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rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Countries that do not embrace AI could be left behind, says OpenAI’s George OsborneEnglish
1·4 days agoWhat is a post doing on Lemmy’s top list with a minus 56 reputation?
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Burger King will use AI to check if employees say ‘please’ and ‘thank you’English
3·5 days agoThe joke my friend made is, “Elf on the Shelf in your ear”
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Fuck AI@lemmy.world•Tech CEOs Confused by Why Everybody Hates AI So Much
42·6 days agoI use emdashes, sparingly, in my own writing. Hooray, now people mistrust me for doing that.
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Guys, what's the best Linux distro to install on my PC?
1·14 days agoAh, I just noticed your reply now! I’d say Mint’s about as easy to install as the other major installations. If you don’t care about dual booting, you can just let the installer use the entire hard disk, and that greatly simplifies everything. If you decide to go back to Windows you’ll have to go through that process, of course, but usually you make recovery media early on in your system’s life, and you could boot from that to get back to a factory state.
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Guys, what's the best Linux distro to install on my PC?
11·2 months agoIf you’re new to Linux: Mint. Use Mint, with Cinnamon. Or MATE, if you’re hardware is older. It works just how you’d expect.
There’s many other distros for other purposes. Bazzite has a lot of people who like it for games. If you really want to control EVERYTHING about your machine there’s Arch. If you want bleeding edge software and don’t mind/can fix the occasional problem caused by rolling releases then I suggest Manjaro.
But most Windows refugees will be looking for something familiar that works and stays out of their face, and for that the simple answer is Mint.
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•At what point is liking childrens toys sad?
14·2 months agoAs someone who doesn’t generally play with children’s toys, i still say the answer is never.
As Randall Munroe said way back in XKCD #150, we’re the grownups now, and we get to decide what that means. Life is too short not to spend as much of it as you can doing what you want. So long as it doesn’t interfere with others, go wild.
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What's an unpopular UI opinion you have?
8·2 months agoI don’t have unpopular UI opinions, but I do have opinions that I don’t see people echo much, yet.
One of the worst things about UI in 2025 is that almost everything most people use on a computer relies on it, more than ever, and yet it’s also at its worst point since the days before mouse driven interfaces. Companies used to be much stricter about their interfaces, how they worked and looked. Now there are tons of bespoke interfaces where everyone decides for themselves how they work, and assumptions made by one program work the opposite way in a different one.
Switches have become way to obvious to what “on” and “off” is. Even when they state something like an option is enabled or not in text, it often isn’t clear whether it’s saying this is what the state is now, or this is what it will be when clicked.
Icons have become way too vague and arbitrary as to what they mean. The Hamburger menu was bad enough, but some of the icons have gotten way too abstract. At least the floppy disk for saving was a convention.
Web pages likewise could use a lot more consistency and visibility. The new Digg, for instance, hides its user block function behind a light-gray three-dots button on a white background. The only options on that menu are to Report or Block that user! Why is it three dots, and why is it so hard to see?
Microsoft’s “Ribbon” interface remains a terrible idea. At least with menu bars you know all the functions are there, somewhere, all represented by text. With the Ribbon, everything’s a toolbar button, and with many of them being different sizes it’s harder to scan through them to find the option you’re looking for.
24 is the highest number.
24 is the highest number.
Do you know how hard it is to shop for bras when you’re a giant spider?
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•To the rapidly aging person reading this: GameFAQs is 30 years old, and people are sharing their memories of the venerable guide hubEnglish
2·4 months agoThank you for your service!
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Leopards Ate My Face@lemmy.world•I voted for Trump. I feel completely swindled.English
5·4 months agoThere is absolutely no excuse. It’s not like he was an unknown quantity. No amount of disdain is too great for these people.
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Leopards Ate My Face@lemmy.world•MAGA supporter feeling gaslitEnglish
191·4 months agoIf only she had come to this realization NINE YEARS AGO
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Texas@lemmy.world•Greg Abbott threatens "100% tariff" on New Yorkers moving to Texas
12·4 months agoSo… to move to Texas, a New Yorker has to bring along another New Yorker?
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.world•The Glorious Misadventures of a Linux-illiterateEnglish
51·4 months agoI think it’s useful, when introducing people to Linux, not to just call it “Linux.” Because, thinking they’re all the same, they might go and install Arch or something.
Instead, tell them to try “Linux Mint.”
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Unpopular Opinion@lemmy.world•Jesus was a historical person. This doesn’t mean Christianity is correct, but there is sufficient historical evidence and most mainstream scholars of the era agree on this.English
1·4 months agoWhat I remember from Bible Geek (and/or Human Bible, another podcast he did) was that the earliest of the gospels actually dates to the 4th century CE, and that three of them are likely derivative works from an earlier book, lost to us, that scholars call “Q.” I think it was John that was the only gospel thought not to originate from it.
Addition: looking it up, here’s Q source on Wikipedia. It states that Matthew and Luke are thought to originate from Q, but not Mark or John.
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Linux gamers on Steam finally cross over the 3% markEnglish
26·4 months agoBy some reports it’s over 5%, statcounter may be undercounting Linux.
rodneylives@lemmy.worldto
Unpopular Opinion@lemmy.world•Jesus was a historical person. This doesn’t mean Christianity is correct, but there is sufficient historical evidence and most mainstream scholars of the era agree on this.English
4·4 months agoGoing from memory here, I heard it years back. Robert M. Price’s podcast The Bible Geek covered the argument against a historical Jesus in an episode, noting that a major pillar in the argument is an obituary written by Josephus. Wikipedia has a page on Josephus’s account.
Price’s argument, such that I remember, has to do with the fact that Josephus’ account outright calls Jesus the Messiah, despite supposedly being written in the first century CE when this would have been a niche argument, suggesting that this account was not actually written when it purports to be. But I haven’t listened to Bible Geek in a long time, all of this could be a misrepresentation.




Any relation to Lucasfilm/Fujitsu Habitat/Habitat II? https://renoproject.org/
It was an early virtual world, running originally on Commodore 64s, later on PCs and (in Japan) Sega Saturn, with a look and style heavily inspired by SCUMM games.