People are submitting LLM generated code they don’t understand right now. How do we protect repos? How do we welcome these contributions while lowering risk? I think with the right engineering effort, this can be done.